Home » Religion » The Protestant Reformation

The Protestant Reformation

by pattya7x in Religion, July 5, 2009

The Protestant Reformation was the rebellious group of people who solved the corruption of the catholic church. It began with Martin Luther who lived from 1483 to 1546.

Corruption in the catholic church really started in the early 1300 and ended in 1540, all in Europe. The first thing that went wrong was in 1302, the pope of the roman catholic church announced that religious and political power came only from him; so the pope now had complete power over the people. In 1309, termoil had struck the church.  This caused the church to be rebuilt and to be relocated in the town of Avignon in southern France.  It was a huge palace that showed the enormous power of the papacy over the people.  It was luxurious, filled with gold and jewelery. These riches were a result of a corrupt system which upset the people.

In 1337, the pope had so much power and his palace was so enormous, it caused a big war between England and France. This war lasted more than 100 years. In 1347 (ten years after the war started), the Black Plague killed over 25 million people in Europe in a span of only four years. The third thing that troubled everything was when a second pope was elected in Rome. This caused a conflict between the two popes; from Avignon and Rome, to get the control of the church. People didn’t know who to trust anymore.  Those who openly protested against their pope were executed.

Martin Luther

Corruption in the catholic church lasted for 240 years. Martin Luther was a catholic priest who lived during this period. He did not like what the pope announced. He searched in the bible and could not find anything that went with the pope. He decided to take his first step on the protestant reformation; that is to rebel against the corrupt church.

On October 31th  1517, Luther posted ninety-five criticizms on the doors of the palace church that protested against selling indulgences.  An indulgence is when a priest forgives you from sins you have done, therefore, eliminating those obstacles to the path to heaven; it’s like a confession. Selling indulgences is instead of a priest eliminating your sin, he made you pay for it with money, coins back then. It was a dishonest form of income for the church.

The Holy Roman Emperor Charles V was a supporter of the pope. He did not like that Luther publicly criticized the pope. Martin Luther did not care. He then wrote three books on how the church is corrupt and must be stopped. These books were published all across Germany. As a result, the pope and the emperor severely punished Luther by bannishing him from the church. But Luther would not stop rebelling. He and his friend Cedric the Wise decided to stay and hide in a castle far from the pope for protection. At the castle, Luther transcribed the bible into german, which had never been done before. This caused many Germans to respect Luther by making ‘Lutherinism’ which was a reformation of the church, free from the pope.

Many Germans used Lutherinism as an excuse to revolt against their rulers. This did not go well and, as a result, over the years, over 100 000 people died due to the rebelling against the pope. Even though many have struggled through this immense opression, Martin Luther and many who followed him succeeded in turning around the papacy for the good. Popes were no longer the ones who ruled over the lands, but were known for being religious priests who guided the church. The churches no longer received money from selling indulgences and the priests were respecting Luther. 

Today, Martin Luther is known for being: ”Father of the Protestant Reformation.”

3
Liked it

User Comments

  1. Skip Johnson

    On July 20, 2009 at 6:28 pm


    You’ve got some things right, though others would beg to differ on certain points.

    If you are judging the Catholic Church’s teachings by the Bible, as Luther did, then they were corrupt for a whole lot longer than the 240 years you suggest. Very early on, the Catholic Church in Rome took it on themselves to make serious alterations to the Ten Commandment Law of God, even as had been predicted would occur in passages such as Daniel chapter 7, where a “Little Horn Power” rising from the area of Rome would “seek to change times and laws”.

    The Papal Church, in order to incorperate as many of those of other religions into their ranks as quickly as possible, shifted the day of public worship from the seventh-day Saturday Sabbath prescribed by the fourth of the Ten Commandments, to Sunday, the first day of the week. This was the mark of Roman Papal authority, and spread from that city over the course of many centuries to now embrace nearly the entire Christian world in worship that is in violation to God’s Ten Commandment Law as expressed in the Bible.

    The Papal Church was also interested in not disturbing the worship practices of the many groups who worshipped idols. So they eleminated the second of the Ten Commandments, the law that forbids making images and bowing down before them and worshipping them. Now they only had nine commandments, instead of ten. So they split what had been the tenth commandment, against coveting, into two parts. Instead of not coveting your neighbors wife or property, as before, there were two commands against coveting. You couldn’t covet his wife. You couldn’t covet his property.

    These attempted alterations were successful in swelling the ranks of the papal church with many who continued to worship on the “venerable day of the sun” which was the day popular in Rome among the worshippers of Mithra in those early centuries, and also in incorperating many idol worshippers into Christian ranks. Often, the same idols that had been worshipped before were simply renamed after Christian saints and continued to be worshipped in the same temples.

    In this way, may of the practices and the beliefs that were part of paganism, and had no part in Biblical Christianity at all, were brought into the Catholic Church. This did not become well-known until the Enlightenment, when people began studying ancient literature of all kinds. When Luther began studying the Bible, which was not available to the common people in their own language at the time, he found a great deal of the teachings and practices of the Roman Church of which he was a priest to be in violation to its teachings and its recomendations. He said, “We need to obey the Bible, rather than the pope!” That’s what resulted in the Catholic-Protestant split.

    As for Luther’s reform resulting in the death of 100,000 persons due to his opposition to the Papacy, that’s rather undershooting the entire body count that has resulted from Papal persecutions. Again, Daniel chapter 7 declared centuries before the Papacy’s rise, that it would be a persecuting power that would “seek to wear out the saints of the Most High”, that is, fight against those who were actually being loyal to God and to His commandments rather than going along with the mixture of true and false that came from mixing paganism with Christianity in the Papacy. In fact, somewhere between 50 and 200 million were killed due to Papal involvement and influence and to extend its powers.

    One should know that all of the major Protestant reformers, including Martin Luther, John Knox, Zwingle, and the rest were in agreement that not only should the Bible be held as the corrector of teaching and practice for the individual Christian as for the church as a whole, but also that the Papacy was in fact, the prophetic fulfillment of the “little horn” power of Daniel 7, and the “Man of Sin” in Paul’s letter to the Thessalonians. This was the intellectual framework for their willingness to withdraw from Rome’s fellowship in protest, the very bedrock of Protestantism.

    It was so convincing and successful that the pope of the day called a council to attempt to get the finger of prophecy that pointed to his own activities off of him and directed somewhere else. Two Jesuit scholars, Alcazar and Ribera, came back with alternate explanations of the “little horn power” and the “man of sin” in the Biblical prophecies. One said the “little horn” was a Syrian ruler from before the time of Jesus who had desecrated the temple. Therefore, all prophecies of this sort were far in the past and should not be examined in relation to the Papacy’s activities. The other said, “No. Antichrist is a renegage Jew who will arise far in the future just before Jesus returns and cause great devestation.” Again, no need to examine the prophecies as they had been fulfilled in the centuries long activity of the Papacy, since their fulfillment wasn’t right there in front of everybody, but either far in the past, or far in the future.

    The pope saw these conflicting and mutually exclusive views and said, “Yes! Teach them both.” So that’s what the Counter Reformation did. And, plainly, it was a successful strategy. Now nearly all of the Protestant Churches embrace one or the other of these views, and have long ago abandoned the method of interpreting prophecy that Martin Luther and their founders once championed.

    For those who wish to study this matter further, Martin Luther is not only the Father of the Protestant Reformation, but also the Father of the Historical Interpretation of Bible Prophecy–which basically holds that the prophecies were given and began to unfold in history, stretching from the day they were given to such prophets as Daniel until the return of Jesus. This method of interpretation clearly identifies the Papal power as the “little horn” power opposed to God and His people, and also as the “Man of Sin” warned against by the apostle Paul. The other two options, which came from the Jesuit scholars in their original form, are Pretertism, which holds Antiochus Epiphanese is the antichrist little horn power, though his activities do not match the specifications of the prophecies in full, and Futurism, which says antichrist is a charismatic figure that will arise in the future and cause great ruin prior to Jesus’ return.

    These are important issues, and ones that many even who hold the name “Protestant” have long ago forgotten as they have embraced views that came from the Counter Reformation councils of the Papacy that followed Martin Luther’s Reformation.

    I would suggest the book “The Great Controversy” by Ellen White, as a good overview of these matters from a viewpoint that is closer to Luther’s days and views than those now held by the Church called by Luther’s name. These things are not secrets. They are a part of Christian history. It is just that they have been forgotten by those who should remember.

  2. AdamA7X

    On July 29, 2009 at 11:51 am


    Nice pat

  3. Pastor Tracy Robinson

    On October 14, 2009 at 8:16 pm


    Brother, you need to be true to the rality of the protestant movement. John Huss started the ball rolling long before Martin Luther did. Jan Huss died for the cause. So how then is Luther the father of protestanism?

Post Comment

Powered by Powered by Triond