Martin Luther — "You people are more stupid than a block of wood."
You people are more stupid than a block of wood.
You people are more stupid than a block of wood.
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"The best way to preach is to get down to the level of the people."
"Everything that is done in this world is done by hope."
"I am afraid that the schools will prove the very gates of hell, unless they diligently labor in explaining the Holy Scriptures and engraving them in the heart of the youth."
"Whoever sticks his nose in every corner will get it stuck."
"I am a peasant's son; my father, grandfather, and great-grandfather were genuine peasants. So I am a peasant and shall remain one."
German theologian whose 95 Theses (1517) launched the Protestant Reformation and broke the Catholic Church's monopoly on Western Christianity. Closely associated with Philipp Melanchthon (Lutheran systematizer) and John Calvin (later Reformer who built on Luther's break). For an intellectual contrast, see Pope Leo X, Renaissance pope (1513-1521) — Leo X's indulgence sales triggered Luther's break and Leo excommunicated him in 1521 — Luther's entire Reformation is structured as a direct answer to the indulgence-funded Vatican Leo represented.
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This is a blunt, insulting rebuke aimed at people the speaker considers foolish or stubbornly incapable of understanding. Comparing someone to a block of wood suggests they are inert, unthinking, and unresponsive to reason. In modern terms, it is calling an audience denser than lumber, unable to grasp what should be obvious. It is less an argument than a verbal slap intended to shame listeners into paying attention or reconsidering their position.
Luther was famous for ferocious, scatological rhetoric against opponents, whether popes, princes, peasants, or fellow reformers. A former Augustinian monk turned theology professor at Wittenberg, he weaponized plain German insults to expose what he saw as willful blindness to scripture. Calling people dumber than wood fits his pulpit style: combative, earthy, and unafraid to humiliate audiences he believed were ignoring gospel truth in favor of tradition, indulgences, or political convenience.
In early-modern Europe, the printing press turned sermons and pamphlets into mass media, and polemical insult was standard intellectual combat. Luther's 1517-1546 campaign against Rome unfolded amid peasant revolts, Holy Roman Empire politics, and violent doctrinal splits. Literacy was rising but most laypeople still depended on preachers to interpret scripture. Calling a congregation wooden-headed reflected the era's anxiety that ordinary Christians were being misled by clergy, and that blunt vernacular shock was needed to awaken them.
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