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The Reformation

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Title: The Reformation


1
The Reformation
"The just shall live by faith".
2
The Protestant Reformation
Weakness of the Church by 1500
  • The Renaissance emphasis on the secular and
    individual challenged Church authority and the
    printing press spread these ideas.
  • Rulers began to challenge the authority of the
    pope.
  • It was difficult for the pope to impose central
    authority in Germany because of so many competing
    states
  • Northern merchants resented paying church taxes
    to Rome.

Criticisms of the Church
  • Many leaders were corrupt including some popes
    who patronized the arts, spent extravagantly on
    personal pleasures and fought wars.
  • Some had children and worldly affairs.
  • The lower clergy were so poorly educated that
    many could hardly read. Others drank or gambled
    excessively.

3
Martin Luther
"The just shall live by faith".
Praying, fasting, and good works were not the key
to salvation. Instead, a strong faith in God was
all that mattered.
4
Johann Tetzel
Selling of Indulgences Pardon from Sins"
5
Martin Luthers Response
Posting of 95 Thesis on the church door in
Wittenberg, Germany challenging Tetzel and others
to debate the issue
6
Luthers Three Main Beliefs
  1. Salvation by faith - good works would not save a
    person, faith in God was the only way to
    salvation
  2. The Bible is the only authority for Christian
    life Both the pope and Church traditions were
    false authorities.
  3. The Priesthood of all Believers - Each person had
    a relationship with God and all people with faith
    were equal. People did not need priests to
    interpret the Bible

The Church Response to Luther
Pope Leo X issue a papal decree (papal bull)
threatening Luther with excommunication if he
refused to recant his beliefs.
7
Luthers Response to the Church
Burning of the Papal Bull by Luther and his
followers in a bonfire.
8
Holy Roman Emperor Charles Vs Response to Luther
Diet of Worms to try Luther for Heresy. Luther
refuses to recant and is declared a heretic and
outlaw. His books are ordered to be burned
9
Luther is Protected
Luther translates the New Testament of the Bible
to German.
Prince Frederick the Wise of Saxony houses Luther
in a castle and protects him from arrest
When he returns to Wittenberg in 1522 many of his
ideas had been put into practice by his
followers. They were known as Lutherans (Lutheran
Church)
10
The English Reformation
  • When the pope refuses to annul Henrys marriage
    to Catherine he breaks from the Church and
    creates the Church of England
  • The Act of Supremacy makes Henry the supreme head
    of the Church in England. He grants his own
    annulment.

11
SIR THOMAS MORE
  • More refuses to sign the Act of Supremacy and is
    arrested, tried and found guilty of high treason.
    He is executed in 1535 at the Tower of London

12
John Calvin
  • French follower of Luther who studied law in
    France.
  • In 1536, he published Institutes of the Christian
    Religion which set forth a systematic Protestant
    philosophy about God, salvation, and human
    nature.
  • His teachings became known as Calvinism.
  • People are sinful by nature only the elect are
    saved
  • Predestination God has always known who the
    elect are
  • Government should be in the hands of religious
    leaders
  • Morality should be rigidly regulated.

13
John Knox
  • A preacher from Scotland who visited Geneva to
    see Calvin's ideas at work.
  • Put Calvin's ideas to work in Scottish towns.
    Each community church was governed by a small
    group of laymen called presbyters.
  • The Church became known as the Presbyterian
    Church.
  • Calvinism became the official religion of
    Scotland in 1567.

14
Ignatius Loyola
  • Spaniard who wrote a book titled Spiritual
    Exercises, which laid out a day-by-day plan of
    meditation, prayer, and study. He gathered a band
    of followers.
  • In 1540, the pope recognized his group as a
    monastic order called the Society of Jesus. Known
    as Jesuits.
  • Jesuits were well disciplined and were willing
    to go anywhere in the world to serve the pope.
  • They concentrated on three major goals.
  • Founding strong schools throughout Europe
  • Convert non-Christians to Catholicism. They
    preached in the Americas, Africa, and Asia.
  • Prevent the spread of Protestantism.

15
The Council of Trent
  • The pope's interpretation of the Bible was final.
    Any Christian who substituted his/her own
    interpretation was a heretic
  • The Bible and Church tradition shared equal
    authority
  • The false selling of indulgences were banned.
  • Christians needed faith and good works for
    salvation. They were not saved by faith alone as
    taught by Luther.

16
Effects of the Reformation
  • Greater emphasis put on education by Catholics
    and Protestants. New colleges and universities.
  • Counter or Catholic Reformation led to greater
    unification of Catholics
  • Forming of Protestant Churches
  • Status of women improved
  • Monarchs grew stronger leading to the development
    strong nation-states.
  • Laid the groundwork for the Enlightenment
  • Religious wars and persecution in Europe
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