the reformation continues. w/tr: november 28/29th
TRANSCRIPT
THE R
EFORMAT
ION
CONTINUES
W/TR: NOVEMBER 28/29TH
CALVIN
BEGIN
S
ANOTHER
PROTE
STANT
CHURCH
SOME REVIEW
Who started the Reformation?Martin LutherWhat was Martin Luther upset about?The selling of indulgencesWhat are indulgences?Free pass for sinsWhy did Henry VIII leave the church?Wanted a divorce (a son)What is a protestant?A Christian who doesn’t recognize the pope as the
head of the church
JOHN CALVIN
• 1546- founded Calvinism
• John Calvin was born in France and was only 12 years old when Martin Luther was standing trial and refusing to recant at the Council of Worms.
• But Calvin heard about the controversy and, even at 12, was intrigued by the excommunicated monk Luther’s bold defense of himself and his belief in the Scriptures.
CALVIN BEGINS ANOTHER PROTESTANT CHURCH
• 1536 published book, Institutes of Christian Religion
• Expressed ideas about God, salvation, human nature
• Created a system of Protestant theology
CALVINISM BELIEFS
• Calvin thought people were sinful by nature and couldn’t earn Salvation
• Believed in Predestination- God knows from the beginning of time who will be saved, those people are called the “elect”
• Thought a disciplined, austere life would prove who had been chosen
CALVINISM AND THE GOVERNMENT Believed ideal government was a
theocracy (a government controlled by religious leaders)
Protestants in Geneva, Switzerland asked Calvin to lead their city- he did so with strict rules
Everyone attended religious class, couldn’t wear bright clothing or play cards
Authorities imprison or excommunicate anyone breaking rules
JOHN K
NOX
JOHN KNOX• Believed that people were
burned at the stake, if preached differently than Calvin
• To many protestants, Geneva was an ideal city
• John Knox, preacher from Scotland put the same ideas into Scottish towns after visiting Geneva
CALVINISM SPREADS BY KNOX
Protestant nobles, led by Knox succeeded in making Calvinism Scotland’s official religion
Followers of Knox became known as Presbyterians
Swiss, Dutch and French reformers adopted Calvinist form of church organization
Although many protestant churches trace roots to Calvin, they have softened Calvin’s strict teachings
HUGENOTS
HUGUENOTS
• In France, Calvin's followers were called Huguenots
• Hatred between Catholics and Huguenots led to violence
• On one occasion, mobs of Catholics began hunting for Protestants and brutally murdered them after a Catholic feast known as St. Bartholomew’s Day
Up to 12,000 people were killed.
OTHER R
EFORMERS
OTHER REFORMERS
• Protestants taught that people should read the bible, as it was the source for truth
• Christians start interpreting the bible for themselves=new Protestant groups form based on those beliefs
ANABAPTIS
TS
ANABAPTISTS
• Name: Greek for “baptize-again”• Believed in baptizing only adults who choose to
be Christian• Believed church and state should be separate• Refused to fight in wars (Pacifists)
ANABAPTISTS
• Viewed by Catholics and Protestants as radicals who threaten society
• The forerunners of the Amish and Mennonites, influencing the Quakers
• Influenced the Quakers and Baptists who late split from the Anglican church.
Mostly live in
northeastern
part of US
ANGLICANS
ANGLICANS• (1534): founded by King Henry
VIII of England• King Henry enraged by pope’s
decision not to grant him divorce
• Believed the monarch, not the pope, was supreme religious authority of England
• Broke away, but beliefs were almost the same as the Catholic Church
THE C
ATHOLIC
REFORMAT
ION
THE CATHOLIC REFORMATION
• While Protestant churches had many followers, millions were true to the Catholic church
• Helping Catholics stay loyal was a movement within the church called the Catholic Reformation
IGNATIUS OF LOYOLA
• Grew up in fathers castle in Loyola, Spain
• Turning point in his life came while recovering from an injury during war
• Thought about his sins and life of Jesus
• Wrote book called Spiritual Exercises, laying out a day to day plan of prayer, study and meditation
For next 18 years, Ignatius gathered followers
1540, the pope made his followers a religious order called the Society of Jesus
Members were called Jesuits Concentrated on 3 activities:
1)found superb schools throughout Europe
2)convert non-Christians to Catholicism3) stop Protestantism from spreading
REFORMING POPES
• 2 popes took the lead in reforming the Catholic Church
• Pope Paul III called a council of church leaders to meet in Trent, Italy
• Known as Council of Trent
Pope Paul III
COUNCIL OF TRENT Catholic bishops and
cardinals agreed on several doctrines:
-church’s interpretation of the bible is final, anyone interpreting different was a heretic
-Christians need faith and good works for salvation- not just faith as Luther suggested
-Bible and church tradition equal authorities for guiding Christian life
-indulgences valid expressions of faith
POPE PAUL IV Paul IV, another reforming
pope carried out councils decrees
Made a list of books considered to be dangerous to Catholic faith- Index of Forbidden Books
Bishops ordered to burn them (along with Protestant Bibles)
In 1 day, 10,000 books burned in Venice
INDEX OF FORBIDDEN BOOKS
LEGACY OF THE REFORMATION
Reformation had lasting effects:
Protestant churches flourishReligion no longer unites Europe
Church power declinesIndividual monarchs and states gain power
Help set the stage for the modern world
ACTIVITY
Get out your book and turn to page…
You will be filling out a chart discussing the differences between different sections of Christianity.