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The Reformation

The Reformation. Chapter 14 Part 1. Causes of the Protestant Reformation. The Prestige of the Church was in decline due to the Crises of the 14 th and 15 th centuries: The Babylonian Captivity 1309-1377 The Great Schism 1377-1417

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The Reformation

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  1. The Reformation Chapter 14 Part 1

  2. Causes of the Protestant Reformation • The Prestige of the Church was in decline due to the Crises of the 14th and 15th centuries: • The Babylonian Captivity 1309-1377 • The Great Schism 1377-1417 • The Conciliar Movement ( sharing power with an assembly and restricting Pope’s power with a Constitution was rejected by several 15th and 16th century Popes.

  3. Corruption within the Church • Simony The sale of Church offices • In 1487 the pope sold 24 offices • Reformers unhappy by unqualified people in Church offices • Pluralism an official holding more than one church office at a time • Absenteeism a church officials collecting payments and privileges even when not performing a duty

  4. More Corruption in the Church • Nepotism: The appointment of Church offices to family members • Leo X and Clement VII were both sons of Medici Florentine rulers • Pope Paul III made two of his grandsons cardinals • The Sale of Indulgences: people paying money to the Church to absolve their sins or sins of their loved ones

  5. The moral decline of the papacy • Pope Alexander VI had numerous affairs and children out of wedlock • In the early 16th century, 1/5 of all priests in Trent kept concubines • Clerical Ignorance: Many priests were illiterate • Some abused their power (trading sexual favors for absolution, etc.)

  6. Critics of the Church • Emphasized a personal relationship with God • Wyclif: (England) The Bible is the sole authority • Diminished the importance of the sacraments • Stressed personal communion with God • Lollards continued his ideas into the 16th century

  7. Critics • Jan Hus (Bohemia) • Freedom of debate • Ultraquism • Vernacular • Transubstantiation • Was executed at the Council of Constance

  8. More Critics • Thomas a’ Kempis wrote The Imitation of Christ • Founded The Brethren of the Common Life • Encouraged Christians to life simply and make religion a personal experience

  9. More Critics • Erasmus In Praise of Folly • Criticized the corruption of the Church and the hypocrisy of the clergy • “Erasmus laid the egg that Luther hatched.”

  10. Christian Humanists in the North • Criticized the Church AND questioned the validity of the Vulgate • New Translations of the Bible undermined Catholic authority • In the North: Erasmus, Ximenes (Spain) LeFevre (in France) Valla (in Italy)

  11. Italian Renaissance • Deemphasized religion • Secularism and individualism emphasized by Church leaders • Many decried the moral decline of the Church

  12. New Critics opposed to the moral decline of the Church • Ulrich Zwingli was a preacher who was trained as a humanist and used Erasmus’ edition of the Greek New Testament • John Calvin was influenced by humanism; especially the writings of Erasmus • After the Reformation, many monasteries were turned into schools by humanists.

  13. Martin Luther 1483-1546 • Was supposed to be a lawyer • Conversion experience • Augustinian monk • Taught at the University of Wittenberg in Saxony

  14. At the Same time… • Pope Leo X looking for more money to build St. Peter’s Cathedral in Rome • Authorized John Tetzel to sell indulgences • “As soon as a coin in the coffer rings, a soul from purgatory springs.” • Tetzel’s selling of indulgences had gotten out of hand

  15. October 31, 1517 The 95 Thesis • Luther went beyond the mere criticism of selling indulgences • He questioned the authority of the Pope to grant indulgences (Scriptural questions) • The actual nailing of the 95 Thesis may not have happened • But the printing press spread his ideas rapidly

  16. The Pope was not worried • Luther’s outbursts did not seem unlike theological debates between different orders of monks that were common • BUT in 1518 when Luther was told by the pope to stop, he defied the Pope’s authority • Luther’s protector was Frederick III (the Wise) of Saxony

  17. In a 1520 debate • With Catholic theologian, Johann Eck • Luther denied the infallibility of the pope (and a general council) • Claimed that the Church made a mistake when executing Jan Hus

  18. Remember what was going on in Italy • Renaissance • The League of Cambrai and invasion

  19. 1520 Luther published his theology of reform • Salvation through faith alone • Bible is the sole authority • Rejected most sacraments (baptism, communion and penance still ok) • The Church = priesthood of all believers • Criticized indulgence sales, simony, etc. • Rejected poverty, chastity, obedience • Encouraged German princes to reform the Church in their states (advantages)

  20. Leo X excommunicated Luther 1520 • Luther threw the Papal Bull containing the news into the fire

  21. 1521 The Diet of Worms • Was the tribunal of the HRE which had the power to outlaw and sentence execution through burning at the stake • Charles V had promised before his election to HRE that he would not allow anyone to be executed or outlawed without a fair trial

  22. The Diet of Worms • Charles V demanded that Luther recant his writings • Luther, “Here I stand, I can do no other” • Edict of Worms: Luther was outlawed as a heretic by the HRE • But was saved and protected by agents of Frederick the Wise

  23. 1523 Luther translated the Bible into the Vernacular • = the development of the modern German language • Since any literate German could have access to Scripture…was a democratizing factor for religion

  24. 1530 Confessions of Augsburg • Written by Luther’s friend…Philip Melanchthon • He tried to mend the rift between Lutheranism and Catholicism within the German states of the HRE • Didn’t work BUT… • Confessions of Augsburg became the traditional statement of the Lutheran Church

  25. Confessions of Augsburg • Salvation through Faith alone • Bible is the sole authority • The Church is the Priesthood of all believers

  26. The early spread of Lutheranism • German princes in the North were drawn to Lutheranism: • they could escape the authority of the Catholic Church • They could confiscate Church lands within their kingdoms • The Southern part of the HRE remained Catholic

  27. The spread of Lutheranism • Denmark and Sweden also embraced Lutheranism • Calvinism will win much of the rest of Western Europe…later

  28. The Political Repercussions of Lutheranism • Charles V (too late) tried to stop the spread of Lutheranism • Remember…Sack of Rome 1527 • Was busy fighting Francis I in Italy • Also Turks were threatening Hungary • Now HRE and the Pope allied against Lutheranism

  29. The Swabian Rebellion • Aka The Peasants’ War 1524-1525 • Peasants believed that Luther would support a liberal social agenda because he was religiously liberal • BUT, Although Luther sympathized with the plight of the peasants, he was not interested in social or political reform; only in reforming the Church

  30. The Swabian Rebellion • 1525: TheTwelve Articles (Peasants’ Demands) • End of serfdom and tithes • End of Feudal hunting rights and other oppressive practices • 100,000+ peasants involved • Luther: Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of the Peasants

  31. The Swabian Peasant Uprising • Luther was disgusted with the violence • Admonished both Lutheran and Catholic princes to crush the revolt • They did • The peasants felt betrayed • REMEMBER: Although Luther was a religious liberal, he was no threat to the existing social or political order.

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