Chapter 13 The Reformation Protestant and Catholic The Protestant Revolt: Part 1.
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Transcript of Chapter 13 The Reformation Protestant and Catholic The Protestant Revolt: Part 1.

Chapter 13The Reformation
Protestant and Catholic The Protestant Revolt: Part 1

Why reform?!
Priests, bishops, popes, and monks:– collected money for
themselves– failed to keep their
promises of celibacy– lacked a high level of
learning/ education– Simony and nepotism– Misunderstanding
indulgences

Why wAS MONEY USED in EXCHANGE FOR AN INDULGENCE?
• Financial contributions / gifts considered to be acts of charity
• Giving money seen by most as a form of penance
• Greed among the clergy • Lack of education among the
people • Lack of education among the
clergy

Martin Luther 1483-1546
• Grew up in extreme simplicity
• Attended Latin School: Ten Commandments/Child’s Belief/Lord’s Prayer
• Monastery…driven there or conversion?

Martin Luther • Rose quite quickly through the ranks
of the monastery, • Was very unhappy• Scrupulosity– thinking that an act is
sinful when it isn’t; thinking something is gravely (very) sinful when it is actually a minor offense
• God is a righteous lawgiver and administrator of Justice
• Tempted with evil thoughts, hatred of God…
• Imagined God would most likely withhold forgiveness and salvation from him

Luther’s Objection to the Church
• Developed from his own personal struggles rather than from ecclesiastical affairs
• Inspired by William of Ockham
• Outraged by indulgences

The Ninety-Five Theses
• Posted in Wittenberg • Did not just spring up
overnight• Reaction to Archbishop of
Magdeburg, who would become Archbishop of Mainz
• Pope Leo X and the Archbishop of Mainz were competing over indulgences

Events Leading to Luther’s Theses
• Archbishop of Magdeburg wanted an appointment to the archiepiscopal see of Mainz
• Could not afford this “bill” • Borrowed the money from
a local wealthy family• The Archbishop asked to
aide in the construction of St. Peter’s Basilica
• Sent Tetzel to go and preach a special papal indulgence

Events Leading to Luther’s Theses
• Tetzel was given a handbook on how to preach/sell the indulgences
• A copy was brought to the University that Luther was at
• Luther was outraged

Duke Frederick of Saxony
• Placed relics on display for the veneration of the faithful
• Upset that pilgrims would bypass his city to go and earn a papal indulgence
• Would later protect Luther

Oct 31 1517: Wittenberg
• Luther posted his theses on a university door • Printing press led to its widespread distribution

Luther’s Theses Not Heretical…
• Undermined the authority of the Church • Luther Criticized:
- The use of indulgences for distracting sinners from true repentance
- Indulgences imply the forgiveness of sin through human as opposed to Divine authority
- The validity of indulgences

From Debate to Dissension
• Posting a thesis on a “wall” was not uncommon
• Theses were invitations for debate
• Luther’s theses went unchallenged ….at first

On to Rome…
• Luther’s theses was sent to Pope Leo X in Rome by the Archbishop of Mainz

The Church Objected To…
• Luther’s questioning of the Church’s infallibility

Luther Invited to Debate
• Met with the highest esteemed Catholic Theologians
• Thought the debate would be a simple matter
• Wanted to state a call to reform

Johann Eck
• Attacked predestination • First to champion Catholic teaching against
“Protestant Error” • Issued reply to Luther (for Bishop)• Exposed Luther’s heresy

Luther's True Philosophy Revealed
• Dismissed the papal supremacy
• Dismissed the authority of the councils
• Committed to the ideas of the justification of faith alone and the limitations of free will

The Debate’s Conclusion
• Luther transformed from being a hero standing up to the Church’s corruption to a heretic
• Pope Leo X issued a bull, giving Luther two months to recant or face excommunication
• Luther burned the bull in public along with the canon code of law

The Diet of Worms • Charles V• Edict of Worms (Reformation) • Forbade anyone to accept Luther’s theology • Private meeting held to determine fate of Luther• Luther disappeared…

Luther’s Theology • Salvation is a Gift of God
only obtainable through Faith in Jesus Christ
• Rejected the Sacrament of Reconciliation: Every Christian is a confessor
• “Faith: and “alone” inserted into Romans 3:28
• Rejected celibacy: unnatural

Luther & Consubstantiation
• The Body/Blood of Christ co-exist with the bread and wine
• “This bread contains my body…this wine contains my blood”
• Christ is truly present – but the bread and wine do not transform into His flesh

Transubstantiation • Catholic Church’s Teaching: the real
presence of Christ in the Eucharist
• The Bread/Wine undergo a change of substance
• The Bread/Wine is no longer the same substance – it is the Body and Blood of Christ
• John 6:51 – “My flesh for the rest of the world.”

Faith Alone?
• Catholicism does NOT teach that we are saved by our own efforts
• James 1:21-25 –must do, not just state • Not everyone who says to me "Lord, Lord" will enter
the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father in heaven. (Mat 7:20)
• Works Complete Our Faith • 1 Corinthians 13: …and if I have a faith that can move
mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.

Sacrament of Reconciliation
• Jesus appeared to His Apostles "breathed on them," and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive men's sins, they are forgiven them; if you hold them bound, they are held bound." (Jn 20:21-23)
• Christ instituted the sacrament of penance and made His Apostles the ministers of it

Luther’s Return to Wittenberg
• Married a nun (Katherine)• Lived out later years peacefully – away from the
spotlight • Due to illness – became angry, senile, and rude• Many friends abandoned him …• Died proclaiming himself to be in the hands of God

Are Protestants heretics today?
• Heretics try to change the Truth within the Catholic Faith/Church
• Protestants do not try to do that
• Vatican II: “Separated Brethren”
• Protestants share in many of our truths
• Ecumenism

PART II
The Peasant Rebellion and the Splintering of Protestantism

The German Princes
• Did not share in the rebellion against the teachings of the Church
• Only sympathized with Luther • Liked Luther because he stood up against the papacy

The German Princes
• Sent armies to help him defend his rebellion
• Troubled Luther with outrageous demands
• For example, one demanded that Luther support his bigamous marriage

The Peasant Rebellion
• Luther advocated Christian liberty and equality. For him, the Christian was accountable to himself.
• Before Luther, denying authority in public was unheard of.
• Luther gave a model for the peasants to follow; peasants entertained the idea that they too could rise up against the establishment - the princes.

The Peasant Rebellion
• Luther summoned to condemn the uprising. • Luther’s response to the princes was:
“Strike, slay front and rear: nothing is more devilish than sedition. There must be no sleep, no patience, no mercy: they are the children of the devil”
• Thousands of men, women, and children were killed
• 100,000 killed• Villages were burned and crops were destroyed

John Calvin
• Born into a middle class family
• Layman who never took vows
• Structured and codified the reform movement
• Turned reform movement into a militant crusade

The Institutes of the Christian Religion
• Ultimate authority is contained in Scripture
• The Bible is the only source of Revelation
• The ability of man to merit through good works
• Denied ALL Sacramental graces
• Directed iconoclastic actions against all crucifixes, statues, sacred paintings, vestments, etc.

Calvin: Predestination
• Some are predestined to heaven, others are predestined to hell
• Those chosen by God = Elect • Necessary to show God's great
justice• Embraced by the middle class• Lower class was = damned

Theocracy in Geneva
• The state is subservient to the church• In Geneva: – No expression of religious freedom was allowed – The old Catholic Creed was forbidden – No prayer could be said in Latin – No words of sympathy or recognition of the pope could be
uttered– Disagreeing with Calvin or criticizing his preaching could
result in punishment – It was rumored that coughing in Church could result in a
prison sentence