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Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation in Europe of the 1500s

Luther’s role in the Protestant Reformation movement in Europe in the 1500s.

Luther was made to appear before the Diet of Worms, an assembly of the estate of the Holy Roman Empire.

Luther was found to be guilty of a crime of notoriety. As a punishment, he was declared, his writings were banned and he was to be arrested.

When Luther was arrested, Prince Frederick III, Elector of Saxony, a known supporter of Luther, had him intercepted by masked horsemen and brought to Wartburg Castle. He grew a beard to hide his identity for eleven months.

During this exile at Wartburg, Luther translated the New Testament from Greek to German. This work was published in September 1522 which sold 5,000 copies in two months. In the introduction of the New Testament he said that good works are derived from faith.

Around this time also Luther set upon himself to translate not just the New Testament but the entire Bible to German so ordinary people can understand it. The new German Bible was published September 1522.

Luther and his supporters began to break ties with the Roman Catholic Church.
Each Prince then were made to decide of the Lutheran teachings be allowed in their individual territories. Those who accepted Lutheran teachings formed part of the states known as Protestants or states that resisted the Edict of Worms.

Lutheranism became separate from Protestantism during 1530 at the Diet of Augsburg where Philipp Melanchton presented the core of Lutheran beliefs called Augsburg Confession. German princes signed the document to identify the “Lutheran” territories.

Protestant Reformation Movement

The Protestant Reformation movement began with Martin Luther’s protests in 1517 and ended with Peace of Westphalia in 1648. The movement was intended to introduce changes to the Catholic Church. The Christians were appalled by the hypocrisies and misconduct they observed in the Roman Catholic Church such as selling indulgences, buying and selling church positions and corruption.

Martin Luther was soon followed by John Calvin and Ulrich Zwingli. Zwingli started his protests in Switzerland about the same time Luther did in Germany. After the excommunication of Luther, Calvin’s writings help spurred the movement by uniting various groups operating independently in Switzerland, Scotland, Hungary, Germany and the rest of Europe.

Luther, Calvin and Zwingli were all referred to as Magisterial Reformers because the movements they started were supported by magistrates. In the case of Luther, Frederick the Wise was behind him. Zwingli and Calvin were protected by the city councils of Zurich and Geneva.

The important Protestant groups formed due to the reformation were the Lutherans, the Reformed/Calvinists/Presbyterians, the Anabaptists and the Anglicans.

A series of religious wars were waged during the Reformation which ended in the Thirty Years War. For thirty years which spanned 1618 to 1648, Catholic Habsburgs and followers waged war against Protestant princes of Germany. The Reformation period ended when Catholic France broke ties with the Habsburgs and fought side by side the Protestants in the battlefields. Feuding parties signed the Peace of Westphalia which brought them peace.

Differences between Catholic and Lutheran church

Lutheran church beliefs are bible based or Christ centered. The central teaching of Lutheran Church is that salvation is reaped by faith in Christ alone. Catholics believe in Sacraments as the way to salvation. Communion in Lutheran Mass is celebrated by partaking both the Body and Blood of Christ.

Roman Catholic Church believes that the church was founded by Apostle Peter and this authority is passed to the bishops. Lutherans believe that the church is founded by Jesus Christ and that the authority rests solely on Jesus not the authorities such as Peter.

The teachings of the Roman Catholic Church are derived from both scriptures and traditions of the church interpreted by the popes. Lutherans believe that all doctrine should be based on the Bible and that salvation is based in Jesus Christ alone. Tradition has no authority over the Bible in Lutheran churches.

The doctrine on salvation is another point of difference for Catholics and Lutherans. Catholics believe that faith and love will give them salvation. Lutherans, on the other hand, believe that it is to be gained by faith alone as a gift from God not through actions.

 

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  1. nobert soloria bermosa

    On April 15, 2008 at 9:51 am


    there is only one God but theres so many Christian sects.thanks for the very interesting topic,i just would like to add that Luther married a former nun in 1525.
    thanks

  2. Gwen

    On April 19, 2008 at 8:26 am


    thanks norbert! this is my first time to open the comments’ page and was quite shocked to see that i have accumulated a number already. to all the commenters, thank you! and my apologies it took so long for me to reply.

  3. satanic frog

    On June 10, 2008 at 7:41 am


    god is fake’
    that is all

  4. Goliath

    On January 3, 2009 at 11:44 am


    Good basis for a project

    awesome

  5. Chelcie

    On March 17, 2009 at 9:26 am


    god is why we are here today!
    God bless

  6. Evans Zock

    On May 16, 2009 at 1:13 pm


    Well done for you teaching explanations to some fact behind the catholic church and the Lutheran Church. But I want to say this here , Catholics does not believ that the church was found by Peter But Cgrist Himself. Rather it was believed that The authority was passed on to Peter and so to ohter bishops. Thanks for you good work, Fact is neccessary before conclussion

  7. Blood

    On April 19, 2010 at 10:37 pm


    God is just a frickin Fictional Character that everyone looks up to… pretty pathetic…

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