The Reformation 3.03 Trace social, political, economic, and cultural changes associated with the...

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The Reformation 3.03 Trace social, political, economic, and cultural changes associated with the Renaissance, Reformation, the rise of nation-states, and absolutism.

Transcript of The Reformation 3.03 Trace social, political, economic, and cultural changes associated with the...

Page 1: The Reformation 3.03 Trace social, political, economic, and cultural changes associated with the Renaissance, Reformation, the rise of nation-states, and.

The Reformation

3.03 Trace social, political, economic, and cultural changes associated with

the Renaissance, Reformation, the rise of nation-states, and absolutism.

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Prelude to the Reformation

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Prelude to the Reformation

• During the second half of the fifteenth century, adherents of Christian humanism sought to reform the Catholic Church.

• They believed that humans could improve themselves and thus improve society.

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Prelude to the Reformation

• Desiderius Erasmus thought that external forms of medieval religion such as pilgrimages, fasts, and relics were unnecessary and that inner piety derived from religious philosophy was more important.

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Prelude to the Reformation• Reasons for Reform of the Catholic Church:– Catholic Popes were more concerned with

politics and material goods than spiritual guidance.

– Parish priests seemed ignorant of their spiritual duties.

– An automatic means of obtaining salvation, such as the collection of relics, was being presented to the people.

– The use of indulgences was used to avoid punishment for sin.

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Martin Luther

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Martin Luther

• Martin Luther was a monk and professor at the University of Wittenberg in Germany.

• He believed that humans would be saved by their faith in God and not by the good works done in His name.

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Martin Luther

• Luther did not want to break away from the Church, only to reform it. He wrote a list of his grievances, known as the Ninety-five Theses, and copies were sent all over Germany.

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Martin Luther

• In 1521, Luther was excommunicated for attempting to get German princes to overthrow the papacy and establish a reformed German church.

• The Edict of Worms made Luther an outlaw, and his works were banned.

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Martin Luther• Many German princes who

supported Luther confiscated Church land, and a government church was established.

• A new religious service which consisted of reading the Bible, preaching the word of God, and songs, became the basis of the doctrine known as Lutheranism.

• Lutheranism was the first Protestant faith.

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Politics in the German Reformation

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Politics in the German Reformation• The Holy Roman Empire was

ruled by Charles V who wanted the empire to remain Catholic.

• The empire included Spain, Austria, Bohemia, Hungary, the Low Countries, Milan, and Naples.

• Problems with the Ottoman Turks, French rivalry, and the alliance of the German kingdoms prevented Charles from asserting military power over the Protestant Reformation in Germany.

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Politics in the German Reformation

• In 1555 the Peace of Augsburg ended the religious wars by accepting the division of Christianity. German rulers, but not the German people, could choose their own religion.

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John Calvin

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John Calvin• John Calvin was a

Frenchman whose conversion to Protestantism forced him to flee to Switzerland.

• Calvin believed in an all-powerful God and the idea of predestination.

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John Calvin• Calvin’s ideas led to the

rise of Calvinism which soon became more popular than Lutheranism.

• Calvin worked to reform the city of Geneva, Switzerland.

• Geneva soon became the center of Protestant reform in Europe, and its missionaries were sent all over to convert the local populations.

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Reformation in England

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Reformation in England• King Henry VIII of England established

the Church of England when the pope refused to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragon.

• The Act of Supremacy of 1534 declared the king of England the official head of religious doctrine, with control over discipline, clerical appointments, and breaking ties with the pope.

• Henry’s Church of England was very similar to Catholicism, although after his death English officials attempted to make it more “Protestant”.

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Reformation in England• In 1553, Henry’s

daughter, Mary, came to power and attempted to restore Roman Catholicism.

• Her efforts, including the burning of more than 300 Protestants, earned her the nickname of “Bloody Mary.”

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Anabaptists

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Anabaptists• Anabaptists were Protestant

reformers who did not want to give power to the state.

• Anabaptists believed:– Religion should be voluntary;

baptism occurred as an adult.– All believers were equal; any

member could become a minister.

– Separation of state and church; refused to bear arms or serve in military positions

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Anabaptists

• The religious and political beliefs of the Anabaptists seemed radical, and they were persecuted by Catholics and Protestants.

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Reformation and Society

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Reformation and Society• With the rise of Protestantism

came the end of celibacy for Church leaders.

• Women were subservient, and their roles were obedience to their husband and to bear children.

• Protestants expected Jews to convert to Lutheranism. When they refused, Protestants such as Martin Luther wrote that Jewish synagogues and homes should be destroyed.

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Catholic Reformation• The Catholic response to the

Protestant Reformation was a Catholic Reformation.

• A Spanish nobleman named Ignatius of Loyola founded the Jesuits, a group who swore allegiance to the pope.

• Jesuit missionaries were influential in spreading Catholicism in Germany and the rest of the world.

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Catholic Reformation• Pope Paul II led a

reformation of the papacy, ending corruption either real or perceived.

• The pope, archbishops, bishops, and other theologians met irregularly at the Council of Trent to discuss Church matters and establish Catholic doctrine.

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Vocabulary 1

• Indulgence: a release from all or part of punishment for sin by the Catholic Church, reducing time in purgatory after death

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Vocabulary 2

• Lutheranism: the religious doctrine that Martin Luther developed; it differed from Catholicism in the doctrine of salvation, which Luther believed could be achieved by faith alone, not by good works; Lutheranism was the first Protestant faith

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Vocabulary 3

• Predestination: the belief that God has determined in advance who will be saved (the elect) and who will be damned (the reprobate)

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Vocabulary 4

• Annul: declare invalid