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THE REFORMATION An Overview

The Reformation - An Overview

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Page 1: The Reformation - An Overview

THE REFORMATIONAn Overview

Page 2: The Reformation - An Overview

BACKGROUND TO THE REFORMATION

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NORTHERN EUROPE IN THE 1500S

• Northern Europeans had much uncertainty in their lives o Most were poor and life could be violent o Changing economy to urban, market-based economies o Wealth distributed unequally

• With the printing press, Renaissance humanist ideas spread o Return to classical education o Emphasis on social reform

• Used humanist ideas to question the Church

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CHURCH ABUSES• Catholic Church increasingly caught up in worldly affairs

o Popes competed with Italian princes for political power o Popes fought wars to protect Papal States against invasions by

secular rulers o Fought to expand own interests

• Popes were leading lavish lives, supported the arts, and hired artists to beautify churches o To finance, Church increased fees for services (marriages,

baptisms, etc.) and some clergy sold indulgences o Indulgence: Pardon for sins committed during a person’s

lifetime

• Many Christians, mainly northern Europeans protested these Church practices

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PRE-REFORMATION REVOLTS• John Wycliffe

o 1300s England o Systematic attack on Church o Used sermons and writings to call for change o After death, followers met in secret to keep

Wycliffe’s movement alive

• Jan Hus o Born 40 years after Wycliffe in the current Czech

Republic o Led reform movement o Executed for reform

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GERMAN REFORMATION

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MARTIN LUTHER• German monk and professor of theology

• Led protest against Catholic Church in 1517 o Near Wittenberg, Germany, Johann Tetzel, a priest, set up

pulpit ▪ Offered indulgences in return for paying money to

rebuild the Cathedral of St. Peter in Rome ▪ Claimed indulgences would assure entry into heaven

for the payer and his dead relatives

• Wrote the 95 Theses in Wittenberg, Germany in response to Tetzel o Arguments against indulgences

▪ Indulgences had no basis in the Bible ▪ Pope had no authority to release souls from purgatory ▪ Christians can only be saved through faith

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RESPONSE TO 95 THESES• Copies of Luther’s 95 These printed and distributed across Europe

• Caused debate

• Church asked Luther to recant (give up his views)

• Luther refused – created new doctrines

• Luther urged Christians to reject the authority of Rome • Believed Church could only be reformed by secular (non-Church) authorities

• 1521: Pope Leo X excommunicated Luther

• 1521: Charles V, new Holy Roman emperor, requested Luther at the diet of Worms • Diet = assembly of German princes • Charles V ordered Luther to recant; Luther again refused; Charles V declares Luther

an outcast

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LUTHER’S TEACHINGS AND IDEAS• Luther’s Beliefs

o All Christians have equal access to God through faith and the Bible

o Translated parts of Bible into German so ordinary people could read and study it

o Wanted every town to have school for children to learn to read the Bible

o Banned indulgences, confession, pilgrimages, and prayers to saints

o Simplified rituals of mass and focused on sermon

o Allowed clergy to marry

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SPREAD OF LUTHERANISM• Luther’s beliefs spread throughout Germany and Scandinavia due to the printing press • By 1530, Lutherans used the term “Protestant” (name for those who protested papal

authority)

• Support of Lutheranism o Some Clergy

▪ saw it as answer to Church corruption o German Princes

▪ Throw off rule of the Church and Holy Roman emperor and chance to seize church propertyin their territories for their own purposes

o Some Germans ▪ Feeling of national loyalty

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PEASANTS’ REVOLT• 1524: Revolt Across Germany

o Peasants hoped to gain Luther’s support for social and economic change

o Called for an end of serfdom and demanded other changes in their livelihoods

o Became violent as revolt intensified

o Luther denounced revolt

o Nobles suppressed rebellion with Luther’s support ▪ Tens of thousands of peasants killed ▪ Thousands became homeless

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PEACE OF AUGSBURG• 1530s-1540s: Charles V tried forcing German princes back into Catholic Church

• Several brief wars ensued

• 1555 – Peace of Augsburg

o Settlement between Charles V and German princes

o Each prince decided which religion, Catholicism or Lutheranism, would be followed in his land

▪ Lutheranism: most northern German states

▪ Catholicism: southern German states

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REFORMATION IN SWITZERLAND

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ULRICH ZWINGLI

• Lived in Zurich, Switzerland

• Priest and admirer of Erasmus

• Stressed importance of the Bible and rejected elaborate church rituals

• Ideas were adopted by Zurich’s city council

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JOHN CALVIN• Born in France

• Trained as priest and lawyer

• 1536 – Published book about his religious beliefs and explained how to organize and run a Protestant church

• Shared many of Luther’s beliefs; however, had some of his own views o Preached predestination

▪ Idea that God had long ago determined who would gain salvation

o World divided into 2 types of people – saints and sinners

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CALVINISM IN SWITZERLAND

• 1541: Protestants in Geneva ask Calvin to lead community

• Calvin sets up a theocracy o Theocracy = government run by church leaders

• Geneva followers consider themselves a “chosen people” entrusted by God to build a truly Christian society o Stressed hard work, discipline, thrift, honesty, and morality o Faced fines or punishments for offenses

• Many Protestants viewed Geneva as a model community o Late 1500s, Calvinism spreads to Germany, France, the

Netherlands, England, and Scotland

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SPREAD OF CALVINISM

• Causes bloody wars of religion across Europe

o Germany: Catholics and Lutherans opposed Calvinists

o France: War raged between French Calvinists and Catholics

o Netherlands: Calvinists preached in countryside to avoid persecution

o England: Some Calvinists sailed to the America in early 1600s to escape persecution

o Scotland: Religious rebellion let by John Knox, Calvinist preacher, that eventually overthrew the Catholic queen

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ANABAPTISTS

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IDEAS OF ANABAPTISTS• Rejected infant baptism

o Argued infants were to you to understand meaning of accepting the Christian faith

• Some sought radical social changes o Abolish private property o Speed up the coming of God’s day of

judgment by violent means

• Took over Munster, Germany o Luther advised his supporters to join

Catholics in suppressing the Anabaptists ▪ Seen as threat on traditional order

• Most Anabaptists were peaceful o Called for religious toleration and

separation of church and state

• Baptists, Mennonites, and Amish trace religious ancestry to the Anabaptists

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ENGLISH REFORMATION

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HENRY VIII• King of England

• Originally against Protestant revolt o Pope gave him title, “Defender of the Faith,” for writing a

pamphlet denouncing Luther

• Married 18 years to Catherine of Aragon and had one child, Mary Tudor

• Believed stability of England depended on him having a male heir o In love with Anne Boleyn, a servant to the Queen o Thought if he could divorce the Queen and marry Anne, he

may be able to have a male heir

• 1527: Henry VIII asks Pope to annul (cancel) his marriage to Catherine of Aragon

o Pope refuses request because he did not want to offend Charles V, Holy Roman emperor, and nephew to Catherine of Aragon

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CHURCH OF ENGLAND• With no annulment from the Pope, Henry VIII took over the English church

• Guided by his chancellor, Thomas Cromwell, he had Parliament pass a series of laws o English church came under Henry VIII’s rule, no longer under the pope’s control

• Appointed Thomas Cranmer as first archbishop of the new church o Annuls king’s marriage and in 1533 Henry VIII marries Anne Boleyn

• 1533: Anne Boleyn gives birth to daughter, Elizabeth

• 1534: Act of Supremacy passed by Parliament o Henry became “the only supreme head on Earth of the Church of England”

• Many Catholics refused to accept Act of Supremacy o Executed for treason

▪ Sir Thomas More, great English humanist and served in Henry’s government, tried to resign in protest of Act ❖ Catholic Church later canonized him (recognized as a saint)

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CHURCH OF ENGLAND

• 1536 – 1540: Royal officials investigate Catholic convents and monasteries o Henry VIII orders them closed as they are “centers of immorality” and

seizes their land and wealth • Henry VIII gives some of the new land to nobles and high-ranking citizens

o Secures their support for the Anglican Church (new name of the Church of England)

• Anglican Church most similar to the Catholic Church o Henry VIII not religious radical and reject most Protestant doctrine o He kept most Catholic forms of worship o Difference from Catholic Church: 1) broke away from Rome and 2)

allowed use of English Bible

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EDWARD VI• 1547: Henry VIII dies

• One surviving male heir – Edward – becomes king of England at age 9

• Edward VI and advisors were devout Protestants

• Take steps to make England a Protestant country o Parliament passed new laws bringing Protestant reform

to England o Thomas Cramner – writes Book of Common Prayers – required

reading in all church services in country o Sparked uprisings; however, they were quickly suppressed

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MARY I

• Edward VI dies as a teenager and his half-sister, Mary Tudor, becomes Queen

• Mary I determined to bring Catholicism back to England

• Under her rule, hundreds of English Protestants, including Archbishop Thomas Cramner, are burned at the stake for heresy

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ELIZABETH I• 1558 – Mary I dies

• Throne passed to Elizabeth, daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn

• Determined the future of the Church of England

• Enforced series of reforms called the Elizabethan settlement o Policies were a compromise between Protestant and Catholic practices

▪ Church of England preserved much Catholic ritual and kept hierarchy of bishops and archbishops

▪ Monarch was “supreme governor” over spiritual matters in England ▪ Restored version of Common Book of Prayers, accepted moderate

Protestant doctrine, and allowed English to replace Latin in church services

• Compromises accepted by both Catholics and Protestants and ended the religious turmoil • England became a Protestant nation while keeping many Catholic

traditions

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CATHOLIC REFORMATION(COUNTER-REFORMATION)

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GIROLAMO SAVONAROLA• A Monk • One of first reformers of to try to change Catholic church

from withing • Late 1400s, preached fiery sermons against abuses of the

church • Called for the church to melt down gold and silver

ornaments to buy bread for the hungry and poor members of the church

• Convinced people to gather and burn their own jewelry and trinkets o Fire knows as the “bonfire of vanities”

• Pope Alexander eventually excommunicated him for spreading ideas the Pope thought were dangerous

• 1498 – executed in Florence

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Society of Jesus• Most influential new religious order to reform church • Also known as the Jesuit order • Founded in 1534 by Ignatius of Loyola

o Basque nobleman and former soldier o Father General of the order

▪ Ran Jesuits like a military organization ▪ Emphasized obedience to church above all

• 1539 – Pope approves order • Jesuits concentrated on education as means of combating

the Protestant Reformation o Established missions, schools, and universities

• With Jesuits’ effective organization, Catholic Church began to regain ground against Reformation

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COUNCIL OF TRENT• Pope Paul III convened Council of Trent in 1545

o Need to redefine the doctrines of the Catholic faith o Led by Italian cardinal Carlo Borromeo

• Series of reforms addressed the corruption of the clergy o Training of priests was regulated o Financial abuse was curbed o The sale of indulgences was abolished

• Declared salvation comes through faith and good works

• Stated the Bible is a major source of religious truth but isn’t the only source

• Council met on and off until 1563 Pope Paul III

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COUNCIL OF TRENT

• Pronouncements of Council of Trent meant there would be no compromise between Catholicism and Protestantism

• The council's bold action was a great boost to Catholicism

• Austria, Poland, and other parts of Europe returned to the Catholic Church. 

• Catholics felt renewed energy and confidence

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THE INQUISITION

• Pope strengthened Inquisition to fight Protestantism • Inquisition = Church court set up during Middle Ages

• Used secret testimony, torture, and execution to root out heresy

• Prepares the Index of Forbidden Books • List of works considered too immoral or irreligious for

Catholics to read • Included works by Luther and Calvin as well as earlier

works by Petrarch and other humanists

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SPREAD OF CATHOLICISM

• Jesuits used renewed spirit to expand scope of church

• By 1700, they operated 669 colleges in Italy, Germany, and other places

• Many future leaders were educated in Jesuit schools o Order would have some influence over political

affairs • Worked in India, Japan, China, and other places

• Gained and passed along information about the cultures of other lands

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RELIGION IN EUROPE

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