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The Protestant Reformation

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Page 1: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

The Protestant Reformation

Page 2: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

The state of EuropePowerful/wealthy Catholic Church

RenaissanceHumanism

Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Page 3: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Catholic Church in the 15th Century

Defined by extravagance

Page 4: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Pope Leo X

Needed $$$ for St. Peter’s Bascilica

Approves the sale of indulgences (buying your way into purgatory/heaven)

Money for building project

Page 5: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Martin Luther - 1517

95 Theses

Criticized practices of the Church

(Including sale of indulgences)

Edict of Worms

Holy Roman Emperor condemned Luther and his writings

Page 6: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

95 Theses

Page 7: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

1. When Jesus said "repent" he meant that believers should live a whole life repenting

2. Only God can give salvation - not a priest.

3. Inwards penitence must be accompanied with a suitable change in lifestyle.

4. Sin will always remain until we enter Heaven.

5. The pope must act according to canon law.

6. Only God can forgive -the pope can only reassure people that God will do this.

7. A sinner must be humbled in front of his priest before God can forgive him.

Page 8: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Effects of Martin LutherPrinting Press = 95 Theses available to many people

1530 – Lutheranism an official branch of Christianity

Begins the Protestant Reformation

Page 9: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Protestant England1527 – Pope refuses to annul King Henry VIII’s marriage to Catherine of Aragon

1534 – Henry breaks with the Catholic Church to divorce his wife, becomes official Head of Church of England

Page 10: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

1553 – Queen Mary I – Back to Catholic, death to Protestants!

1558 – Queen Elizabeth I - restores Church of England – persecutes Catholics

Page 11: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

The Counter-Reformation

Which is really a reformation, and what Martin Luther wanted in the first place

Page 12: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Counter-Reformation

The Church response to the Protestant movement

Page 13: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

St. Ignatius of Loyola founds the Jesuit Order -

1534

Concentrate on education

Founded schools, missions, and universities

Page 14: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Council of Trent 1545-1563Training of priests

regulated

Indulgences abolished

Got rid of financial abuses

Rejects Protestants emphasis on the individual

Boost to Catholicism

Page 15: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Women in the Church

Before Renaissance, lived only in Convents

After…

Would help poor/orphans/sick

Founded Orders toeducate girls

train women to be teachers

Build schools for girls

Page 16: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Inquisition (not to be confused with the earlier and more violent Spanish Inquisition of Mel

Brooks fame)

Church court to fight Protestantism

Accused Protestants of breaking church law

Used torture violence etc… (why not, it works! …right?)

Page 17: The Protestant Reformation. The state of Europe Powerful/wealthy Catholic Church Renaissance Humanism Rise of Nations and Nationalism

Reading: Brought Before the Inquisition,

1573Why does Paolo Veronese believe he is brought before the Inquisitors?

What issues do they have with the figures in his painting?

What is the major complaint about the painting?

What does he change?

What does the result of the inquiry tell you about the Inquisition as a whole?