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Chapter 17 Section 3
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Protestant Reformation Indulgences Lutheran Theocracy Protestant Peace of Augsburg Henry VIII Annul Anglican
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Gained power and wealth Influence, worldliness, and extravagance Strayed from its spiritual roots Protestant Reformation- a protest movement against the Catholic church
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Financial corruption Abuse of power Immorality Church taxed people for renaissance projects 1500’s Pope Leo needed money to build Saint Peter’s Basiclica
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Indulgences-pardons issued by the pope to reduce a person’s time in purgatory Thousand years people believed you worked off your sins in purgatory Indulgences – one of the most criticized activities
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Nationalism or devotion to a particular country was growing People thought of themselves as citizens, separate from the church
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John Wycliffe- believed the church should give up its worldly possessions Jan Haus-1370 was a priest preached about immorality and worldliness of the Catholic church
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Hus excommunicated by Pope Gregory XII Arrested for heresy and burned at the stake First influential theologians to openly criticize the church
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Selling indulgences was sinful Criticized the power of the pope and wealth of the church Luther’s theses were for church leaders Written in Latin and nailed to a church door His actions began the Reformation(religious movement)
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Not meant to be discussed at universities Printing press helped them to spread throughout Europe Read by intellectuals, clergy, and laypeople Made sense to many people and they wanted reform
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Contradicted basic Catholic beliefs God’s grace can not be won by good works Also need faith Jesus was the head of the Christian church not the pope
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Christians should interpret the Bible Christian practices should come from the bible Translated the Bible into German More people could read it without the aid of the clergy
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1520 Pople Leo X excommunicated him 1521 summoned to appear in front of the Holy Roman Emperor o Charles IV o German Diet o City of Worms o Luther refused to change his opinions
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Edict of Worms-Luther to be an outlaw and condemned his writings Edict did not prevent Luther from spreading his ideas 1530 Lutheranism was a recognized branch of Christianity
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1529 Charles V moved to suppress Lutherans Princes in Germany assembly issued a protestatio or protest Term protestant came into being
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Luther stood against the Catholic Church Opened the door to other religions Lutheranism arose in Germany Religious movements began in Switzerland. and Europe
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22 year old priest Established a church in Switzerland based on theocracy Theocracy-government in which church and state are joined Martin Luther opposed this
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Luther accused him of tampering with the word of God Swiss Protestants could not win Luther’s support Catholics and Swiss Protestants fought Zwingli died in battle
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Next most important Protestant reformer 1509 born in France Supported Luther’s reforms Predestination-God knows who will be saved even before they are born
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God guides their lives Nothing they can do good or bad to change that Calvinism took root in Switzerland Viewed people as sinful by nature
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Strict laws put in place to regulate behavior o Geneva- church attendance was mandatory o Number and courses of meals o Color of clothing o Feasting, dancing, singing, wearing jewelry were forbidden
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Strictness- heart of Calvinists appeal Sense of mission and discipline Making world fit for the elect Elect were the chosen ones
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John Knox-spokesman for reformation in Scotland Replaced the Roman Catholic Church Presbyterian denomination
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Anabaptists- rebaptizing adults Was a crime punishable by death at the time Latter evolved into several religious factions(Amish, Mennonites)
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King Henry VIII- 1509 became king at 17 Devout Catholic Wrote protests against Luther’s ideas 1529 Henry’s wife had a girl, wanted a male heir Thought girl would weaken England
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Henry wanted the marriage annulled Annulment- means to declare the marriage invalid based on church laws Pope offered several solutions did not grant annulment
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Charles the IV Holy Roman Emperor could not agree on it (Catherine’s cousin) Henry fell in love with Bobelyn
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Summoned by Henry Declaration that England was no longer under authority of the pope Changed rituals of the Church Closed Catholic monasteries
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Distributed much of the land to his nobles Helped build more support for the split 1533 Henry and Bobelyn married Parliament declared the marriage to Catherine annulled
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Anne gave birth to a girl Parliament passed the Act of Supremacy o Take oath to declare Henry the “Supreme head of the Church of England” Split with Rome complete
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Henry VIII had six wives o Edward VI the male heir o King at 9 o Died before 16 o Sister becomes queen Mary returned to authority of the pope
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Hundreds of people burned at the stake Called Bloody Mary Little sorrow for Mary’s death Elizabeth I was protestant Draft Supremacy Act of 1559
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Split England from Rome Felt threatened by Catholics who wanted a new queen Persecuted anyone who worship as a Catholic Elizabeth firmly establishes the Church of England or the Anglican
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Elizabeth brought religious peace Protestant Priests could marry 1500’s began thinking of building an American Empire Colonies strengthened but did not enrich the Queen
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