Download - Preconditions for the Reformation

Transcript
Page 1: Preconditions for the Reformation

Preconditions for the Reformation

• Pope’s Unam Sanctam-Pope has authority over all earthly Kings

• Fr King Philip IV despised-Why?

• Advisor elected Pope-Clement V– Moved papacy to Avignon

France-was there for 70 years

– Under French influence

• Pope Gregory XI returned to Rome in 1377, but died– Rome elected own pope

– French elected own pope

• Known as the Great Schism How does the Church appear?

Page 2: Preconditions for the Reformation

John Wycliffe & Jan Hus

• Wycliffe-Scholar at Oxford attacked church practices– Wealth of the Church– Clergy immorality– Pope’s claim to supreme

authority

• Argued the Bible was the only guide to faith & salvation

• Jan Hus-follower of John– Taught at Univ. of Prague– Burned at stake as a heretic

• Why do you think these ideas were opposed by the Church?

Page 3: Preconditions for the Reformation

Printing Press & Education

• Gutenberg’s printing press– Allowed for Bibles to be

mass produced– Allowed educated men to

read more-became aware of Church doctrines

• Education-Renaissance– The lay city inhabitants were

more educated– Understood politics and

basic philosophic ideas– Lay people could preach on

their own-had own Bible & could read it.

• How does this undermine the Church?

Page 4: Preconditions for the Reformation

Martin Luther• As a monk, he studied

theology & received his doctorate

• Luther was troubled by his own sinfulness & the righteousness required by God for forgiveness that was taught by the Church

• Did Luther believe that Penance & good works were enough to gain salvation?

• Justification by faith alone– Believe & trust in Jesus

Christ because his righteousness satisfies God.

Page 5: Preconditions for the Reformation

The Reformation• Luther didn’t want to break

away-just reform• His complaints of the Church

– Indulgences/Purgatory• What is Purgatory?

– Church raising armies & declaring war

– Church Practices not found in the Bible-clerical celibacy, sacraments

– Infallibility of the Pope

• Oct. 31, 1517 he posted his 95 theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany

Page 6: Preconditions for the Reformation

Europe’s Response• Luther urged Germ. Princes

to force reforms on the church to curtail its political & economic power in Germany

• He was called before Emperor Charles V to recant his beliefs-Diet of Worms

• Some German princes sided with Luther-Why?

• Still declared an outlaw• Luther protected by a

German Prince-Frederick the Wise

• He translated Erasmus’ Greek Bible into German

“My conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot & will not recant anything…”

Page 7: Preconditions for the Reformation

Political Reasons for Supporting the

Reformation

• German princes argued that a church doesn’t need its huge landed estates-Why?

• Envied the property of the Church & its freedom from taxation

• What do you suppose the princes are trying to do?

• Way to assert their freedom from the Holy Roman Emperor

• Princes worked with converted preachers in bringing in new followers

Page 8: Preconditions for the Reformation

Anabaptists• Radical reformers who

called for more extreme separation from the RCC.

• Wanted a more visible moral transformation-Why?

• Rejected infant baptism• They physically separated

themselves from society– Formed religious

communities together– Ancestors of the Mennonites

& Amish– Why would this be a

problem? – Viewed as a threat by

political authorities

Page 9: Preconditions for the Reformation

Calvinists• Started by John Calvin in Geneva Switzerland-1536

• Believed in the idea of ‘predestination’– God knows who is going to

be saved– Guides those lives destined

for salvation

• Calvinists gained control of Geneva

• Believed people were sinful by nature– Outlawed dancing, card

playing, profane language– People liked the strictness of

the new denomination

•Calvinism had more followers than Luther & greatly influenced Northern Europe

•Why do you suppose people like the strictness of Calvininsm?

Page 10: Preconditions for the Reformation

England & the Reformation

• King Henry VIII actually was against Luther

• However, his wife didn’t produce a male heir

• Wanted to divorce her– Pope said no– How could he solve this?– Declared himself head of the

English Church– Sir Thomas More didn’t

agree and support-beheaded

• Henry VIII didn’t change the Church much– Maintained Catholic

doctrine in a country full of Protestants

Page 11: Preconditions for the Reformation

The Western Heritage 1995

Page 12: Preconditions for the Reformation

Catholic Counter-Reformation

• Church needed an answer to the Protestant uprisings-found help in the Jesuits– Started by Ignatius de Loyola in 1534

– Very militaristic with an emphasis on self-discipline & obedience to the Church

– Good Catholics were to deny themselves & submit to the higher Church authority

– Combined with the traditional spirituality & mysticism of the Church

• Was a potent combination– Won back many Protestants in

Austria, Bavaria & along the Rhine

– Why do you think the Church supported this monastic order? •How does geography play a role

in the success of the Jesuits?

Page 13: Preconditions for the Reformation

Church Answers the Reform Call

• Council of Trent 1545-1563– Made almost entirely of Ital.’s– Presided by the Pope

• Changes made:– Ban selling Indulgences– Made bishops live in their

diocese– New rules for clergy-better

dressed, educated, active, & strictly celibate

• No concessions made to Protestants on doctrines– Church said use of rich

display, mystery & ceremonies would inspire faith & help believers achieve salvation

•What did the Church change?

Page 14: Preconditions for the Reformation

Religious WarsOf Europe

• By 1550’s 1/3 of France was Protestant Calvinists

• Called the Huguenots, they worked to reform rest of Fr.– Catholic King Henry III not about to

let that happen

• St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre-1572– Rioters in Paris & around Fr. Killed

20,000 Protestants

• Calvinists knew they had to respond– Protestant Henry of Navarre became

King Henry IV

– He renounced Calvinism & returned to the Catholic fold

– What did Henry IV have to give up to be King?

•Edict of Nantes-issued by Henry IV & proclaimed a truce

•Protestants would control cities they occupied

Page 15: Preconditions for the Reformation
Page 16: Preconditions for the Reformation

Germany & The Thirty Years’ War

1618-1648

• Peace of Augsburg in 1555 assured that each prince could choose the faith of his territory

• Was an uneasy peace-a patchwork of Catholic/Protestant territories in the HRE

• The new HR Emperor, Ferdinand II, revoked the freedoms in Protestant Bohemia– They responded by throwing

his representatives out the castle window in Prague

– As new HR Emperor-was going to crush the revolt

Page 17: Preconditions for the Reformation

Bohemian Phase • Emperor Ferdinand II called on supporters in Bavaria & Spain– Sent troops to defeat the

Bohemians

– Battle of White Mountain-Catholic troops routed the Protestants

• Bavarian Duke pressed the war on into rest of Germany hoping to gain lands

• What does this tell you about the motives of the Nobility?

Page 18: Preconditions for the Reformation

Danish Period• The Danish King was

fearful that the Emperor was going to reCatholicize the whole HRE

• Why?• Danes started fighting the

Bavarian forces to maintain their Protestant faith– Also wanted to gain control

of land along North & Baltic Seas

– Was badly defeated by General Wallenstein who occupied Denmark

Page 19: Preconditions for the Reformation

Swedish Phase• Swedish King Adolphus had a

united Lutheran Sweden– Found allies in Northern Germany

to continue fighting– Won great victory at Breitenfeld– Swung war back to Protestant side

• Germans tired of fighting– Protestants compromise with

Emperor– Swedes won’t accept-invested too

much- what do they want?– French wanted to continue war-

• Secretly sent $ & supplies to Protestants

– Why would they do this? •What was the war being fought for now?

Page 20: Preconditions for the Reformation

Swedish & French Phase

• French enter the war in 1635 (They’re Catholic)

• Along with Swedes they continue the fighting-IN GERMANY!

• Germans watch their lands being looted– 1/3 of Germany is killed– Just as devastating as Black

Death

• Treaty of Westphalia-1648– Ended the war– Basically was a repeat of the

Peace of Augsburg– Calvinists gained legal protection– Brandenbug-Prussia emerged

powerful in N. Germany

What is now the role of religion in European politics?