Protestant Reformation Essay

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    The Protestant Reformation affected religious life in the early 15th century. It was a movement that reformed the beliefs and practices of the Roman Catholic Church. At the time, the church was viewed as a wealthy and powerful institution that was practicing many corrupt ideas such as selling indulgences. Indulgences were letters of forgiveness for one’s sin. This sparked anger causing priests to revolt by calling for reforms to take place. A German priest and monk, Martin Luther became a leader

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    that cause the Protestant Reformation. It was a religious, political, cultural and logical disturbance that had made some Europeans split from the Catholic Church. “In northern and central Europe, reformers [such as John Calvin, Henry VIII and most importantly Martin Luther] challenged papal authority and questioned the Catholic Church’s ability to define Christian practice.” The tension between the reformers and the church triggered wars, persecutions and the Counter-Reformation, also called the

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    Protestant reformation Task 1A The Black Death sometimes called the black plague was devastating for the people living in Europe from 1346 to 1353 Killing around 200 million people, there were many different theories to what was happening to everyone, Most people thought that it was some kind of judgement day, killing all the people who had sinned. Until the priests and popes and important people that no one ever thought God would want dead, so eventually most people figured out that by going

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    “How and to what extent did the methods and ideals of Renaissance humanism contribute to the Protestant Reformation?” The renaissance and it’s humanistic principles took form in different ways across Europe. In the Italian states, for example, humanism permeated art, resulting is some of mans greatest works which reflect the artists appreciation of the individual and focus away from god. In northern Europe however, humanists didn’t turn away from god, they instead worked to reform the church

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    he Reformation fragmented the unity of the Roman Catholicism matrix, as the emergence of a new confessional church undermined the traditional religious identity. Martin Luther pioneered a movement in which he critiqued church corruption by posting his 95 theses on the door of a Roman Catholic church in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517. Luther critiqued the Catholic church practices but not the institution in order to save the church's credibility. This event sparked a series of attitudes and actions that

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    so-called Protestant Reformation was the split within western Christian Church initiated by Martin Luther, John Calvin, and other early Protestants. Calls for reform came form all sectors of the European society and it is this dissatisfaction that explains why the ideas of Martin Luther evoked such extreme responses, there was already a ready audience. Although there had been significant attempts at reform before Luther, the date usually given for the start of the Protestant Reformation is 1517, when

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    1. Discuss the political and social consequences of the Protestant Reformation in the first half of the sixteenth century. During our studies, I felt that the Protestant Reformation had many consequences during this time frame. It brought problems to many family’s inner circle, as well as education and various religious beliefs. Women now suffered a step back in their lives. They were often pressured into being the house wife and no longer allowed to participate in various roles. Education for boys

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    The Protestant Reformation period was one of the most single important aspects to the development of Christianity. The Protestant Reformation began in the fifteenth century around 1517. This was the time that Martin Luther created his “95 theses, addressing his objections to the medieval church’s doctrine of purgatory (WCW 151). The historical situation of the Protestant Reformation was a time of the churches competing for power based on their own beliefs of Christianity. Henry the V111 broke with

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    The Protestant Reformation was a European movement in the 16th century which initially attempted to reform the beliefs and traditions of the Roman Catholic Church. Changing attitudes towards the Bible influenced the Reformation Movement. Martin Luther and other reformers considered the bible to be the only reliable source of instructions, as opposed to the teachings of the church. Similar to Humanists, Reformers wished to return to the source to analyze and examine the truth. Upon evaluation of the

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    Rahul Mangal The Protestant Reformation was a European movement in the 16th century which initially attempted to reform the beliefs and traditions of the Roman Catholic Church. Changing attitudes towards the bible influenced the Reformation Movement. Martin Luther and other reformers considered the bible to be the only reliable source of instructions, as opposed to the teachings of the church. Similar to Humanists, Reformers wished to return to the source to analyze and examine the truth. Upon evaluation

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