Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Reformation Template:Protestantism Template:Christianity The Reformation, also known as the Protestant Reformation, the European Reformation,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> was a time of major theological movement in Western Christianity in 16th-century Europe that posed a religious and political challenge to the papacy and the authority of the Catholic Church. Towards the end of the Renaissance, the Reformation marked the beginning of Protestantism. It is considered one of the events that signified the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the early modern period in Europe.Template:Sfn
The Reformation is usually dated from Martin Luther's publication of the Ninety-five Theses in 1517, which gave birth to Lutheranism. Prior to Martin Luther and other Protestant Reformers, there were earlier reform movements within Western Christianity. The end of the Reformation era is disputed among modern scholars.
In general, the Reformers argued that justification was based on faith in Jesus alone and not both faith and good works, as in the Catholic view. In the Lutheran, Anglican and Reformed view, good works were seen as fruits of living faith and part of the process of sanctification.<ref name="Bray2021">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Harstad1997">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Protestantism also introduced new ecclesiology. The general points of theological agreement by the different Protestant groups have been more recently summarized as the three solae, though various Protestant denominations disagree on doctrines such as the nature of the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, with Lutherans accepting a corporeal presence and the Reformed accepting a spiritual presence.<ref name="Bente2021">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Nevin2012">Template:Cite book</ref>
The spread of Gutenberg's printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular. The initial movement in Saxony, Germany, diversified, and nearby other reformers such as the Swiss Huldrych Zwingli and the French John Calvin developed the Continental Reformed tradition. Within a Reformed framework, Thomas Cranmer and John Knox led the Reformation in England and the Reformation in Scotland, respectively, giving rise to Anglicanism and Presbyterianism.<ref name="NullYates2017">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="González1987">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Fortson2017">Template:Cite book</ref> The period also saw the rise of non-Catholic denominations with quite different theologies and politics to the Magisterial Reformers (Lutherans, Reformed, and Anglicans): so-called Radical Reformers such as the various Anabaptists, who sought to return to the practices of early Christianity.<ref name="Shah2016"/><ref name="Cremeens2018"/>Template:Sfn The Counter-Reformation comprised the Catholic response to the Reformation, with the Council of Trent clarifying ambiguous or disputed Catholic positions and abuses that had been subject to critique by reformers.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The consequent European wars of religion saw the deaths of between seven and seventeen million people.
TerminologyEdit
In the 16th-century context, the term mainly covers four major movements: Lutheranism, Calvinism, the Radical Reformation, and the Catholic Reformation or Counter-Reformation. Since the late Template:Nowrap, historians often use the plural of the term to emphasize that the Reformation was not a uniform and coherent historical phenomenon but the result of parallel movements.Template:Sfn
Anglican theologian Alister McGrath explains the term "Reformation" as "an interpretative category—a way of mapping out a slice of history in which certain ideas, attitudes, and values were developed, explored, and applied". Historian John Bossy criticized the term Reformation<ref>Christianity in the West 1400-1700 (review) Template:Cite journal</ref> for "wrongly implying that bad religion was giving way to good," but also because it has "little application to actual social behaviour and little or no sensitivity to thought, feeling or culture."Template:Sfn A French scholar has noted "no Reformation term is indisputable" and that "Reformation studies has revealed that “Protestants” and “Catholics” were not as homogenous as once thought."<ref name=kanga>Template:Cite book</ref>
Specific terminology includes:
- "Protestant Reformation" excludes the Renaissance and early modern Catholic reform movements.
- "Magisterial Reformation" has a narrower sense, as it refers only to mainstream Protestantism, primarily Lutheranism, Anglicanism and Calvinism, contrasting it with more radical ideas such as the Anabaptists'.Template:Sfn<ref name="Shah2016">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Cremeens2018">Template:Cite book</ref>
- "Catholic Reformation" is distinguished by the historian Massimo Firpo from Counter-Reformation. In his view, Catholic Reformation was "centered on the care of souls ..., episcopal residence, the renewal of the clergy, together with the charitable and educational roles of the new religious orders", whereas Counter-Reformation was "founded upon the defence of orthodoxy, the repression of dissent, the reassertion of ecclesiastical authority".Template:Sfn
- Some historians have also suggested a persisting "Erasmian Reformation."Template:Refn
Several aspects of the Reformation, such as changes in the arts, music, rituals, and communities are frequently presented in specialised studies.Template:Sfn
The historian Peter Marshall emphasizes that the "call for 'reform' within Christianity is about as old as the religion itself, and in every age there have been urgent attempts to bring it about". Charlemagne employed a "rhetoric of reform".Template:Refn Medieval examples include the Cluniac Reform in the Template:Nowrap, and the 11th-century Gregorian Reform,Template:Sfn both striving against lay influence over church affairs.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When demanding a church reform, medieval authors mainly adopted a conservative and utopian approach, expressing their admiration for a previous "golden age" or "apostolic age" when the Church had allegedly been perfect and free of abuses.Template:Sfn
When considered as a historical time period, both the starting and ending date of the Reformation have always been debated.Template:Sfn The most commonly used starting date is 31 October 1517—the day when the German theologian Martin Luther (d. 1546) allegedly nailed up a copy of his disputation paper on indulgences and papal power known as the Ninety-five Theses to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg in Electoral Saxony.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn Calvinist historians often propose that the Reformation started when the Swiss priest Huldrych Zwingli (d. 1531) first preached against abuses in the Church in 1516.Template:Sfn The end date of the Reformation is even more disputed: considered as political/martial strife, 25 September 1555 (when the Peace of Augsburg was accepted), 23 May 1618 and 24 October 1648 (when the Thirty Years' War began and ended, respectively) are the most commonly mentioned terminuses. The Reformation has always been presented as one of the most crucial episodes of the early modern period, or even regarded as the event separating the modern era from the Middle Ages.Template:Sfn
The term Protestant, though initially purely political in nature, later acquired a broader sense, referring to a member of any Western church that subscribed to the main Reformation (or anti-Catholic) principles.<ref name= "etymonline.com" /> Six princes of the Holy Roman Empire and rulers of fourteen Imperial Free Cities, who issued a protest (or dissent) against the edict of the Diet of Speyer (1529), were the first individuals to be called Protestants.<ref name= "etymonline.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The edict reversed concessions made to the Lutherans with the approval of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V three years earlier.
BackgroundEdit
CalamitiesEdit
Europe experienced a period of dreadful calamities from the early Template:Nowrap. These culminated in a devastating pandemic known as the Black Death, which killed about one-third of Europe's population.Template:Sfn Around 1500, the population of Europe was about Template:Nowrap people—no more than Template:Nowrap of the mid-14th-century demographic maximum.Template:Sfn Due to a shortage of workforce, the landlords began to restrict the rights of their tenants which led to rural revolts that often ended with a compromise.Template:Sfn
The constant fear of unexpected death was mirrored by popular artistic motifs, such as the allegory of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('dance of death'). The fear also contributed to the growing popularity of Masses for the dead.Template:Sfn Already detectable among early Christians, these ceremonies indicated a widespread belief in purgatory—a transitory state for souls that needed purification before entering heaven.Template:Sfn Fear of malevolent magical practice was also growing, and witch hunts intensified.Template:Sfn
At the end of the Template:Nowrap, the sexually transmitted infection known as syphilis spread throughout Europe for the first time. Syphilis destroyed its victims' looks with ulcers and scabs before killing them. Along with the French invasion of Italy, syphilis contributed to the success of the charismatic preacher Girolamo Savonarola (d. 1498) who called for a moral renewal in Florence. He was arrested and executed for heresy, but his meditations remained a popular reading.Template:Sfn
Late Medieval ChristianityEdit
Lay communityEdit
Historian John Bossy (as summarized by Eamon Duffy<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>) emphasized that "medieval Christianity had been fundamentally concerned with the creation and maintenance of peace in a violent world. 'Christianity' in medieval Europe denoted neither an ideology nor an institution, but a community of believers whose religious ideal—constantly aspired to if seldom attained—was peace and mutual love."Template:Refn <ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
The Catholic Church taught that entry into heaven required dying in a Template:Linktext.Template:Sfn Based on Christ's parable on the Last Judgement, the Church emphasized the performance of good works by the baptized faithful, such as feeding the hungry and visiting the sick, as an important co-condition of salvation.Template:Sfn
Villagers and urban laypeople were frequently members of confraternities (such as the Archconfraternity of the Gonfalone),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Refn mutual-support guilds associated with a saint, or religious fraternities (such as the Third Order of Saint Francis). The faithful made pilgrimages to saints' shrines,Template:Sfn but the proliferation in the saints' number undermined their reputation.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn There was a strong non-theological Biblical awareness,Template:Refn especially of the Gospels and Psalms.
New religious movements promoted the deeper involvement of laity in religious practices. The communal fraternities of the Brethren of the Common Life did not encourage lay brothers to become priests<ref name=post>Template:Cite book</ref> and often placed their houses under the protection of urban authorities.Template:Sfn They were closely associated with the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, a new method of Catholic spirituality with a special emphasis on the education of laypeople.Template:Sfn A leader of the movement the Dutch Wessel Gansfort (d. 1489) attacked abuses of indulgences.Template:Sfn
Church buildings were richly decorated with paintings, sculptures, and stained glass windows. While Romanesque and Gothic art made a clear distinction between the supernatural and the human, Renaissance artists depicted God and the saints in a more human way.Template:Sfn Historian Caroline Walker Bynum has written of 'a sort of religious materialism' in the period: 'a frenzied conviction that the divine tended to erupt into matter'.<ref name=marshall2015/>
Sources of authorityEdit
The sources of religious authority included the Bible and its authoritative commentaries, apostolic tradition, decisions by ecumenical councils, scholastic theology, and papal authority. Catholics regarded the Vulgate as the Bible's authentic Latin translation. Commentators applied several methods of interpretations to resolve contradictions within the Bible.Template:Refn Apostolic tradition verified religious practices with unclear Biblical foundations or which required deduction, such as infant baptism.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Rp The ecumenical councils' decisions were binding to all Catholics. The crucial elements of mainstream Christianity had been first summarised in the Nicene Creed in 325. Its western text contained a unilateral addition which contributed to the schism between Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy.Template:Sfn The Creed contained the dogma of Trinity about one God uniting three equal persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Church authorities acknowledged that an individual might exceptionally receive direct revelations from God but maintained that a genuine revelation could not challenge traditional religious principles.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn Preaching was an important part of bishops' and priests' responsibilities.Template:Refn
ClergyEdit
Western Christianity displayed a remarkable unity. This was the outcome of the Gregorian Reform that established papal supremacy over the Catholic Church, and achieved the legal separation of the Catholic clergy from laity.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Clerical celibacy was reinforced through the prohibition of clerical marriage; ecclesiastical courts were granted exclusive jurisdiction over clerics, and also over matrimonial causes.Template:Sfn Priests were ordained by bishops in accordance with the principle of apostolic succession—a claim to the uninterrupted transmission of their consecrating power from Christ's Apostles through generations of bishops.Template:Sfn Bishops, abbots, abbesses, and other prelates might possess remarkable wealth.Template:Sfn Some of the ecclesiastic leaders also functioned as local secular princes, such as the prince-bishops in Kingdom of Germany and the English County Palatine of Durham, and the Grand Masters of the Teutonic Knights in their Baltic {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Other prelates might be regents or the power behind the throne.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn Believers were expected to pay the tithe (one tenth of their income) to the Church.Template:Sfn Pluralism—the practice of holding multiple Church offices (or benefices)—was not unusual. This led to non-residence, and the absent priests' deputies were often poorly educated and underpaid.Template:Sfn
The clergy consisted of two major groups, the regular clergy and the secular clergy. Regular clerics lived under a monastic rule within the framework of a religious order;Template:Sfn secular clerics were responsible for pastoral care. The Church was a hierarchical organisation. The pope was elected by high-ranking clergymen, the cardinals, and assisted by the professional staff of the Roman Curia. Secular clerics were organised into territorial units known as dioceses, each ruled by a bishop or archbishop.Template:Refn Each diocese was divided into parishes headed by parish priests who administered most sacraments to the faithful.Template:Sfn These were sacred rites thought to transfer divine grace to humankind. The Council of Florence declared baptism, confirmation, marriage, extreme unction, penance, the Eucharist, and priestly ordination as the seven sacraments of the Catholic Church.Template:Sfn Women were not ordained priests but could live as nuns in convents after taking the three monastic vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.Template:Sfn
PapacyEdit
The authority of the papacy was based on a well-organised system of communication and bureaucracy.Template:Sfn The popes claimed the power of binding and loosing that Christ had reportedly granted to Peter the Apostle (d. Template:Circa 66), and offered indulgence—the reduction of the penalty in both this world (penance) and in Purgatory to contrite and pardoned sinners who e.g. gave alms or went on pilgrimages.Template:Sfn The popes also granted dispensations to institutions or individuals, exempting them from certain provisions of canon law (or ecclesiastic law).Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
From 1309 to 1417, the papacy was in turmoil: various election controversies resulted in the Western Schism (1378-1417) leading to, at the end, three rival claimant Popes. At the Council of Constance, one of the three popes resigned, his two rivals were deposed, and the newly elected Martin V (Template:Reign) was acknowledged as the legitimate pope throughout Catholic Europe.Template:Sfn The relative authority of popes and ecumenical councils was in contest.
The Renaissance popes were also secular rulers: as princes of the Papal States in Italy, the popes were deeply involved in the power struggles of the peninsula, and the Italian noble houses vied for election. These popes frequently caused scandal: Pope Alexander VI (Template:Reign) appointed his relatives, among them his own illegitimate sons to high offices; Pope Julius II (Template:Reign) took up arms to recover papal territories lost during his predecessors' reign,Template:Sfn prompting the underground satire Julius Excluded from Heaven.
In the early Age of Exploration, a succession of popes (Nicholas V, Sixtus IV, Template:Nowrap) successfully arbitrated territorial disputes between Spain and Portugal outside Europe, notably with the papal bull Inter caetera (1493) drawing a line through South America to separate their trade and colonial regions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Spanish and Portuguese conquests and developing trade networks contributed to the global expansion of Catholicism.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
The popes were generous patrons of art and architecture. Template:Nobr ordered the demolition of the ruined 4th-century St. Peter's Basilica in preparation for the building of a new Renaissance basilica, creating a financial problem.Template:Sfn
Partial and failed institutional reformsEdit
The necessity of a church reform {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('in head and limbs') was frequently discussed at the ecumenical councils from the late Template:Nowrap. However, many high stakeholders—popes, prelates, abbots and kings—preferred the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} because they did not want to lose privileges or revenues.Template:Sfn The system of papal dispensations proved a continual obstacle to the implementation of each revived reform attempt, as the Holy See had regularly granted privileges or immunities.Template:Sfn
Within regular clergy, the so-called "congregations of strict observance" spread. These were monastic communities that returned to the strict interpretation of their order's rule.Template:Refn Reformist bishops tried to discipline their clergy through regular canonical visitations but their attempts mainly failed due to the resistance of autonomous institutions such as cathedral chapters. Neither could they exercise authority over non-resident clerics who had received their benefice from the papacy.Template:Sfn On the eve of the Reformation, the Fifth Council of the Lateran was the last occasion when efforts to introduce a far-reaching reform from above could have achieved but it was dissolved in 1517 without making decisions on the issues that would soon come to the fore.Template:Sfn
HumanismEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also
A new intellectual movement known as Humanism emerged in the Late Middle Ages. The Humanists' slogan {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('back to the sources!') demonstrated their enthusiasm for Classical texts and textual criticism.Template:Sfn The rise of the Ottoman Empire led to the mass immigration of Byzantine scholars to Western Europe, and many of them brought manuscripts previously unknown to western scholarship. This led to the rediscovery of the Ancient Greek philosopher Plato (Template:Nobr). Plato's ideas about an ultimate reality lying beyond visible reality posed a serious challenge to scholastic theologians' rigorous definitions. Textual criticism called into question the reliability of some of the fundamental texts of papal privilege: humanist scholars, like Nicholas of Cusa (d. 1464) proved that one of the basic documents of papal authority, the allegedly 4th-century Donation of Constantine was a medieval forgery.Template:Sfn
As the manufacturing of paper from rags and the printing machine with movable type were spreading in Europe, books could be bought at a reasonable price from the Template:Nowrap.Template:Refn Demand for religious literature was especially high.Template:Sfn The German inventor Johannes Gutenberg (d. 1468) first published a two-volume printed version of the Vulgata in the early 1450s.Template:Sfn High and Low German, Italian, Dutch, Spanish, Czech and Catalan translations of the Bible were published between 1466 and 1492; in France, the Bible's abridged French versions gained popularity.Template:Sfn Laypeople who read the Bible could challenge their priests' sermons, as it happened already in 1515.Template:Sfn
Completed by Jerome (d. 420), the Vulgate contained the Septuagint version of the Old Testament.Template:Sfn The systematic study of Biblical manuscripts revealed that Jerome had sometimes misinterpreted his sources of translation.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn A series of Latin-Greek editions of the New Testament was completed by the Dutch humanist Erasmus (d. 1536). These new Latin translations challenged some scriptural proof texts for some Catholic dogmas.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
DissidentsEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
After Arianism—a Christological doctrine condemned as heresy at ecumenical councils—disappeared in the late Template:Nowrap, no major disputes menaced the theological unity of the Western Church. Religious enthusiasts could organise their followers into nonconformist groups but they disbanded after their founder died.Template:Refn The Waldensians were a notable exception. Due to their efficient organisation, they survived not only the death of their founder Peter Waldo (d. Template:Circa 1205), but also a series of anti-heretic crusades. They rejected the clerics' monopoly of public ministry, and allowed all trained members of their community, men and women alike, to preach.Template:Sfn
The Western Schism reinforced a general desire for church reform. The Oxford theologian John Wycliffe (d. 1384) was one of the most radical critics.Template:Sfn He attacked pilgrimages, the veneration of saints, and the doctrine of transubstantiation.Template:Sfn He regarded the Church as an exclusive community of those chosen by God to salvation,Template:Sfn and argued that the state could seize the corrupt clerics' endowments.Template:Sfn Known as Lollards, Wycliffe's followers rejected images, clerical celibacy and the purchase of indulgences by crusading lords. The Parliament of England passed a law against heretics, but Lollard communities survived the purges.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Wycliffe's theology had a marked impact on the Prague academic Jan Hus (d. 1415). He delivered popular sermons against the clerics' wealth and temporal powers, for which he was summoned to the Council of Constance. Although the German king Sigismund of Luxemburg (Template:Reign) had granted him safe conduct, Hus was sentenced to death for heresy and burned at the stake on 6 July 1415. His execution led to a nationwide religious movement in Bohemia, and the papacy called for a series of crusades against Hus's followers. The moderate Hussites, mainly Czech aristocrats and academics, were known as Utraquists for they taught that the Eucharist was to be administered {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('in both kinds') to the laity. The most radical Hussites, called Taborites after their new town of Tábor, held their property in common. Their millenarianism shocked the Utraquists who destroyed them in the Battle of Lipany in 1434.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By this time, the remaining Catholic communities in Bohemia were almost exclusively German-speaking. The lack of a Hussite church hierarchy enabled the Czech aristocrats and urban magistrates to assume control of the Hussite clergy from the 1470s. The radical Hussites set up their own Church known as the Union of Bohemian Brethren. They rejected the separation of clergy and laity, and condemned all forms of violence and oath taking.Template:Sfn
Marshall writes that the Lollards, Hussites and conciliarist theologians "collectively give the lie to any suggestion that torpor and complacency were the hallmarks of religious life in the century before Martin Luther."Template:Sfn Historians customarily refer to Wycliffe and Hus as "Forerunners of the Reformation". The two reformers' emphasis on the Bible is often regarded as an early example of one of the basic principles of the Reformation—the idea {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('by the Scriptures alone'), although prominent scholastic theologians were also convinced that Scripture, interpreted reasonably and in accord with the Church and the Church Fathers,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> contained all knowledge necessary for salvation.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
BeginningsEdit
The Reformation in Germanic countries was instigated by Martin Luther, however historians note that many of his ideas were pre-dated by Wycliff, Huss, Erasmus, Zwingli and others, both heretic and orthodox. Historian Peter Marshall has noted "In recent decades, scholars have become increasingly acclimatized to the idea that the Reformation was in important respects a continuation and intensification of trends within later medieval Catholicism, rather than simply a wholesale rejection of it."<ref name=marshall2015>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Luther and the Ninety-five ThesesEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Pope Leo X (Template:Reign) decided to complete the construction of the new St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.<ref>Huppert, Ann C. Year. "Envisioning New St. Peter's: Perspectiva, Drawings, and the Process of Design." University of Kansas Journal, no. 160</ref> As the sale of certificates of indulgences had been a well-established method of papal fund raising, he announced new indulgences in the papal bull {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in 1515. On the advice of the banker Jakob Fugger (d. 1525), he appointed the pluralist prelate Albert of Brandenburg (d. 1545) to supervise the sale campaign in Germany.Template:Refn The Dominican friar Johann Tetzel (d. 1519), a leading figure in the campaign, applied unusually aggressive marketing methods. A slogan attributed to him famously claimed that "As soon as the coin into the box rings, a soul from purgatory to heaven springs".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Frederick the Wise, Prince-elector of Saxony (Template:Reign) forbade the campaign because the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} suspended the sale of previous indulgences, depriving him of revenues that he had spent on his collection of relics.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
The campaign's vulgarity shocked many serious-minded believers,Template:Sfn among them Martin Luther, a theology professor at the University of Wittenberg in Saxony.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Born into a middle-class family, Luther entered an Augustinian monastery after a heavy thunderstorm dreadfully reminded him the risk of sudden death and eternal damnation, but his anxiety about his sinfulness did not abate.Template:Sfn His studies on the works of the Late Roman theologian Augustine of Hippo (d. 430) convinced him that those whom God chose as his elect received a gift of faith independently of their acts.Template:Sfn He first denounced the idea of justification through human efforts in his {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Disputation against Scholastic Theology') in September 1517.Template:Sfn
On 31 October 1517, Luther addressed a letter to Albert of Brandenburg, stating that the clerics preaching the St. Peter's indulgences were deceiving the faithful, and attached his Ninety-five Theses to it. He questioned the efficacy of indulgences for the dead, although also stated "Template:Nowrap indulgences were preached according to the spirit and intention of the pope, Template:Nowrap doubts would be readily resolved".Template:Sfn Archbishop Albert ordered the theologians at the University of Mainz to examine the document. Tetzel, and the theologians Konrad Wimpina (d. 1531) and Johann Eck (d. 1543) were the first to associate some of Luther's propositions with Hussitism. The case was soon forwarded to the Roman Curia for judgement.Template:Sfn Pope Leo remained uninterested, and mentioned the case as "a quarrel among friars".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
New theologyEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also
Template:Quote box As the historian Lyndal Roper notes, the "Reformation proceeded by a set of debates and arguments".Template:Sfn Luther presented his views in public at the observant Augustinians' assembly in Heidelberg on 26 April 1518.Template:Sfn Here he explained his "theology of the Cross" about a loving God who had become frail to save fallen humanity, contrasting it with what he saw as the scholastic "theology of glory" that in his view celebrated erudition and human acts.Template:Sfn It is uncertain when Luther's concept of justification by faith alone—a central element of his theology—crystallised. He would later attribute it to his "tower experience"Template:Refn (1519),<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> when he comprehended that God could freely declare even sinners righteous while he was thinking about the words of Paul the Apostle (d. 64 or 65)—"the just shall live by faith".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Urged by Luther's opponents, Pope Leo appointed the jurist Girolamo Ghinucci (d. 1541) and the theologian Sylvester Mazzolini (d. 1527) to inspect Luther's teaching.Template:Sfn Mazzolini argued that Luther had questioned papal authority by attacking the indulgences, while Luther concluded that only a fundamental reform could put an end to the abuse of indulgences.Template:Sfn Pope Leo did not excommunicate Luther because Leo did not want to alienate Luther's patron Frederick the Wise.Template:Refn Instead, he appointed Cardinal Thomas Cajetan (d. 1534) to convince Luther to withdraw some of his theses. Cajetan met with Luther at Augsburg in October 1518.Template:Sfn The historian Berndt Hamm says that the meeting was the "historical point at which the opposition between the Reformation and Catholicism first emerged",Template:Refn as Cajetan thought that believers accepting Luther's views of justification would no more obey clerical guidance.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Luther first expressed his sympathy for Jan Hus at a disputation in Leipzig in June 1519. His case was reopened at the Roman Curia. Cajetan, Eck and other papal officials drafted the papal bull {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Arise, O Lord') which was published on 15 June 1520. It condemned Luther's forty-one theses, and offered a sixty-day-long grace period to him to recant.Template:Sfn Luther's theology quickly developed. In a Latin treatise On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church, he stated that only baptism and the Eucharist could be regarded as sacraments, and priests were not members of a privileged class but servants of the community (hence they became called ministers from the Latin word for servant). His German manifesto To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation associated the papacy with the Antichrist, and described the Holy See as "the worst whorehouse of all whorehouses" in reference to the funds flowing to the Roman Curia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It also challenged the Biblical justification of clerical celibacy.Template:Sfn Luther's study On the Freedom of a Christian consolidated his thoughts about the believers' inner freedom with their obligation to care for their neighbours although he rejected the traditional teaching about good works.Template:Sfn The study is a characteristic example of Luther's enthusiasm for paradoxes.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
{{#invoke:Listen|main}}
The papal nuncio Girolamo Aleandro (d. 1542) ordered the burning of Luther's books.Template:Sfn In response, Luther and his followers burned the papal bull along with a copy of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}—the fundamental document of medieval ecclesiastic law—at Wittenberg. The papal bull excommunicating Luther was published on 3 January 1521.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The newly elected Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (Template:Reign) wanted to outlaw Luther at the Diet of Worms, but could not make the decision alone.Template:Sfn The Holy Roman Empire was a confederation of autonomous states, and authority rested with the Imperial Diets where the Imperial Estates assembled.Template:Sfn Frederick the Wise vetoed the imperial ban against Luther, and Luther was summoned to Worms to defend his case at the Diet in April 1521. Here he refused to recant stating that only arguments from the Bible could convince him that his works contained errors.Template:Sfn
After Luther and his supporters left the Diet, those who remained sanctioned the imperial ban, threatening Luther's supporters with imprisonment and confiscation of their property.Template:Sfn To save Luther's life but also to hide his involvement, Frederick arranged Luther's abduction on 4 May.Template:Sfn During his ten-month-longTemplate:Sfn staged captivity at Frederick's castle of Wartburg, Luther translated the New Testament to High German. The historian Diarmaid MacCulloch describes the translation as an "extraordinary achievement that has shaped the German language ever since", adding that "Luther's gift was for seizing the emotion with sudden, urgent phrases".Template:Sfn The translation would be published at the 1522 Leipzig Book Fair along with Luther's treatise On Monastic Vows that laid the theological foundations of the dissolution of monasteries.Template:Sfn Luther also composed religious hymns in Wartburg. They would be first published in collections in 1524.Template:Sfn During Luther's absence, his co-workers, primarily Philip Melanchthon (d. 1560) and Andreas Karlstadt (d. 1541) assumed the leadership of Reformation in Wittenberg. Melanchthon consolidated Luther's thoughts into a coherent theological work titled {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Common Places').Template:Sfn
SpreadEdit
Roper argues that "the most important reason why Luther did not meet with Hus's fate was technology: the new medium of print". Luther was publishing his views in short but pungent treatises that gained unexpected popularity: he was responsible for about one-fifth of all works printed in Germany in the first third of the Template:Nowrap.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn German printing presses were scattered in many urban centers which prevented their control by central authorities.Template:Sfn Statistical analysis indicates a significant correlation between the presence of a printing press in a German city and the adoption of Reformation.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
Reformation spread through the activities of enthusiastic preachers such as Johannes Oecolampadius (d. 1531) and Konrad Kürsner (d. 1556) in Basel, Sebastian Hofmeister (d. 1533) in Schaffhausen, and Matthäus Zell (d. 1548) and Martin Bucer (d. 1551) in Strasbourg.Template:Sfn They were called "Evangelicals" due to their insistence on teaching in accordance with the Gospels (or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:Sfn Luther and many of his followers worked with the artist Lucas Cranach the Elder (d. 1553) who had a keen sense of visualising their message. He produced Luther's idealised portrait setting a template for further popular images printed on the covers of books.Template:Sfn Cranach's woodcuts together with itinerant preachers' explanations helped the mainly illiterate people to understand Luther's teaching.Template:Sfn The illustrated pamphlets were carried from place to place typically by peddlers and merchants.Template:Sfn Laypeople started to discuss various aspects of religion in both private and public all over Germany.Template:Sfn
The self-governing free imperial cities were the first centers of the Reformation.Template:Sfn The Evangelical preachers emphasized that many of the well-established church practices had no precedent in the Bible. They offered the Eucharist to the laity in both kinds,Template:Sfn and denied the clerics' monopolies, which resonated with popular anti-clericalism.Template:Sfn It was not unusual that their supporters attacked clerics and church buildings.Template:Sfn Violent iconoclasm was common.Template:RefnIn some cities such as Strasbourg and Ulm, the urban magistrates supported the Reformation; in the cities of the Hanseatic League the affluent middle classes enforced changes in church life.Template:Sfn Cities located closer to the most important ideological centers of the Reformation—Wittenberg and Basel—adopted its ideas more likely than other towns. This indicates the significance either of student networks,Template:Sfn or of neighbours who had rejected Catholicism.Template:Sfn
The sociologist Steven Pfaff underlines that "ecclesiastical and liturgical reform was not simply a religious question ... since the sort of reforms demanded by Evangelicals could not be accommodated within existing institutions, prevailing customs, or established law". After their triumph, the reformers expelled their leading opponents, dissolved the monasteries and convents, secured the urban magistrates' control of the appointment of priests, and established new civic institutions.Template:Sfn Evangelical town councils usually prohibited begging but established a common chest for poverty relief by expropriating the property of dissolved ecclesiastic institutions. The funds were used for the daily support of orphans, old people and the sick, but also for low-interest loans to the impoverished to start a business. Luther was convinced that only educated people could effectively serve both God and the community. Under his auspices, public schools and libraries were opened in many towns offering education to more children than the traditional monastic and cathedral schools.Template:Sfn
Resistance and oppressionEdit
Resistance to Evangelical preaching was significant in Flanders, the Rhineland, Bavaria and Austria.Template:Sfn Here the veneration of local saints was strong, and statistical analysis indicates that cities where indigenous saints' shrines served as centers of vivid communal cults less likely adopted Reformation.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn Likewise, cities with an episcopal see or monasteries more likely resisted Evangelical proselytism.<ref name="Rubin270"/>Template:Sfn
Luther's ideas were rejected by most representatives of the previous generation of Humanists. Erasmus stated that Luther's "unrestrained enthusiasm carries him beyond what is right". Jacob van Hoogstraaten (d. 1527) compared Luther's theology of salvation "as if Christ takes to himself the most foul bride and is unconcerned about her cleanliness".Template:Sfn Luther's works were burned in most European countries.Template:Sfn Emperor Charles initiated the execution of the first Evangelical martyrs, the Augustinian monks Jan van Essen and Hendrik Vos. They were burned in Brussels on 1 July 1523.Template:Sfn Charles was determined to protect the Catholic Church, but the Ottoman Turks' expansion towards Central Europe often thwarted him.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Spanish Inquisition prevented the spread of Evangelical literature in that country, and suppressed the spiritual movement of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Illuminists') who put a special emphasis on personal faith. Some Italian men of letters, such as the Venetian nobleman Gasparo Contarini (d. 1542) and the Augustinian canon Peter Martyr Vermigli (d. 1562) expressed ideas resembling Luther's theology of salvation but did not quickly break with Catholicism.Template:Refn They were part of a group known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The English king Henry VIII (Template:Reign) commissioned a team of theologians to defend the Catholic dogmas against Luther's attacks. Their treatise titled The Assertion of the Seven Sacraments was published under Henry's name, and the grateful Pope awarded him with the title Defender of the Faith.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In Scotland, the first Evangelical preacher Patrick Hamilton (d. 1528) was burned for heresy.Template:Sfn In France, the theologians of the Sorbonne stated that Luther "vomited up a doctrine of pestilence". Guillaume Briçonnet (d. 1534), Bishop of Meaux, also condemned Luther but employed reform-minded clerics like Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (d. Template:Circa 1536) and William Farel (d. 1565) to renew religious life in his diocese. They enjoyed the protection of Marguerite of Angoulême (d. 1549), the well-educated sister of the French king Francis I (Template:Reign). The Parlement of Paris only took actions against them after Francis was captured in the Battle of Pavia in 1525, forcing many of them into exile.Template:Sfn
Correspondence between Luke of Prague (d. 1528), leader of the Bohemian Brethren, and Luther made it clear that their theologies were incompatible even if their views about justification were similar. In Bohemia, Hungary, and Poland, Luther's theology spread in the local German communities. King Louis of Bohemia and Hungary (Template:Reign) ordered the persecution of Evangelical preachers although his wife Mary of Austria (d. 1558) favoured the reformers. Sigismund I the Old, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania (Template:Reign) banned the import of Evangelical literature.Template:Sfn Christian II, who ruled the Kalmar Union of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway (Template:Reign), was sympathetic towards the Reformation but his despotic methods led to revolts. He was replaced by his uncle Frederick I in Denmark and Norway (Template:Reign), and by a local aristocrat Gustav I Vasa in Sweden (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn
AlternativesEdit
Saxon radicals and rebellious knightsEdit
Andreas Karlstadt accelerated the implementation of Reformation in Wittenberg. On Christmas Day 1521, he administered the Eucharist in common garment; the next day he announced his engagement to a fifteen-year-old noble girl Anna von Mochau.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> He proclaimed that images were examples of "devilish deceit" which led to the mass destruction of religious art. Enthusiasts began swarming to Wittenberg. The Zwickau prophets, who had been incited by the radical preacher Thomas Müntzer (d. 1525), claimed that they had received revelations from God.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They rejected transubstantiation and attacked infant baptism. Luther defended art as a proof of the beauty of the Creation, maintained that Christ's Body and Blood were physically present in the Eucharist,Template:Refn and regarded infant baptism as a sign of membership in the Christian community.Template:Refn To put an end to the anarchy, Frederick the Wise released Luther in March 1522. Luther achieved the Zwickau prophets' removal from Wittenberg, calling them fanatics.Template:Sfn Karlstadt voluntarily left Wittenberg for Orlamünde where the local congregation elected him its minister. Luther visited most parishes in the region to prevent radical reforms, but he was often received by verbal or physical abuses. When he wanted to dismiss Karlstadt, the parishioners referred to his own words about the congregations' right to freely elect their ministers, and Karlstadt called him a "perverter of the Scriptures". Karlstadt was expelled from Electoral Saxony without a trial on Luther's initiative.Template:Sfn
Luther condemned violence but some of his followers took up arms. Franz von Sickingen (d. 1523), an imperial knight from the Rhineland, formed an alliance with his peers against Richard von Greiffenklau, Archbishop-elector of Trier (Template:Reign), allegedly to lead the Archbishop's subjects "to evangelical, light laws and Christian freedom".Template:Sfn Sickingen had demanded the restitution of monastic property to the grantors' descendants, stating that the secularisation of church property would also improve the poor peasants' situation.Template:Sfn Sickingen and his associates attacked the archbishopric but failed at the siege of Trier. Sickingen was mortally wounded while defending his Nanstein Castle against the Archbishop's troops.Template:Sfn Luther denounced Sickingen's violent acts.Template:Sfn According to his "theory of two kingdoms", true Christians had to submit themselves to princely authority.Template:Sfn
ZwingliEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
The Swiss Humanist priest Huldrych Zwingli would claim that he "began to preach the Gospel of Christ in 1516 long before anyone in our region had ever heard of Luther". He came to prominence when attended a meal of sausages in Zürich during Lent 1522, breaching the rules of fasting.Template:Sfn He held disputations with the urban magistrates' authorization to discuss changes in church life, and always introduced them with the magistrates' support. In 1524, all images were removed from the churches, and fasting and clerical celibacy were abolished. Two years later, a German communion service replaced the Latin liturgy of the Mass, and the Eucharist (or Lord's Supper) was administered on a plain wooden table instead of an embellished altar.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Two new institutions were organised in Zürich: the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (a public school for Biblical studies), and the Marriage and Morals Court (a legal court and moral police consisting of two laymen and two clerics). Both would be copied in other towns.Template:Sfn Zwingli's interpretation of the Eucharist differed from both Catholic theology and Luther's teaching. He denied Christ's presence in the sacramental bread and wine, and regarded the Eucharist as a commemorative ceremony in honor of the crucified Jesus.Template:Sfn The disagreement caused a bitter pamphlet war between Luther and Zwingli.Template:Sfn They both rejected intermediary Eucharistic formulas coined by Bucer.Template:Sfn
Swiss BrethrenEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Zwingli's cautious "Magisterial Reformation" outraged the more radical reformers, among them Conrad Grebel (d. 1526), a Zürich patrician's son who had fallen out with his family for marrying a low born girl. The radicals summarized their theology in a letter to Müntzer in 1524. They identified the Church as an exclusive community of the righteous, and demanded its liberation from the state. They deplored all religious practices that had no Biblical foundations, and endorsed believers' (or adult) baptism.
In January 1525, a former Catholic priest George Blaurock (d. 1529) asked Grebel to rebaptize him, and after his request was granted they rebaptized fifteen other people.Template:Sfn For this practice, they were called Anabaptists ('rebaptizers').Template:Sfn As a featuring element of Donatism and other heretic movements, rebaptism had been a capital offence since the Late Roman period. After the magistrates had some radicals imprisoned, Blaurock called Zwingli the Antichrist.Template:Sfn The town council enacted a law that threatened rebaptizers with capital punishment, and the Anabaptist Felix Manz (d. 1527) was condemned to death and drowned in the Limmat River.Template:Sfn He was the first victim of religious persecution by reformist authorities. The purge convinced many Anabaptists that they were the true heirs to early Christians who had suffered martyrdom for their faith. The most radicals took inspiration from the Book of Daniel and the Book of Revelation for apocalyptic prophesies. Some of them burnt the Bible reciting St Paul's words, "the letter kills".Template:Sfn In St. Gallen, Anabaptist women cut their hair short to avoid arousing sexual passion, while a housemaid Frena Bumenin proclaimed herself the New Messiah before announcing that she would give birth to the Antichrist.Template:Sfn
According to Dr Kenneth R. Davis, "the Anabaptists can best be understood as, apart from their own creativity, a radicalization and Protestantization not of the Magisterial Reformation but of the lay-oriented, ascetic reformation of which Erasmus is the principle mediator."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
Peasants' WarEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
MacCulloch says that the Reformation "injected an extra element of instability" into the relationship between the peasants and their lords, as it raised "new excitement and bitterness against established authority".Template:Sfn Public demonstrations in the Black Forest area indicated a general discontent among the southern German peasantry in May 1524. The Anabaptist preacher Balthasar Hubmaier (d. 1528) was one of the peasant leaders, but most participants never went beyond traditional anti-clericalism. In early 1525, the movement spread towards Upper Swabia. The radical preacher Cristopher Schappler and the pamphleteer Sebastian Lotzer summarized the Swabian peasants' demand in a manifesto known as Twelve Articles. The peasants wanted to control their ministers' election and to supervise the use of church revenues, but also demanded the abolition of the tithe on meat. They reserved the right to present further demands against non-Biblical seigneurial practices but promised to abandon any of their demands that contradicted the Bible, and appointed fourteen "arbitrators" to clarify divine law on the relationship between peasants and landlords. The arbitrators approached Luther, Zwingli, Melanchthon and other leaders of the Reformation for advice but none of them answered.Template:Sfn Luther wrote a treatise, equally blaming the landlords for the oppression of the peasantry and the rebels for their arbitrary acts.Template:Sfn
Georg Truchsess von Waldburg (d. 1531), commander of the army of the aristocratic Swabian League, achieved the dissolution of the peasant armies either by force or through negotiations. By this time the peasant movements reached Franconia and Thüringia. The Franconian peasants formed alliances with artisans and petty nobles such as Florian Geyer (d. 1525) against the patricians and the Prince-Bishopric of Würzburg but Truchsess forced them into submission.Template:Sfn In Thüringia, Müntzer convinced 300 radicals that they were invincible but they were annihilated at Frankenhausen by Philip the Magnanimous, Landgrave of Hesse (Template:Reign) and George, Duke of Saxony (Template:Reign). Müntzer who had hidden in an attic before the battle was discovered and executed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn News of atrocities by peasant bands and meetings with disrespectful peasants during a preaching tour outraged Luther while he was writing his treatise Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of Peasants. In it, he urged the German princes to "smite, slay, and slab" the rebels.Template:Sfn Moderate observers felt aggrieved at his cruel words. They regarded as an especially tasteless act that Luther married Katharina von Bora (d. 1552), a former nun while the punitive actions against the peasantry were still in process.Template:Sfn Further peasant movements began in other regions in Central Europe but they were pacified through concessions or suppressed by force before the end of 1525.Template:Sfn
ConsolidationEdit
Princely Reformation in GermanyEdit
The Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights Albert of Brandenburg-Ansbach (Template:Reign) was the first prince to formally abandon Catholicism. The Teutonic Order held Royal Prussia in fief of Poland. After defeats in a war against Poland and Lithuania demoralised the Knights, Albert transformed the region into the hereditary Duchy of Prussia in April 1525. As the secularisation of Prussia represented an open rebellion against Catholicism, it was followed by the establishment of the first Evangelical state church.Template:Sfn In August, Albert's brothers, Casimir (Template:Reign) and George (Template:Reign) instructed the priests in Brandenburg-Kulmbach and Brandenburg-Ansbach to pray the doctrine of justification by faith alone.Template:Sfn The Reformation was officially introduced in Electoral Saxony under John the Constant (Template:Reign) on Christmas Day 1525.Template:Sfn Electoral Saxony's conversion facilitated the adoption of the Reformation in smaller German states, such as Mansfeld and Hessen.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Philip of Hessen founded the first Evangelical university at his capital Marburg in 1527.Template:Sfn
At the Diet of Speyer in 1526, the German princes agreed that they would "live, govern, and act in such a way as everyone trusted to justify before God and the Imperial Majesty".Template:Sfn In practice, they sanctioned the principle {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('whose realm, their religion'), acknowledging the princes' right to determine their subjects' religious affiliation.Template:Sfn Fully occupied with the War of the League of Cognac against France and its Italian allies, Emperor Charles had appointed his brother Ferdinand I, Archduke of Austria (Template:Reign) to represent him in Germany. They both opposed the compromise, but Ferdinand was brought into succession struggles in Bohemia and Hungary after their brother-in-law King Louis died in the Battle of Mohács. In 1527, Charles's mutinousTemplate:Sfn troops sacked Rome and took Pope Clement VII (Template:Reign) under custody. Luther stated that "Christ reigns in such a way that the emperor who persecutes Luther for the pope is forced to destroy the pope for Luther".Template:Sfn
After his experiences with radical communities, Luther no more wrote of the congregations' right to elect their ministers (or pastors). Instead, he expected that princes acting as "emergency bishops" would prevent the disintegration of the Church.Template:Sfn Close cooperation between clerics and princely officials at church visitations paved the way for the establishment of the new church system.Template:Sfn In Electoral Saxony, princely decrees enacted the Evangelical ideas.Template:Sfn Liturgy was simplified, the church courts' jurisdiction over secular cases was abolished, and state authorities took control of church property.Template:Sfn The Evangelical equivalent to bishop was created with the appointment of a former Catholic priest Johannes Bugenhagen (d. 1558) as superintendent in 1533.Template:Sfn The church visitations convinced Luther that the villagers' knowledge of the Christian faith was imperfect.Template:Refn To deal with the situation, he completed two cathecisms—the Large Catechism for the education of priests, and the Small Catechism for children.Template:Sfn Records from Brandenburg-Ansbach indicates that Evangelical pastors often attacked traditional communal activities such as church fairs and spinning bees for debauchery.Template:Sfn
Taking advantage of Emperor Charles' victories in Italy, Template:Nowrap achieved the reinforcement of the imperial ban against Luther at the Diet of Speyer in 1529. In response, five imperial princes and fourteen imperial citiesTemplate:Refn presented a formal {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. They were mocked as "Protestants", and this appellation would be quickly applied to all followers of the new theologies.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn To promote Protestant unity, Philip the Magnanimous organised a colloquy (or theological debate) between Luther, Melanchton, Zwingli and Oecolampadius at Marburg early in October 1529,Template:Sfn but they could not coin a common formula on the Eucharist.Template:Sfn During the discussion, Luther remarked that "Our spirit has nothing in common with your spirit", expressing the rift between the two mainstream versions of the Reformation. Zwingli's followers started to call themselves the "Reformed", as they regarded themselves as the true reformers.Template:Sfn
Stalemate in SwitzerlandEdit
Template:Further Template:See also
In 1526, the villagers of the autonomous Graubünden region in Switzerland agreed that each village could freely choose between Protestantism and Catholicism, setting a precedent for the coexistence of the two denominations in the same jurisdiction.Template:Sfn Religious affiliation in the Mandated Territories (lands jointly administered by the Swiss cantons) became the subject of much controversy between Protestant and Catholic cantons. The Protestant cantons concluded a military alliance early in 1529, the Catholic cantons in April.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After a bloodless armed conflict, the Mandated communities were granted the right to choose between the two religions by a majority vote of the male citizens. Zwingli began an intensive proselityzing campaign which led to the conversion of most Mandated communities to Protestantism. He set up a council of clergymen and lay delegates for church administration, thus creating the forerunners of presbyteries.Template:Sfn Zürich imposed an economic blockade on the Catholic cantons but the Catholics routed Zürich's army in 1531. The Catholics' victory stopped the Protestant expansion in Switzerland.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Zwingli was killed in the battlefield, and succeeded by a former monk Heinrich Bullinger (d. 1575) in Zürich. Bullinger developed Zwingli's Eucharistic formula in an attempt to reach a compromise with Luther, saying that the faithful made spiritual contact with God during the commemorative ceremony.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
Schleitheim ArticlesEdit
The historian Carter Lindberg states that the "Peasants' War was a formative experience for many leaders of Anabaptism".Template:Sfn Hans Hut (d. 1527) continued Müntzer's apocalyticism but others rejected all forms of violence.Template:Sfn
The pacifist Michael Sattler (d. 1527) took the chair at an Anabaptist assembly at Schleitheim in February 1527. Here the participants adopted an anti-militarist program now known as the Schleitheim Articles. The document ordered the believers' separation from the evil world, and prohibited oath-taking, bearing of arms and holding of civic offices. Facing Ottoman expansionism, the Austrian authorities considered this pacifism as a direct threat to their country's defense. Sattler was quickly captured and executed. During his trial, he stated that "If the Turks should come, we ought not to resist them. For it is written: Thou shalt not kill."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Total segregation was alien to Hübmaier who tried to achieve a peaceful coexistence with non-Anabaptists.Template:Sfn Expelled from Zürich, he settled in the Moravian domains of Count Leonhard von Liechtenstein at Nikolsburg (now Mikulov, Czech Republic). He baptised infants on the parents' request for which hard-line Anabaptists regarded him as an evil compromiser. He was sentenced to death and burned at the stake for heresy on Template:Nowrap's orders. His execution inaugurated a period of intensive purge against rebaptisers. His followers relocated to Austerlitz (now Slavkov u Brna, Czech Republic) where refugees from Tyrol joined them. After the Tyrolian Jakob Hutter (d. 1536) assumed the leadership of the community, they began to held their goods in common. The Bohemian Brethren symphatised with the Hutterites which facilitated their survival in Moravia.Template:Sfn
ConfessionsEdit
Back in Germany in January 1530, Template:Nowrap asked the Protestants to summarize their theology at the following Diet in Augsburg. As the imperial ban prevented Luther from attending the Diet, Melanchthon completed the task. Melanchthon sharply condemned Anabaptist ideas and adopted a reconciliatory tone towards Catholicism but did not fail to emphasize the most featuring elements of Evangelical theology, such as justification by faith alone. The twenty-eight articles of the Augsburg Confession were presented at the Diet on 25 June. Four south German Protestant cities—Strasbourg, Constance, Lindau, and Memmingen—adopted a separate confessional document, the Tetrapolitan Confession because they were influenced by Zwingli's Eucharistic theology. On Charles's request, Eck and other Catholic theologians completed a response to the Augsburg Confession, called {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('refutation'). Charles ordered the Evangelical theologians to admit that their argumentation had been completely refuted. Instead, Melanchthon wrote a detailed explanation for the Evangelical articles of faith, known as the Apology of the Augsburg Confession.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Charles wanted to attack the Protestant princes and cities but the Catholic princes did not support him fearing that his victory would strengthen his power. The Diet passed a law prohibiting further religious innovations and ordering the Protestants to return to Catholicism until 15 April 1531. Luther had previously questioned the princes' right to resist imperial power, but by then he had concluded that a defensive war for religious purposes could be regarded as a just war.Template:Sfn The Schmalkaldic League—the Protestant Imperial Estates' defensive alliance—was signed by five princes and fourteen cities on 27 February 1531.Template:Refn As a new Ottoman invasion prevented the Habsburgs from wage war against the Protestants, a peace treaty was signed at Nuremberg in July 1532.Template:Sfn
Edit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Relationship between the papacy and the Scandinavian kingdoms was tense, as both Template:Nowrap of Denmark and Norway, and Template:Nowrap of Sweden appointed their own candidates to vacant episcopal sees.Template:Sfn In 1526, the Danish Parliament prohibited the bishops to seek confirmation from the Holy See, and declared all fees payable for their confirmation as royal revenue.Template:Sfn The former Hospitaller knight Hans Tausen (d. 1561) delivered Evangelical sermons in Viborg under royal protection from 1526. Four years later, the Parliament rejected the Catholic prelates' demand to condemn Evangelical preaching.Template:Sfn After Frederick's death the bishops and conservative aristocrats prevented the election of his openly Protestant son Christian as his successor.Template:Sfn Christopher, Count of Oldenburg (Template:Reign) took up arms on the deposed Template:Nowrap's behalf, but the war known as Count's Feud ended with the victory of Frederick's son who ordered the arrest of the Catholic bishops. Template:Nowrap (Template:Reign) was crowned king by Bugenhagen. Bugenhagen also ordained seven superintendents to lead the Church of Denmark. Christian declared the Augsburg Confession as the authoritative articles of faith in 1538,Template:Sfn but pilgrimages to the most popular shrines continued, and the Eucharistic liturgy kept Catholic elements, such as kneeling.Template:Sfn
In the Danish dependencies of Norway and Iceland, the Reformation required vigorous governmental interventions.Template:Sfn The last Catholic Archbishop of Nidaros in Norway Olav Engelbrektsson (d. 1538) was a staunch opponent of the changes, but was succeeded by the Evangelical Gjeble Pederssøn (d. 1557) as superintendent.Template:Sfn In Iceland, Jón Arason, Bishop of Hólar (d. 1550)—the last Nordic Catholic bishop—took up arms to prevent the Reformation, but he was captured and executed by representatives of royal authority.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
Template:Nowrap of Sweden appointed the Evangelical preacher Laurentius Andreae (d. 1552) as his chancellor, and the Evangelical scholar Olaus Petri (d. 1552) as a minister at Stockholm. Petri translated the Gospels to Swedish. On his advice, Gustav dissolved a Catholic printing house that published popular anti-Protestant literature under the auspices of Hans Brask (d. 1538), Bishop of Linköping. Gustav also expelled the radical German pastor Melchior Hoffman (d. Template:Circa 1543) from Sweden for iconoclastic propaganda.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The royal treasury needed extra funds to repay the loans borrowed from the Hanseatic League to finance the war against Template:Nowrap. Gustav persuaded the legislative assembly to secularise church property by threatening the delegates with his abdication.Template:Sfn The peasantry remained very cautious about changes in church life. This together with heavy taxation led to uprisings. To appease the rebels, Gustav declared that he had not sanctioned the changes, and dismissed Andreae in 1531, Petri in 1533.Template:Sfn He continued the transformation of church life in Sweden and Finland after the Reformation was fully introduced in Denmark. He was assisted by two Evangelical theologians Georg Norman (d. 1552/1553) and Mikael Agricola (d. 1557).Template:Sfn In 1539, Norman was appointed as supertindent of the Church of Sweden, and Gustav took the title of "Supreme Defender of the Church".Template:Sfn
Catholic reformEdit
BeginningsEdit
The religious upheaval in Germany and the sack of Rome convinced many Catholics that their Church was in need of a profound reform. Pope Paul III (Template:Reign) appointed prominent representatives of the Catholic reform movement as cardinals, among them Contarini, Reginald Pole (d. 1558), and Giovanni Pietro Caraffa (d. 1559). They completed a report condemning the corruption of church administration and the waste of church revenues.Template:Refn Contarini, Pole and other {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} were ready to make concessions to the Protestants but their liberalism shocked Caraffa and other conservative prelates.Template:Sfn
Negotiations between moderate Catholic and Protestant theologians were not unusual. In 1541, Bucer and the Catholic theologian Johann Gropper (d. 1559) drafted a compromise formula on justification.Template:Refn The draft was discussed along with other issues at a colloquy during the Diet of Regensburg but no compromise was reached, not least due to opposition by both Luther and the Holy See.Template:Sfn Contarini, who represented the papacy at the Diet, died in 1541; many {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} such as Vermigli fled from Italy to avoid persecution.Template:Sfn Hermann of Wied, Archbishop-elector of Cologne (Template:Reign) completed a reform program with Bucer's assistance, criticising prayers to the saints and traditional Eucharistic theology, and proposing sermons about justification by faith.Template:Sfn The canons of the Cologne Cathedral requested Gropper to write a critical response to it,Template:Sfn and achieved Hermann's deposal by the Roman Curia.Template:Sfn
New OrdersEdit
The spread of new monastic orders was an important element of the Catholic reform movement. Most new orders placed great value on pastoral care.Template:Refn Among them, the Society of Jesus (or Jesuits) became the most influential.Template:Sfn Its founder Ignatius of Loyola (d. 1556) was born to a Basque noble family. He chose a military career but abandoned it after being wounded during a siege. He started to write a devotional guide, the Spiritual Exercises, during his ascetic retreat at a cave.Template:Sfn His mysticism arouse the Spanish Inquisition's suspicion but the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} supported him. Template:Nowrap sanctioned the establishment of the Jesuits on Contarini's influence in 1540.Template:Sfn The new order quickly developed: when Loyola died, the Society had about 1,000 members; in less than a decade, it numbered around 3,500. The maintenance of a well organised schooling system was the Jesuits' most prominent feature. Their Roman collegium prepared future priests to discuss and reject Protestant theologies primarily in Germany, Bohemia, Poland, and Hungary.Template:Sfn
Council of TrentEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:Nowrap decided to convoke the nineteenth ecumenical council to handle the crisis caused by the Reformation. The Council of Trent met in a series of sessions from December 1545 to 1548, 1521 to 1522, and 1562 to 1563.<ref group=note>"It ran in two tracks: alongside the reformulation of Catholic doctrine in contrast to Protestant teaching stood the many general…reform decrees which would influence the life of Catholicism for centuries to come.Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Sfn The topics dealt with included the Creed, the Sacraments including transubstantiation and ordination,Template:Sfn justification, and improvement in the quality of priests by diocesan seminaries and annual canonical visitations.Template:Sfn The council reaffirmed that apostolic tradition was as authentic a source of faith as the Bible, and emphasized the importance of good works in salvation, rejecting two important elements of Luther's theology.Template:Sfn Before being closed in December 1563, the Council mandate the papacy to revise liturgical books and complete a new catechism.Template:Sfn Carlo Borromeo, Archbishop of Milan (d. 1582) adopted a more practical approach. He completed a handbook covering everyday details of church life, including the delivery of sermons, arrangement of church interiors, and hearing confessions.Template:Sfn After the council, papal authority was reinforced through the establishment of central offices known as congregations. One of them became responsible for the list of forbidden literature. All church officials and university teachers were required to take a Tridentine confessional oath that included an oath of "true obedience" to the papacy.Template:Sfn
Lindberg suggests that (following Trent) the "spirituality of Catholic reform was the ascetic, subjective, and personal piety", as expressed in public processions, the "perpetual" adoration of the Eucharist, and the reaffirmed veneration of Mary the Virgin and the saints.Template:Sfn
New wavesEdit
English reformation under Henry VIIIEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
In England, reformist clerics such as Thomas Bilney (d. 1531) and Robert Barnes (d. 1540) spread Luther's theology among Cambridge and Oxford scholars and students.Template:Sfn The young priest William Tyndale (d. 1536) translated the New Testament to English using Erasmus's Latin-Greek edition.Template:Sfn By around 1535, more than 15,000 copies of his translation had been distributed in secret.Template:Sfn Tyndale's biographer David Daniell (d. 2016) writes that the translation "gave the English language a plain prose style of the very greatest importance", and his "influence has been greater than any other writer in English".Template:Sfn
The Lord Chancellor Cardinal Thomas Wolsey (d. 1530) had strong links to the Roman Curia, he was unable to achieve the annulment of the marriage of Template:Nowrap and the middle-aged Catherine of Aragon (d. 1536).Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn They had needed a papal dispensation to marry because Catherine was the widow of Henry's brother Arthur, Prince of Wales (d. 1502). As she had not produced a male heir, Henry became convinced that their incestuous marriage drew the wrath of God.Template:Sfn
Henry charged a group of scholars including Thomas Cranmer (d. 1556) with collecting arguments in favour of the annulment. They concluded that the English kings had always had authority over the clergy, and the Book of Leviticus forbade marriage between a man and his brother's widow in all circumstances.Template:Sfn In 1530, the Parliament limited the jurisdiction of church courts. Wolsey had meanwhile lost Henry's favour and died, but More tried to convince Henry to abandon his plan about the annulment of his marriage. In contrast, Cranmer and Henry's new chief advisor Thomas Cromwell (d. 1540) argued that the marriage could be annulled without papal interference.Template:Sfn Henry who had fallen in love with Catherine's lady-in-waiting Anne Boleyn (d. 1536) decided to marry her even if the marriage could lead to a total break with the papacy.Template:Sfn During a visit in Germany, Cranmer married but kept his marriage in secret. On his return to England, Henry appointed him as the new Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Holy See confirmed the appointment.Template:Sfn
The links between the English Church and the papacy were severed by Acts of Parliament.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn In April 1533, the Act of Appeals decreed that only English courts had jurisdiction in cases of last wills, marriages and grants to the Church, emphasizing that "this realm of England is an Empire".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A special church court annulled the marriage of Henry and Catherine, and declared their only daughter Mary (d. 1558) illegitimate in May 1533.Template:Sfn Template:Nowrap did not sanction the judgement and excommunicated Henry.Template:Sfn Ignoring the papal ban, Henry married Anne, and she gave birth to a daughter Elizabeth (d. 1603).Template:Sfn Anne was a staunch supporter of the Reformation, and mainly her nominees were appointed to the vacant bishoprics between 1532 and 1536.Template:Sfn In 1534, the Act of Supremacy declared the king the "only supreme head of the Church of England".Template:Sfn Many of those who refused to swear a special oath of loyalty to the king—65 from about 400 defendants—were executed. More and John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester (d. 1535) were among the most prominent victims.Template:Sfn Cromwell gradually convinced Henry that a "purification" of church life was needed. The number of feast days was reduced by about 75 per cent, pilgrimages were forbidden, all monasteries were dissolved and their property was seized by the Crown.Template:Sfn
The Parliament of Ireland passed similar acts but they could only be fully implemented in the lands under direct English rule. Resistance against the Reformation was vigorous. In 1534, the powerful Lord Thomas FitzGerald (d. 1537) staged a revolt. Although it was crushed, thereafter Henry's government did not introduce drastic changes in the Church of Ireland.Template:Sfn In England, the dissolution of monasteries caused a popular revolt known as the Pilgrimage of Grace. The "pilgrims" demanded the dismissal of "heretic" royal advisors but they were overcame by royalist forces.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The principal articles of faith of the Church of England were summarized in the Six Articles in 1539. It reaffirmed several elements of traditional theology, such as transubstantiation and clerical celibacy.Template:Sfn
As Anne Boleyn did not give birth to a son, she lost Henry's favour. She was executed for adultery, and Elizabeth was declared a bastard. Henry's only son Edward (d. 1553) was born to Henry's third wife Jane Seymour (d. 1537). In 1543, an Act of Parliament returned Mary and Elizabeth to the line of the succession behind Edward.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Henry attacked Scotland to enforce the marriage of Edward and the infant Mary, Queen of Scots (Template:Reign) but her mother Mary of Guise (d. 1560) reinforced Scotland's traditional alliance with France.Template:Sfn The priest George Wishart (d. 1546) was the first to preach Zwinglian theology in Scotland. After he was burned for heresy, his followers, among them John Knox (d. 1572), assassinated Cardinal David Beaton, Archbishop of St Andrews (d. 1546), but French troops crushed their revolt.Template:Sfn
MünsterEdit
Having been banished from Sweden, Hoffman was wandering in southern Germany and the Low Countries. He turned AnabaptistTemplate:Sfn but suspended adult baptism to avoid persecution.Template:Sfn He denied that Christ had become flesh,Template:Refn and preached that 144,000 elect were to gather in Strasbourg to witness Christ's return in 1533.Template:Sfn His followers known as Melchiorites swarmed into the city, presenting an enormous challenge for its charity provisions. Hoffman also came to Strasbourg, but the authorities arrested him. After the deadline for Christ's return passed uneventfully, many disappointed Melchiorites accepted the leadership of a charismatic Dutch baker Jan Matthijszoon (d. 1534). He blamed Hoffman for the suspension of adult baptism, and proclaimed the city of Münster as the New Jerusalem. Although Münster was an episcopal see, the town council had installed a Protestant pastor Bernhard Rothmann (d. Template:Circa 1535) in clear defiance to the new prince-bishop Franz von Waldeck (Template:Reign). Those who expected a radical social transformation from the Reformation flocked to Münster. The radicals assumed full control of the town in February 1534.Template:Sfn
Bishop Franz and his allies, among them Philip of Hessen, attacked Münster but could not capture it. Under Matthijszoon's rule, private property and the use of money was outlawed in the town. Believing that God would protect him, Matthijszoon made a sortie against the enemy, but he was killed. Another charismatic Dutchman, John of Leiden (d. 1536)—a former tailor—succeeded him. Leiden announced that he was receiving revelations from God, and proclaimed himself "king of righteousness" and "the ruler of the new Zion". Church and state were united, and all sinners were executed.Template:Sfn Leiden legalized polygyny, and ordered all women who were twelve or older to marry. The protracted siege demoralized the defenders, and Münster fell through treason on 25 June 1535. After the fall of Münster, most Anabaptist groups adopted a pacifist approach under the leadership of a former priest Menno Simons (d. 1561).Template:Sfn He associated the Anabaptist communities with the New Jerusalem. His followers would be known as Mennonites.Template:Sfn Nearly all Anabaptist communities were destroyed in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland,Template:Sfn but moderate Anabaptist groups survived in East Frisia,Template:Sfn and were mainly tolerated in England.Template:Sfn
Calvin and the Institutes of the Christian ReligionEdit
The future reformer John Calvin (d. 1564) was destined to a church career by his father, a lay administrator of the Bishopric of Noyon in France.Template:Refn He studied theology at the Sorbonne, and law at Orléans and Bourges. He read treatises by Lefèvre and Lefèvre's disciples at the newly established {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and abandoned Catholicism under the influence of his Protestant friends, particularly the physician Nicolas Cop (d. 1540).Template:Sfn The persecution of French Protestants intensified after the so-called Affair of the Placards. In October 1534, placards (or posters) attacking the Mass were placed at many places, including the door to the royal bedchamber in Château d'Amboise. In retaliation, twenty-four Protestants were executed, and many intellectuals had to leave France.Template:Sfn
Calvin was one of the religious refugees. He settled in Basel and completed the first version of his principal theological treatise, the Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536. He would be rewriting and expanding it several times until 1559. As the historian Carlos Eire writes, "Calvin's text was blessed with a lawyer's penchant for precision, a humanist's love for poetic expression and rhetorical flourishes, and a theologian's respect for paradox".Template:Sfn With Eire's words, Calvin "revived the jealous God of the Old Testament". He warned King Francis that the persecution of the faithful would incur the wrath of God upon him but sharply distanced moderate Protestants from Anabaptists.Template:RefnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Already the first edition of the Institutes contained references to two distinguishing elements of Calvin's theology, both traceable back to Augustine: his conviction that the original sin had completely corrupted human nature, and his strong belief in "double predestination". In his view, only strict social and ecclesiastic control could prevent sins and crimes,Template:Sfn and God did not only decide who were saved but also those who were destined to damnation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
In 1536, Farel convinced Calvin to settle in Geneva. Their attempts to implement radical reforms in discipline brought them into conflicts with those who feared that the new measures would lead to clerical despotism.Template:Sfn After they refused to acknowledge the urban magistrates' claim to intervene in the process of excommunication, they were banished from the town. Calvin moved to Strasbourg where Bucer made a profound impact on him.Template:Sfn Under Bucer's influence, Calvin adopted an intermediate position on the Eucharist between Luther and Zwingli, denying Christ's presence in it but acknowledging that the rite included a real spiritual communion with Christ.Template:Sfn
After Calvin and Farel left Geneva, no pastors were able to assume the leadership of the local Protestant community. Fearing of a Catholic restoration, the urban magistrates convinced Calvin to come back to Geneva in 1541. Months after his return, the town council enacted The Ecclesiastical Ordinances, a detailed regulation summarizing Calvin's proposals for church administration.Template:Sfn The Ordinances established four church offices. The pastors were responsible for pastoral care and discipline; the doctors instructed believers in the faith; the elders (or presbyters) were authorized to "watch over the life of each person" and to report those who lived a "disorderly" life to the pastors; and deacons were appointed to administer the town's charity. All townspeople were obliged to regularly attend church services. Calvin established a special court called the consistory to hear cases of moral lapse such as blasphemy, adultery, disrespect to authorities, gossiping, witchcraft and participation in rites considered superstitious by church authorities. The consistory was composed of the pastors, the elders, and an urban magistrate, and the townspeople were encouraged to report sinful acts to it. First-time offenders mainly received lenient sentences such as fines, but repeat offenders were banished from the town or executed.Template:Sfn Resistance against the Ordinances was significant. Many continued visit shrines and pray to saints, while many patricians insisted on liberal traditional customs for which Calvin called them "Libertines".Template:Sfn
Reformation in BritainEdit
Template:Nowrap died on 27 January 1547. His nine-year-old son Template:Nowrap (Template:Reign) succeeded him, and Edward's maternal uncle Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset (d. 1552) assumed power as Lord Protector. Somerset halted the persecution of religious dissidents, making England a safe haven for religious refugees from all over Europe. They established their own congregations, served by prominent pastors, such as the Polish Jan Łaski (d. 1560) and the Spanish Casiodoro de Reina (d. 1594). Most of them adhered to Reformed theology.Template:Sfn Cranmer introduced further religious reforms: images were removed from the churches, the doctrine of purgatory was rejected, and all endowments for prayers for the dead (or chantries) were confiscated. With the introduction of Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer, the Mass was replaced by a vernacular liturgy.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
Marshall notes, that it is "safe to say that the greater part of the population disliked what was taking place". The liturgical changes caused popular revolts in Devon and Cornwall and other places but they were quickly suppressed, just like the riot against the dissolution of chantries in East Yorkshire. Even in Norfolk, where the peasants adopted a Protestant rhetoric, they assembled under the banners of their parish saints.Template:Sfn Somerset's opponents take advantage of the unrest to get rid of him. He was replaced by John Dudley (d. 1553) who was made Duke of Northumberland.Template:Sfn Cranmer continued the liturgical reforms, and the new version of the Book of Common Prayer rejected the dogma of transubstantiation.Template:Sfn He completed the Forty-two Articles, a new confessional document combining elements of Reformed and Evangelical theologies.Template:Sfn
Edward died of tuberculosis on 6 July 1553. He had designated his Protestant relative Jane Grey (d. 1554) as his heir to prevent the succession of his Catholic sister Mary, but most English remained loyal to the Tudor dynasty. Initially, Template:Nowrap (Template:Reign) took advantage of her royal prerogatives to dismiss married clergy, appoint Catholic priests to bishoprics, and restore the Mass.Template:Sfn She had to make concessions to landowners who had seized church property to achieve the restoration of papal supremacy by the Parliament in November 1554. Cranmer was forced to sign six documents condemning his own acts but withdrew his recantations while being burned for heresy in public in March 1556. Reginald Pole was appointed as the new archbishop of Canterbury, but he was accused of heresy after his old enemy Carafa had been elected pope as Template:Nowrap (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn The restoration of the altars and images gained popular support in many places, but recatholisation faced significant resistance—around 300 Protestants were burned, and about 1,000 were forced into exile during Mary's reign.Template:Sfn Her marriage with Template:Nowrap of Spain was unpopular, and she died childless on 17 November 1558.Template:Sfn
Mary's sister and successor Template:Nowrap (Template:Reign) sought a {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('middle way') between religious extremists. Her first Parliament restored the royal leadership of the Church of England, and introduced a modified version of the Book of Common Prayer. The Anglican liturgy retained elements of Catholic ceremonies, such as priestly vestments, and contained ambiguous sentences about the Eucharist, suggesting the real presence of Jesus's Blood and Body for conservatives, and a memorial service for reformers. Elizabeth supervised the revision of the Anglican articles of faith in person. The subsequent Thirty-nine Articles were formulated in a way that adherents to the major mainstream Protestant theologies could accept them. However, the most resolute Protestants were determined to purify the Church of England from the remnants of Catholic ceremonies, hence they were called Puritans. They were especially influential at the universities. Many of them rejected the authority of bishops, the Presbyterians emphasized the equal status of all priests, whereas the Congregationalists wanted to strengthen the position of local communities in church administration.Template:Sfn
England's recatholisation contributed to the triumph of Reformation in Scotland. James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran (d. 1575), heir presumptive to Queen Mary of the Scots, assumed the leadership of the Protestant lords. Incited by Knox's passionate sermons, anti-Catholic sentiments led to a popular revolt of elementary force in 1559, causing the destruction of monasteries and friaries.Template:Sfn
Servetus and the Restoration of ChristianityEdit
The first radicals who rejected the dogma of Trinity were put on trial in Augsburg in 1527. A scholar from Navarre Michael Servetus (d. 1553) adopted antitrinitarian theology in the 1530s. MacCulloch proposes that Servetus rejected the Trinity, a dogma extremely offensive to Jews and Muslims, because he wanted to present Christianity as a universal religion.Template:Sfn After studying medicine and anatomy in Paris,Template:Refn Servetus became the court physician of the elderly Catholic archbishop of Vienne in southern France. While in Vienne, he sent the first (unpublished) versions of his theological work, the Restoration of Christianity to Calvin. He disrespectfully described the Trinity as a three-headed Cerberus, attacked infant baptism, and denied original sin. He also wrote insulting comments on Calvin's Institutes. The Restoration was published anonymously in Lyon in 1553, but the Catholic Inquisition identified Servetus as its author by using documents from Calvin's personal files. Servetus fled from France but attended a church service delivered by Calvin in Geneva. He was recognised and arrested, and the urban authorities sentenced him to death with Calvin's consent. He was burned at the stake on 27 October 1553.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Bucer, Melanchthon and other leading Protestant theologians agreed with Servetus's execution. Only the Basel-based schoolmaster and Bible translator Sebastian Castellio (d. 1563) condemned it in a manifesto for religious toleration. He also addressed a letter to Calvin, echoing Erasmus his posthumous benefactor, stating "To burn a heretic is not to defend a doctrine, but to kill a man".Template:Sfn Erasmus was a Trinitarian himself, but had noted that the theological formulation had developed from the time of the Apostles, which fueled many subsequent antitrinitarians who took this to mean it that the idea was unbiblical. Template:Refn
Antitrinitarian theology survived among Italian exiles in Basel. Lelio Sozzini (d. 1562), a scholar from Siena, argued that Biblical texts calling Jesus "Son of God" did not refer to his divinity but to his faultless humanity. His nephew, Fausto Sozzini (d. 1604) rejected original sin and the theory of satisfaction (the concept that Christ's sufferings brought about atonement to God the Father for the original sin). Their followers became known as Socinians.Template:Sfn
After Servetus's execution Calvin strengthened his position as the leading figure of Reformed Protestantism.Template:Sfn In Geneva, the Libertines rose up but they were quickly overcame, and forced into exile or executed. The confiscation of the property of the wealthy Ami Perrin (d. 1561) and his family provided the city with funds to create an academy. It served both as a preparatory school for local youths and as a seminary for Reformed ministers. Calvin's chief assistant Theodore Beza (d. 1605) was appointed as its first rector. The academy quickly developed into a principal center of theologian training for students from all over Europe, earning Geneva the nickname "the Protestant Rome". It was especially popular among French Protestants.Template:Sfn
Wars of religion and toleranceEdit
Schmalkaldic WarsEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Scandals and internal conflicts weakened the Protestants' position in Germany in the early 1540s.Template:Sfn Philip the Magnanimous committed bigamy by secretly marrying a lady-in-waiting of his court although his wife was still alive. Bucer, Luther, and Melanchthon had discretely sanctioned the bigamious marriage allegedly to prevent adultery.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1542, Philip and John the Constant's successor, John Frederick I (Template:Reign) invaded the Duchy of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel which brought disapproval from other princes. Disputes over lands renewed the old rivalry between the Ernestine and Albertine branches of the Wettin dynasty of Saxony. Taking advantage of the situation, Emperor Charles built a broad coalition of Catholic and Evangelical princes against Hesse and Electoral Saxony. The coalition included the Albertine duke Maurice of Saxony (Template:Reign). During the ensuing Schmalkaldic War, Charles and his allies won a decisive victory, and Maurice was rewarded with John Frederick's title of elector.Template:Sfn
The triumphant Template:Nowrap regulated religious issues with an imperial edict known as the Augsburg Interim. The Interim sanctioned clerical marriage and the communion in both kinds in Protestant territories, but denied further concessions. Maurice issued an alternative regulation called the Leipzig Interim for Saxony which ordered the clergy to wear surplices. Melanchthon supported the Leipzig Interim, stating that such issues were "matters indifferent" but uncompromising Lutheran theologians such as Nicolaus von Amsdorf (d. 1565) and Matthias Flacius (d. 1575) rejected all concessions to imperial demands. Different views on justification and the Eucharist caused further heated debates between Melanchton's followers, known as Philippists, and their opponents, called Gnesio-Lutherans ('authentic Lutherans') in the 1550s. The Augsburg Interim was only implemented in the southern German Protestant cities. This led to the expulsion of recalcitrant clerics, including Bucer from Strasbourg.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Alarmed by Charles's triumph, Calvin and Bullinger agreed on a consensual Eucharistic formula, now known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Consensus of Zürich'), emphasising that Christ "makes us participants of himself" in the Lord's Supper, but also stating that God "uses the ministry of the sacraments" without infusing divine power into them. Luther had died in 1546 but his followers rejected the Consensus.Template:Refn The rift between Evangelical and Reformed Protestants widened to the extent that Reformed refugees faced an unfriendly reception at Evangelical countries.Template:Sfn In Bohemia, Hussite and Evangelical aristocrats and townspeople rose up against Template:Nowrap. Although Ferdinand crushed the revolt, he had to sanction religious plurality in Moravia as a reward for the Moravian Estates' loyalty during the Bohemian revolt.Template:Sfn
Distrusting Emperor Charles, Maurice brokered a coalition of Evangelical princes, and promised four prince-bishoprics to King Henry II of France (Template:Reign) for financial support. Maurice and his allies invaded the Habsburgs' domains, forcing Charles to flee. Signed on 10 August 1552, the Peace of Passau prescribed that the religious issues were to be discussed at the following Imperial Diet. The Diet was opened at Augsburg on 5 February 1555. Already exhausted, Charles appointed Ferdinand to represent him. Ferdinand's negotiations with the Evangelical princes ended with the Peace of Augsburg on 25 September. The document reaffirmed the principle {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, but the Imperial Estates could only choose between Catholicism and the Augsburg Confession. Evangelical imperial free cities had to tolerate the existence of Catholic communities within their walls, and prince-bishoprics could not be secularised in case the bishop abandoned the Catholic faith.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charles, who did not sign the peace treaty, abdicated, ceding his imperial title to Ferdinand, and his vast empire to his son Philip II of Spain (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn
French Wars of ReligionEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also
Many French Protestants did not risk to profess their faith in public. They were known as Nicodemites after Nicodemus, a Pharisee who visited Jesus in secret. Calvin condemned this practice describing those who attended the Mass as soldiers "in the army of Antichrist". Under his influence, the French Protestants started to stay away from Catholic church services. They were called Huguenots for uncertain reason.Template:Sfn The poet Clément Marot (d. 1544) provided them with popular stirring songs by translating forty-nine Psalms to French.Template:Sfn Template:Nowrap promised to exterminate heresy in France in a peace treaty with Template:Nowrap in 1544. Next year, Waldensians were massacred in the Luberon region. In 1547, Template:Nowrap established a special court for heresy cases, named {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('the burning chamber'). The lawyer Jean Crespin (d. 1572) completed a catalogue of martyrs to commemorate the victims of the purges, and it gained immense popularity in the Protestant communities all over Europe.Template:Sfn After around 1555, prominent French aristocrats converted to Protestantism, including Marguerite of Angoulême's daughter, Jeanne d'Albret, (d. 1572), Jeanne's husband Antoine de Bourbon (d. 1562), and Gaspard II de Coligny (d. 1572), admiral of France. Their patronage encouraged less distinguished Huguenots to express their faith in public.Template:Sfn In 1559, delegates from seventy-two congregations attended the first synod of the Reformed Church of France, representing about 1.5–2 million believers. The synod adopted the Gallican Confession, a confessional document drafted by Calvin.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Fully preoccupied with a new war against Emperor Charles, Template:Nowrap did not take severe measures against the Huguenot nobility.Template:Sfn After his sudden death after an accident, his eldest son Francis II (Template:Reign) ascended the throne. His wife, Mary, Queen of Scots was the niece of Francis, Duke of Guise (d. 1563) and Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine (d. 1574), two leaders of the most resolute Catholic faction of the nobility.Template:Sfn The queen mother Catherine de' Medici (d. 1589) distrusted them but the persecution of Huguenots intensified under their influence.Template:Sfn When Francis died by an ear infection, Calvin considered his fate as divine deliverance. Francis was succeeded by his brother Charles IX (Template:Reign) under Catherine's regency.Template:Sfn She enacted the Huguenots' right to freely attend church services and hold public assemblies because she wanted to avoid a civil war along religious lines.Template:Sfn
Uncompromising Catholics and Huguenots considered their confrontation inevitable.Template:Sfn The first of the French Wars of Religion—a series of armed conflicts between Catholics and Huguenots—began after Guise's retainers massacred more than fifty Huguenots at Vassy on 1 March 1562.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As Antoine de Bourbon had returned to Catholicism, his brother Louis I, Prince of Condé (d. 1569) assumed the leadership of a Huguenot revolt.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They concluded a treaty with England in September 1562.Template:Sfn To achieve a reconciliation, Catherine de'Medici married off her daughter Margaret of Valois (d. 1615) to the Protestant son of Jeanne d'Albret and Antoine de Bourbon, Henry de Bourbon, King of Navarre (Template:Reign). Mutual mistrust between Catholics and Huguenots, and the Parisians' determination to cleanse their city of heresy led to the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre after the wedding. On 24 August 1572, a fanatic mob slaughtered 2,000–3,000 Protestants in Paris, and by early October further 6,000–7,000 Huguenots fell victim to pogroms in other cities and towns.Template:Sfn Many Huguenots returned to the Catholic Church or fled from France, and those who remained gathered in southern and southern-west France and continued the armed resistance.Template:Sfn Known as "Malcontents", moderate Catholics concluded that only concessions to the Huguenots could restore peace.Template:Sfn
Template:Nowrap died in May 1574 leaving an almost empty treasury to his brother Henry III (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn Henry adopted a moderate religious policy but the uncompromising Catholics established the Catholic League in 1576. They entered into a secret alliance with Template:Nowrap of Spain to prevent the spread of Protestantism. In 1589, the monk Jacques Clément mortally wounded King Henry. He named Henry de Bourbon as his heir, but the League and many cities refused to obey to a Huguenot king. Template:Nowrap secured the support of moderate Catholics by converting to Catholicism. He defeated his French opponents and their Spanish allies, and put an end to the civil war early in 1598. He enacted many of the demands of the Huguenots, about fifteen per cent of the population, in the Edict of Nantes. Among others, they were allowed to attend religious services in many places, and their right to hold public offices was confirmed.Template:Sfn
Revolt in the NetherlandsEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
More Protestants fell victim to persecution in the seventeen provinces of Habsburg Netherlands than in any other country between 1523 and 1555.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn The ruthless persecution prevented the establishment of Evangelical congregations although Luther's ideas were widely discussed in Flemish communities.Template:Sfn Reformed theology spread among the Walloons through individuals' correspondence with Calvin and the Genevan academy from the 1540s. Nicodemism was not unusual but uncompromising Protestants disturbed Catholic ceremonies.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn The preacher Guido de Bres (d. 1567) established the first permanent Reformed congregations.Template:Sfn He was a main contributor to the Belgic Confession, a confessional document based on the Gallican Confession, first published in Walloon in 1561, and in Dutch in 1562. The Confession sharply criticised the Anapabtists, and emphasized the importance of church discipline.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
In 1566, Template:Nowrap requested Template:Nowrap governor Margaret of Parma (d. 1586) to moderate anti-heretic legislation. Although the petitioners were mocked as "beggars",Template:Sfn Margaret was open to a compromise. Protestant refugees returned from abroad, and religious enthusiasts stirred up public demonstrations.Template:Sfn On the night of 20–21 August 1566, a Protestant mob sacked the Antwerp Cathedral, introducing a popular iconoclastic movement that spread all over the Netherlands.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1567, Philip appointed Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba (d. 1582) to crush the riots. Alba arrived at the head of a 20,000-strong army, and introduced a reign of terror, leading to the execution of thousands of people.Template:Sfn A prominent aristocrat William the Silent, Prince of Orange (d. 1584) assumed the leadership of the resistance. His "Sea Beggars"—a squadron of privateers—seized the provinces of Holland and Zeeland by 1572,Template:Sfn although the Reformed communities were in the minority in most towns.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfn
Template:Nowrap government faced bankruptcy and his unpaid Spanish troops sacked Antwerp in 1576. This led to a general revolt against Spanish rule. The Catholic aristocrat Philippe III de Croÿ, Duke of Aarschot (d. 1595), made an alliance with William the Silent but rivalry between Catholics and Protestants did not abate. In 1581, the northern provinces united under William's leadership, and renounced allegiance to Philip. In the south, Margaret of Parma's son Alessandro Farnese crushed the revolts,Template:Sfn forcing about 100,000 Protestants to seek refugee in the north.Template:Sfn Developed from the union of seven northern provinces, the Dutch Republic remained under the loose leadership of the House of Orange.Template:Sfn The Reformed pastors were eager to transform the whole society along their ideas. They failed because William preferred a more tolerant approach, and significant Protestant groups associated church discipline with Catholicism. As a consequence, Evangelical, Annabaptist and Catholic communities survived in the Dutch Republic.Template:Sfn Heterodox theologies could also spread, such as the views of Jacobus Arminius (d. 1609) who argued that an individual could resist divine grace. Although Arminianism was rejected at the international Synod of Dort in 1619, it continued to influence Protestant theologians.Template:Sfn
Edict of TordaEdit
After King Louis's death at Mohács, two claimants John Zápolya (Template:Reign) and Ferdinand I of Habsburg (Template:Reign) competed for the Hungarian throne.Template:Sfn They were Catholic but neither of them risked to alienate potential supporters by anti-Protestant purges.Template:Sfn The Transylvanian Saxon leader Markus Pemfflinger (d. 1537) promoted Evangelical preaching in the Saxon metropolis Hermanstadt (Sibiu, Romania) from around 1530. Evangelical teaching spread among ethnic Hungarians, Slovaks, and Croats after Protestant aristocrats started to appoint Evangelical preachers to the churches under their patronage in the 1530s. After Zápolya's death, the Ottomans conquered central Hungary, his widow Isabella Jagiellon (d. 1559) assumed the regency for their infant son John Sigismund Zápolya (Template:Reign) in eastern Hungary under Ottoman suzerainty, and Ferdinand ruled Royal Hungary in the north and west.Template:Sfn Often in need of funds, Ferdinand seized church revenues, while Isabella and her treasurer the Catholic bishop George Martinuzzi (d. 1551) secularised the estates of the Transylvanian bishopric.Template:Sfn The Transylvanian Saxons adopted the Augsburg Confession in 1544; five years later, five free royal boroughs accepted an Evangelical confession in Royal Hungary.Template:Sfn
Two former Catholic priests Mátyás Dévai Bíró (d. 1547) and Mihály Sztárai (d. 1575) were among the first Hungarian pastors to teach Zwinglian Eucharistic theology. "Sacramentarianism" (the denial of Christ's presence in the Eucharist) and rebaptism were outlawed by the Diet in Royal Hungary in 1548.Template:Sfn John Sigismund was open to religious innovations. Under the influence of his court chaplain Ferenc Dávid (d. 1579), he adhered to Reformed theology from 1562, and accepted antitrinitarian views during the last years of his life.Template:Refn The Edict of Torda legalised three Protestant denominations—Evangelical, Reformed and Unitarian—in eastern Hungary in 1568.Template:Sfn Eastern Hungary transformed into the autonomous Principality of Transylvania under Ottoman suzerainty in 1570. The coexistence of four officially recognised churches—Catholicism and the three legalised Protestant denominations—remained a lasting feature of religious politics in Transylvania.Template:Sfn The most radical antitrinitarians rejected the New Testament and held Saturday (or Sabbath) as weekly holiday; hence they were called Sabbatarians.Template:Sfn
Warsaw ConfederationEdit
As the Bohemian Brethren were famed for their diligence, many Polish aristocrats eagerly settled them on their estates.Template:Sfn Ethnic Poles became receptive to Protestant ideas, especially to Calvin's theology from the 1540s. The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Jan Tarnowski (d. 1561) entered into correspondence with Calvin in 1540; in 1542, Jan Łaski (d. 1560) converted although his uncle (and namesake) had been the Primate of Poland. In 1548, Sigismund the Old's tolerant son Sigismund II Augustus (Template:Reign) ascended the throne. Two years later, the first synod of the Polish Reformed Church assembled at Pińczów.Template:Sfn Proposals for the introduction of vernacular liturgy and communion in both kinds, and the abolition of clerical celibacy were forwarded by Sigismund Augustus to the Holy See but Pope Paul IV (Template:Reign) rejected them.Template:Sfn The Catholic prelates tried to put Protestant nobles and married priests on trial for heresy but the legislative assembly, or Sejm suspended such persecutions on the initiative of the Protestant Marshal of the Sejm Rafał Leszczyński and Tarnowski in 1552.Template:Sfn In 1556, Łaski organised a synod in the hope of reuniting all non-Lutheran Protestants but failed. At the meeting, Piotr of Goniądz (d. 1573) openly attacked infant baptism and the doctrine of Trinity.Template:Sfn The antitrinitarian Polish Brethren established their own church, known as Minor Church in contrast with the Reformed Major Church.Template:Sfn From 1565, Polish nobles could no more be persecuted on religious grounds which allowed them to freely choose between competing theologies.Template:Sfn By this time, around one-fifth of the nobility had converted to the Reformed faith, and most secular members of the Senate were Protestant. Relationship between Poland and Lithuania was redefined by the 1569 Union of Lublin which created the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.Template:Sfn After Sigismund Augustus died, the Sejm passed the Warsaw Confederation prescribing that only candidates who promised to protect religious freedom could be elected king.Template:Sfn
Counter-Reformation and regional conflictsEdit
The continuous expansion of Protestantism stopped in Germany after the Peace of Augsburg. The Bavarian duke Albert V (Template:Reign) took the lead of recatholicisation. He overcame the opposition of Evangelical nobles, and exiled all clerics who refused to take the Tridentine oath.Template:Sfn With Albert's support, the Jesuits opened a college in Ingolstadt that accepted Evangelical and Hussite students.Template:Sfn Template:Nowrap eldest son and successor, Maximilian II (Template:Reign) pursued a tolerant religious policy but his brothers, Ferdinand II of the Tyrol (Template:Reign) and Charles II of Inner Austria (Template:Reign) were determined to subdue their Protestant subjects. After the predominantly Evangelical Estates of Inner Austria who controlled taxation extracted concessions from Template:Nowrap, he promoted Catholicism by appointing Catholics to state offices even if he needed to hire Bavarian and Tyrolian nobles.Template:Sfn
Interreligious conflicts led to wars in many regions of Central Europe. The Cologne War broke out after Gebhard Truchsess von Waldburg, Archbishop-elector of Cologne (Template:Reign), abandoned Catholicism and married his Protestant lover Agnes von Mansfeld-Eisleben (d. 1637) in 1582. The war ended with the victory of his Catholic opponent Ernest (Template:Reign), a younger son of Template:Nowrap.Template:Sfn The Strasbourg Bishops' War began when both the Catholic and Protestant canons of the Strasbourg Cathedral elected their own candidate to the see of Strasbourg in 1592. At the end, the Protestant candidate Johann Georg von Brandenburg (d. 1624) renounced in favor of his opponent Charles of Lorraine (Template:Reign).Template:Sfn
Template:Nowrap son and successor Ferdinand II (Template:Reign) set up "reformation commissions"—a group of clerics and state officials led by a senior clergyman—to visit the Inner Austrian parishes between 1598 and 1601. The commissioners seized and destroyed Evangelical churches, burned Protestant books and expelled Evangelical priests, often with the support of the local (mainly Slovenian) peasantry.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His cousin Emperor Rudolf II (Template:Reign) introduced anti-Protestant measures in Royal Hungary and Transylvania, provoking a rebellion. The Ottomans supported the rebels whose leader, the Reformed aristocrat Stephen Bocskai was proclaimed prince of Transylvania (Template:Reign). Rudolph appointed his brother Matthias to conduct negotiations with Bocskai, and the peace treaty sanctioned the freedom of the Evangelical and Reformed Churches in Royal Hungary in 1606.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rudolph was forced to cede Hungary, Austria and Moravia to Matthias in 1608, and to confirm religious freedom in Bohemia in 1609.Template:Sfn
Reformation outside GermanyEdit
The Reformation also spread widely throughout Europe, starting with Bohemia, in the Czech lands, and, over the next few decades, to other countries.
Nordic countriesEdit
All of Scandinavia ultimately adopted Lutheranism over the course of the 16th century, as the monarchs of Denmark (who also ruled Norway and Iceland) and Sweden (who also ruled Finland) converted to that faith.
IcelandEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Luther's influence had already reached Iceland before King Christian's decree. The Germans fished near Iceland's coast, and the Hanseatic League engaged in commerce with the Icelanders. These Germans raised a Lutheran church in Hafnarfjörður as early as 1533. Through German trade connections, many young Icelanders studied in Hamburg.Template:Sfn In 1538, when the kingly decree of the new Church ordinance reached Iceland, bishop Ögmundur and his clergy denounced it, threatening excommunication for anyone subscribing to the German "heresy".Template:Sfn In 1539, the King sent a new governor to Iceland, Klaus von Mervitz, with a mandate to introduce reform and take possession of church property.Template:Sfn Von Mervitz seized a monastery in Viðey with the help of his sheriff, Dietrich of Minden, and his soldiers. They drove the monks out and seized all their possessions, for which they were promptly excommunicated by Ögmundur.
Great BritainEdit
EnglandEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See The English Reformation is a complex historical series of events and reversals, whose nature and effect has been debated by historians.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=peeps>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Rp The results of the reformation included an established church with a "Prayer Book consciously aligned with Swiss theology,...(but) the most elaborate liturgy of any Protestant Church in Europe" practiced in Cathedrals, with plain, sermon-centred services in parish churches,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Rp politically imposed by a "literate Protestant elite".<ref name=peeps/>Template:Rp
According to political historian Gregory Slysz "The dissolution of the monasteries [...] brought social catastrophe to England" for the next 50 or so years, due to the closure of the numerous associated urban almshouses for poor relief and hospitals, worsened by spiraling inflation and a doubling of the population.<ref name=slysz>Template:Cite journal</ref> Popular revolts by grassroots Catholics against the changes, such as the Prayer Book Rebellion in the South and the Pilgrimage of Grace and Bigod's rebellion in the North, were ruthlessly put down by government forces with the loss of thousands of lives.
English North AmericaEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The most famous emigration to America was the migration of Puritan separatists from the Anglican Church of England. They fled first to Holland, and then later to America to establish the English colony of Massachusetts in New England, which later became one of the original United States. These Puritan separatists were also known as "the Pilgrims". After establishing a colony at Plymouth (which became part of the colony of Massachusetts) in 1620, the Puritan pilgrims received a charter from the King of England that legitimised their colony, allowing them to do trade and commerce with merchants in England, in accordance with the principles of mercantilism.
The Pilgrims held radical Protestant disapproval of Christmas, and its celebration was outlawed in Boston from 1659 to 1681.<ref name="Barnett">Template:Cite book</ref> The ban was revoked in 1681 by the English-appointed governor Edmund Andros, who also revoked a Puritan ban on festivities on Saturday nights.<ref name="Barnett"/> Nevertheless, it was not until the mid-19th century that celebrating Christmas became fashionable in the Boston region.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
WalesEdit
Template:Further Bishop Richard Davies and dissident Protestant cleric John Penry introduced Calvinist theology to Wales. In 1588, the Bishop of Llandaff published the entire Bible in the Welsh language. The translation had a significant impact upon the Welsh population and helped to firmly establish Protestantism among the Welsh people.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Welsh Protestants used the model of the Synod of Dort of 1618–1619. Calvinism developed through the Puritan period, following the restoration of the monarchy under Charles II, and within Wales' Calvinistic Methodist movement. However few copies of Calvin's writings were available before the mid-19th century.<ref>D. Densil Morgan, "Calvinism in Wales: c. 1590–1909," Welsh Journal of Religious History (2009), Vol. 4, pp. 22–36</ref>
ScotlandEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
The Reformation in Scotland's case culminated ecclesiastically in the establishment of a church along reformed lines, and politically in the triumph of English influence over that of France. John Knox is regarded as the leader of the Scottish reformation.
The Reformation Parliament of 1560 repudiated the pope's authority by the Papal Jurisdiction Act 1560, forbade the celebration of the Mass and approved a Protestant Confession of Faith. It was made possible by a revolution against French hegemony under the regime of the regent Mary of Guise, who had governed Scotland in the name of her absent daughter Mary, Queen of Scots (then also Queen of France).
Although Protestantism triumphed relatively easily in Scotland, the exact form of Protestantism remained to be determined. The 17th century saw a complex struggle between Presbyterianism (particularly the Covenanters) and Episcopalianism. The Presbyterians eventually won control of the Church of Scotland, which went on to have an important influence on Presbyterian churches worldwide, but Scotland retained a relatively large Episcopalian minority.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
FranceEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Catholicism remained the official state religion, and the fortunes of French Protestants gradually declined over the next century, culminating in Louis XIV's Edict of Fontainebleau (1685), which revoked the Edict of Nantes and made Catholicism the sole legal religion of France, leading some Huguenots to live as Nicodemites.<ref>"Nicodemism", The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000.</ref> In response to the Edict of Fontainebleau, Frederick William I, Elector of Brandenburg declared the Edict of Potsdam (October 1685), giving free passage to Huguenot refugees and tax-free status to them for ten years.
In the late 17th century, 150,000–200,000 Huguenots fled to England, the Netherlands, Prussia, Switzerland, and the English and Dutch overseas colonies.<ref>1685 and the French Revolution, Andrew Jainchill, The French Revolution in Global Perspective, ed. Suzanne Desan, Lynn Hunt, and William Max Nelson, (Cornell University Press, 2013), 57.</ref> A significant community in France remained in the Cévennes region. A separate Protestant community, of the Lutheran faith, existed in the newly conquered province of Alsace, its status not affected by the Edict of Fontainebleau.
SpainEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:Multiple image
In the early 16th century, Spain had a different political and cultural milieu from its Western and Central European neighbours in several respects, which affected the mentality and the reaction of the nation towards the Reformation. Spain, which had only recently managed to complete the reconquest of the Peninsula from the Moors in 1492, had been preoccupied with converting the Muslim and Jewish populations of the newly conquered regions through the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition in 1478. The rulers of the nation stressed political, cultural, and religious unity, and by the time of the Lutheran Reformation, the Spanish Inquisition was already 40 years old and had the capability of quickly persecuting any new movement that the leaders of the Catholic Church perceived or interpreted to be religious heterodoxy.Template:Sfn Charles V did not wish to see Spain or the rest of Habsburg Europe divided, and in light of continual threat from the Ottomans, preferred to see the Catholic Church reform itself from within. This led to a Counter-Reformation in Spain in the 1530s. During the 1520s, the Spanish Inquisition had created an atmosphere of suspicion and sought to root out any religious thought seen as suspicious. As early as 1521, the Pope had written a letter to the Spanish monarchy warning against allowing the unrest in Northern Europe to be replicated in Spain. Between 1520 and 1550, printing presses in Spain were tightly controlled and any books of Protestant teaching were prohibited.
Between 1530 and 1540, Protestantism in Spain was still able to gain followers clandestinely, and in cities such as Seville and Valladolid adherents would secretly meet at private houses to pray and study the Bible.Template:Sfn Protestants in Spain were estimated at between 1000 and 3000, mainly among intellectuals who had seen writings such as those of Erasmus. Notable reformers included Juan Gil and Juan Pérez de Pineda who subsequently fled and worked alongside others such as Francisco de Enzinas to translate the Greek New Testament into the Spanish language, a task completed by 1556. Protestant teachings were smuggled into Spain by Spaniards such as Julián Hernández, who in 1557 was condemned by the Inquisition and burnt at the stake. Under Philip II, conservatives in the Spanish church tightened their grip, and those who refused to recant such as Rodrigo de Valer were condemned to life imprisonment. On May 21, 1559, sixteen Spanish Lutherans were burnt at the stake; 14 were strangled before being burnt, while two were burnt alive. In October another 30 were executed. Spanish Protestants who were able to flee the country were to be found in at least a dozen cities in Europe, such as Geneva, where some of them embraced Calvinist teachings. Those who fled to England were given support by the Church of England.Template:Citation needed
The Kingdom of Navarre, although by the time of the Protestant Reformation a minor principality territoriality restricted to southern France, had French Huguenot monarchs, including Henry IV of France and his mother, Jeanne III of Navarre, a devout Calvinist.
Upon the arrival of the Protestant Reformation, Calvinism reached some Basques through the translation of the Bible into the Basque language by Joanes Leizarraga. As Queen of Navarre, Jeanne III commissioned the translation of the New Testament into BasqueTemplate:Refn and Béarnese for the benefit of her subjects.
ItalyEdit
Word of the Protestant reformers reached Italy in the 1520s but never caught on. Its development was stopped by the Counter-Reformation, the Inquisition and popular disinterest. Not only was the Church highly aggressive in seeking out and suppressing heresy, but there was a shortage of Protestant leadership. No-one made a new Protestant translation of the Bible into Italian to compete with the existing Catholic vernacular translations; few tracts were written. No core of Protestantism emerged. The few preachers who did take an interest in "Lutheranism", as it was called in Italy, were suppressed, or went into exile to northern countries where their message was well received. As a result, the Reformation exerted almost no lasting influence in Italy, except for strengthening the Catholic Church and pushing for an end to ongoing abuses during the Counter-Reformation.<ref name=McCulloch401>MacCulloch Reformation pp. 401–417</ref>Template:Sfn
Some Protestants left Italy and became notable activists of the Eastern European Reformation, mainly in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (e.g. Giorgio Biandrata, Bernardino Ochino, Giovanni Alciato, Giovanni Battista Cetis, Fausto Sozzini, Francesco Stancaro and Giovanni Valentino Gentile some of whom propagated Nontrinitarianism there and were chief instigators of the movement of Polish Brethren.<ref name=Church457>Church "Literature of the Italian reformation" Journal of Modern History pp. 457–473</ref>) Some also fled to England and Switzerland, including Peter Vermigli.
In 1532, the Waldensians, who had been already present centuries before the Reformation, aligned themselves and adopted the Calvinist theology. The Waldensian Church survived in the Western Alps through many persecutions and remains a Protestant church in Italy.Template:SfnTemplate:Page needed
SloveniaEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
Primož Trubar is notable for consolidating the Slovene language and is considered to be the key figure of Slovenian cultural history, in many aspects a major Slovene historical personality.<ref name="Voglar I">Template:Cite news</ref> He was the key figure of the Protestant Church of the Slovene Lands, as he was its founder and its first superintendent. The first books in Slovene, Catechismus and Abecedarium, were written by Trubar.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
GreeceEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The Protestant teachings of the Western Church were also briefly adopted within the Eastern Orthodox Church through the Greek Patriarch Cyril Lucaris in 1629 with the publishing of the Confessio (Calvinistic doctrine) in Geneva. Motivating factors in their decision to adopt aspects of the Reformation included the historical rivalry and mistrust between the Greek Orthodox and the Catholic Churches along with their concerns of Jesuit priests entering Greek lands in their attempts to propagate the teachings of the Counter-Reformation to the Greek populace. He subsequently sponsored Maximos of Gallipoli's translation of the New Testament into the Modern Greek language and it was published in Geneva in 1638. Upon Lucaris's death in 1638, the conservative factions within the Eastern Orthodox Church held two synods: the Synod of Constantinople (1638) and Synod of Iași (1642) criticising the reforms and, in the 1672 convocation led by Dositheos, they officially condemned the Calvinistic doctrines.
In 2019, Christos Yannaras told Norman Russell that although he had participated in the Zoë movement, he had come to regard it as Crypto-Protestant.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
SpreadEdit
The Reformation spread throughout Europe beginning in 1517, reaching its peak between 1545 and 1620. The greatest geographical extent of Protestantism occurred at some point between 1545 and 1620. In 1620, the Battle of White Mountain defeated Protestants in Bohemia (now the Czech Republic) who sought to have the 1609 Letter of Majesty upheld.
The Thirty Years' War began in 1618 and brought a drastic territorial and demographic decline when the House of Habsburg introduced counter-reformational measures throughout their vast possessions in Central Europe. Although the Thirty Years' War concluded with the Peace of Westphalia, the French Wars of the Counter-Reformation continued, as well as the expulsion of Protestants in Austria.
According to a 2020 study in the American Sociological Review, the Reformation spread earliest to areas where Luther had pre-existing social relations, such as mail correspondents, and former students, as well as where he had visited. The study argues that these social ties contributed more to the Reformation's early breakthroughs than the printing press.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Conclusion and legacyEdit
There is no universal agreement on the exact or even the approximate date the Reformation ended. Various interpretations emphasise different dates, entire periods, or argue that the Reformation never really ended.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> However, there are a few popular interpretations. The Peace of Augsburg in 1555 officially ended the religious struggle between the two groups and made the legal division of Christianity permanent within the Holy Roman Empire, allowing rulers to choose either Lutheranism or Catholicism as the official confession of their state. It could be considered to end with the enactment of the confessions of faith. Other suggested ending years relate to the Counter-Reformation or the 1648 Peace of Westphalia. From one Catholic perspective, the Second Vatican Council ended the Counter-Reformation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- In the history of theology or philosophy, the Reformation era ended with the Age of Orthodoxy. The Orthodox Period, also termed the Scholastic Period, succeeded the Reformation with the 1545–63 Council of Trent, the 1562 Anglican Thirty-nine Articles, the 1580 Book of Concord, and other confessions of faith. The Orthodox Era ended with the development of both Pietism and the Enlightenment.
- The Peace of Westphalia might be considered to be the event that ended the Reformation.
Thirty Years' War: 1618–1648Edit
The Reformation and Counter-Reformation era conflicts are termed the European wars of religion. In particular, the Thirty Years' War (1618–48) devastated much of Germany, killing between 25 and 40% of its population.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Catholic House of Habsburg and its allies fought against the Protestant princes of Germany, supported at various times by Denmark, Sweden and France. The Habsburgs, who ruled Spain, Austria, the Crown of Bohemia, Hungary, Slovene Lands, the Spanish Netherlands and much of Germany and Italy, were staunch defenders of the Catholic Church.
Two main tenets of the Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years' War, were:
- All parties would now recognise the Peace of Augsburg of 1555, by which each prince would have the right to determine the religion of his own state, the options being Catholicism, Lutheranism, and now Calvinism (the principle of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).
- Christians living in principalities where their denomination was not the established church were guaranteed the right to practice their faith in public during allotted hours and in private at their will.
The treaty also effectively ended the Papacy's pan-European political power. Pope Innocent X declared the treaty "null, void, invalid, iniquitous, unjust, damnable, reprobate, inane, empty of meaning and effect for all times" in his apostolic brief Zelo Domus Dei. European sovereigns, Catholic and Protestant alike, ignored his verdict.Template:SfnTemplate:Page needed
Consequences of the ReformationEdit
In nations that remained Catholic, or reverted to it, remaining Protestants sometimes lived as crypto-Protestants, also called Nicodemites, contrary to the urging of John Calvin, who wanted them to live their faith openly.<ref>Eire, Carlos M. N. "Calvin and Nicodemism: A Reappraisal". Sixteenth Century Journal X:1, 1979.</ref> Some crypto-Protestants have been identified as late as the 19th century after immigrating to Latin America.<ref name="Martínez Fernández">Template:Cite journal</ref>
In Britain from the Elizabethan period, dissenters called Recusants included both Catholic families and English Dissenters (Quakers, Ranters, Diggers, Grindletonians, etc.): almost the entire Irish population were recusants from the imposed Protestant Church of Ireland.<ref>Burton, Edwin, Edward D'Alton, and Jarvis Kelley. 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia, Penal Laws III: Ireland.</ref>
Travel and migration between countries became more difficult. "In 1500, a Christian could travel from one end of Europe to another without fear of persecution; by 1600, every form of Christianity was illegal somewhere in Europe."<ref>Wandell, Lee Palmer (2011) The Reformation, Cambridge University Press apud {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Two prolonged series of conflicts, the French Wars of Religion (1562–1598) and the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) resulted in between six and sixteen million deaths.
As well as wars, most countries and colonies of Europe enacted discriminatory legislation, these only winding down in the late 18th century Age of Enlightenment. For example, the Popery Acts (1699 and 1704) disallowed Irish Catholic schooling and purchase of land, and changed inheritance law; it was repealed by the 1778 and 1791 Catholic Relief Acts. The Quebec Act (1774) re-allowed Catholics to worship and hold public office, but was one of the Intolerable Acts that precipitated the American Revolutionary War. In the countries of the Holy Roman Empire, the Patent of Toleration (1781, 1782) allowed religious toleration for non-Catholic Christians and Jews. In France, the Edict of Toleration (1787) proposed the non-persecution of non-Catholics and Jews. However vestiges of Reformation-period legal discrimination continued: for example, currently, a Roman Catholic, or someone married to a Roman Catholic, may not be crowned the British Monarch.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Radical ReformationEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
In parts of Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, a majority sympathised with the Radical Reformation despite intense persecution.<ref name=horsch>Template:Cite book</ref> Although the surviving proportion of the European population that rebelled against Catholic, Lutheran and Zwinglian churches was small, Radical Reformers wrote profusely and the literature on the Radical Reformation is disproportionately large, partly as a result of the proliferation of the Radical Reformation teachings in the United States.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Despite significant diversity among the early Radical Reformers, some "repeating patterns" emerged among many Anabaptist groups. Many of these patterns were enshrined in the Schleitheim Confession (1527) and include believers' (or adult) baptism, memorial view of the Lord's Supper, belief that Scripture is the final authority on matters of faith and practice, emphasis on the New Testament and the Sermon on the Mount, interpretation of Scripture in community, separation from the world and a two-kingdom theology, pacifism and nonresistance, communal ownership and economic sharing, belief in the freedom of the will, non-swearing of oaths, "yieldedness" (Gelassenheit) to one's community and to God, the ban (i.e., shunning), salvation through divinization (Vergöttung) and ethical living, and discipleship (Nachfolge Christi).<ref>Andrew P. Klager, "Ingestion and Gestation: Peacemaking, the Lord's Supper, and the Theotokos in the Mennonite-Anabaptist and Eastern Orthodox Traditions", Journal of Ecumenical Studies 47, no. 3 (summer 2012): pp. 441–42.</ref>
LiteracyEdit
The Protestant Reformation was a triumph of literacy and the new printing press.<ref name= Cameron>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Page needed</ref>Template:Refn<ref name= Rubin270>Rubin, "Printing and Protestants" Review of Economics and Statistics pp. 270–86</ref><ref name= ":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Luther's translation of the Bible into High German (the New Testament was published in 1522; the Old Testament was published in parts and completed in 1534) was also decisive for the German language and its evolution from Early New High German to Modern Standard German.<ref name="Lobenstein-Reichmann"/> Luther's translation of the Bible promoted the development of non-local forms of language and exposed all speakers to forms of German from outside their own area.<ref>Birgit Stolt, "Luther's Translation of the Bible." Lutheran Quarterly 28.4 (2014): 373–400.</ref> The publication of Luther's Bible was a decisive moment in the spread of literacy in early modern Germany,<ref name= "Lobenstein-Reichmann"/> and stimulated as well the printing and distribution of religious books and pamphlets. From 1517 onward, religious pamphlets flooded Germany and much of Europe.Template:SfnTemplate:Page neededTemplate:Refn
By 1530, over 10,000 publications are known, with a total of ten million copies. The Reformation was thus a media revolution.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Luther strengthened his attacks on Rome by depicting a "good" against "bad" church. From there, it became clear that print could be used for propaganda in the Reformation for particular agendas, although the term propaganda derives from the Catholic Congregatio de Propaganda Fide (Congregation for Propagating the Faith) from the Counter-Reformation. Reform writers used existing styles, cliches and stereotypes which they adapted as needed.Template:SfnTemplate:Page needed Especially effective were writings in German, including Luther's translation of the Bible, his Smaller Catechism for parents teaching their children, and his Larger Catechism, for pastors.
Illustrations in the German Bible and in many tracts popularised Luther's ideas. Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553), the great painter patronised by the electors of Wittenberg, was a close friend of Luther, and he illustrated Luther's theology for a popular audience. He dramatised Luther's views on the relationship between the Old and New Testaments, while remaining mindful of Luther's careful distinctions about proper and improper uses of visual imagery.Template:Sfn
OutcomesEdit
Protestants have to some extent developed their own culture, with major contributions in education, the humanities and sciences, the political and social order, the economy and the arts and many other fields.<ref name= "Karl Heussi 1956 pp. 317–319">Karl Heussi, Kompendium der Kirchengeschichte, 11. Auflage (1956), Tübingen (Germany), pp. 317–19, 325–26</ref> Various outcomes of the Reformation have been suggested by scholars: improved human capital formation, the disputed Protestant work ethic, improved economic development, the modern state, and "dark" outcomes:Template:Sfn
Human capital formationEdit
Claims include:
- Higher literacy rates,<ref name= "Becker 531–596">Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Refn
- Lower gender gap in school enrollment and literacy rates.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Higher primary school enrollment.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Higher public spending on schooling and better educational performance of military conscripts.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Higher capability in reading, numeracy, essay writing, and history.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Protestant ethic Template:AnchorEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Claims include:
- More hours worked.<ref>Template:Cite SSRN</ref>
- Divergent stated attitudes about the absolute priority of work between Protestants and Catholics.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Fewer referendums on leisure, state intervention, and redistribution in Swiss cantons with more Protestants.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Lower life satisfaction when unemployed.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Pro-market attitudes.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Higher relative income growth in Protestant cities compared to Catholic cities (correlated with larger growth in Protestant city size.)<ref name= "Becker 531–596"/>
Economic developmentEdit
Claims include:
- Different levels of income tax revenue per capita, % of labor force in manufacturing and services, and incomes of male elementary school teachers.<ref name="Becker 531–596"/>
- Growth of Protestant cities.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Greater entrepreneurship among religious minorities in Protestant states.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Different social ethics facilitating impersonal trade.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Industrialization.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Modern statesEdit
Claims include:
- The Reformation has been credited as a key factor in the development of the state system.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- The Reformation has been credited as a key factor in the formation of transnational advocacy movements.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- The Reformation impacted the Western legal tradition.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Enabling professional bureaucracies to emerge in Europe.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Establishment of state churches.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Poor relief and social welfare regimes.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- James Madison noted that Martin Luther's doctrine of the two kingdoms marked the beginning of the modern conception of separation of church and state.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- The Calvinist and Lutheran doctrine of the lesser magistrate contributed to resistance theory in the Early Modern period and was employed in the United States Declaration of Independence.
- Reformers such as Calvin promoted mixed government and the separation of powers,<ref>Clifton E. Olmstead (1960), History of Religion in the United States, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, pp. 9–10</ref><ref name= "ReferenceA">Jan Weerda, Calvin, in Evangelisches Soziallexikon, col. 210–11</ref> which governments such as the United States subsequently adopted.<ref>Heinrich August Winkler (2012), Geschichte des Westens. Von den Anfängen in der Antike bis zum 20. Jahrhundert, 3rd Ed., Munich (Germany), Template:ISBN, pp. 290ff.</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
World demographicsEdit
Template:Pie chart Today, classical Protestantism (including Anglicans) has between 300 and 625 million worldwide adherents,<ref name= "gordonconwell.edu">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> up to one quarter of all Christians.
And general Protestantism—broadly defined to also include Evangelical, Pentecostal, non-conformist and non-denominationalists<ref group= note>Over half of this population are in Modern Protestant denominations such as Pentecostal churches which are not derived from the historical Reformation denominations; and the remaining Historical denominations include Arminian denominations such as Methodists which do not hold to certain key Reformation doctrines, such as sola fide.</ref>—constitutes the second-largest form of Christianity (after Catholicism), with between 850,000 and 1.17 billion adherents worldwide (between 40% and 45% of all Christians)<ref name= "pewforum1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Refn divided into an estimated 45,000 denominations.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Other outcomesEdit
Other claims include:
- Witch trials became more common in regions or other jurisdictions where Protestants and Catholics contested the religious market.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Christopher J. Probst, in his book Demonizing the Jews: Luther and the Protestant Church in Nazi Germany (2012), shows that a large number of German Protestant clergy and theologians during Nazi Germany used Luther's hostile publications towards the Jews and Judaism to justify at least in part the anti-Semitic policies of the National Socialists.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- In its decree on ecumenism, the Second Vatican Council of Catholic bishops declared that by contemporary dialogue that, while still holding views as the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, between the churches "all are led to examine their own faithfulness to Christ's will for the Church and accordingly to undertake with vigor the task of renewal and reform" (Unitatis Redintegratio, 4).
- Beer production switched from using herbs to hops.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
HistoriographyEdit
Margaret C. Jacob argues that there has been a dramatic shift in the historiography of the Reformation. Until the 1960s, historians focused their attention largely on the great leaders and theologians of the 16th century, especially Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli. Their ideas were studied in depth. However, the rise of the new social history in the 1960s led to looking at history from the bottom up, not from the top down. Historians began to concentrate on the values, beliefs and behavior of the people at large. She finds, "in contemporary scholarship, the Reformation is now seen as a vast cultural upheaval, a social and popular movement, textured and rich because of its diversity."Template:Sfn
For example, historian John Bossy characterized the Reformation as a period where Christianity was re-cast not as "a community sustained by ritual acts, but as a teaching enforced by institutional structures," for Catholics as well as Protestants;<ref group= note>"But in the Renaissance era, and even more so in the Reformation period which followed, reliance on symbol and image gave way to the privileging of the printed or spoken word. Peace remained a fundamental Christian aspiration, but ritual and sacrament gave way to persuasion and instruction as the means to achieve it."Template:Harvnb.</ref><ref group= note>"Until the seventeenth century, …Christianity meant a body of people, but since then it refers only to a body of beliefs." Template:Cite journal</ref> and sin was re-cast from the seven deadly sins —wrong because antisocial— to transgressions of the Ten Commandments —wrong as affronts to God.
Music and artEdit
Template:Further Template:Div col Painting and sculpture
- Northern Mannerism
- Lutheran art
- German Renaissance Art
- Swedish art
- English art
- Woodcuts
- Art conflicts
- Beeldenstorm
Building
Literature
- Elizabethan
- Metaphysical poets
- Propaganda
- Welsh
- Scottish
- Anglo-Irish
- German
- Czech
- Swiss
- Slovak
- Sorbian
- Romanian
- Danish
- Faroese
- Norwegian
- Swedish
- Finnish
- Icelandic
- Dutch Renaissance and Golden Age
- Folklore of the Low Countries
- 16th century Renaissance humanism
- 16th century in poetry
- 16th century in literature
- English Renaissance theatre
Musical forms
- Hymnody of continental Europe
- Music of the British Isles
- Hymn tune
- Lutheran chorale
- Lutheran hymn
- Anglican church music
- Exclusive psalmody
- Anglican chant
- Homophony vs. Polyphony
Liturgies
- Reformed worship
- Calvin's liturgy
- Formula missae
- Deutsche Messe
- Ecclesiastical Latin
- Lutheran and Anglican Mass in music
- Cyclic mass vs. Paraphrase mass
- Roman vs. Sarum Rites
- Sequence (retained by Lutherans, mostly banned by Trent)
Hymnals
- First and Second Lutheran hymnals
- First Wittenberg hymnal
- Swenske songer
- Thomissøn's hymnal
- Ausbund
- Book of Common Prayer
- Metrical psalters
- Souterliedekens
- Book of Common Order
- Genevan Psalter
- Scottish Psalter
Secular music
Partly due to Martin Luther's love for music, music became important in Lutheranism. The study and practice of music was encouraged in Protestant majority countries. Songs such as the Lutheran hymns or the Calvinist Psalter became tools for the spread of Protestant ideas and beliefs, as well as identity flags. Similar attitudes developed among Catholics, who in turn encouraged the creation and use of music for religious purposes.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
- Catholic Church and ecumenism
- Catholic-Protestant relations
- Criticism of Christianity
- Criticism of Protestantism
- Concordat of Worms
- Confessionalization
- European City of the Reformation
- Historiography of religion
- List of Protestant Reformers
- Protestantism in Germany
- Sectarian violence among Christians
- Women in the Protestant Reformation
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
Further readingEdit
SurveysEdit
- Appold, Kenneth G. The Reformation: A Brief History (2011) online
- Collinson, Patrick. The Reformation: A History (2006)
- Elton, Geoffrey R. and Andrew Pettegree, eds. Reformation Europe: 1517–1559 (1999) excerpt and text search
- Elton, G.R., ed. The New Cambridge Modern History, Vol. 2: The Reformation, 1520–1559 (1st ed. 1958) online free
- Gassmann, Günther, and Mark W. Oldenburg. Historical dictionary of Lutheranism (Scarecrow Press, 2011).
- Hillerbrand, Hans J. The Protestant Reformation (2nd ed. 2009)
- Hsia, R. Po-chia, ed. A Companion to the Reformation World (2006)
- Lindberg, Carter. The European Reformations (2nd ed. 2009)
- Mourret, Fernand. History of the Catholic Church (vol 5 1931) online free; pp. 325–516; by French Catholic scholar
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite book
- Reeves, Michael. The Unquenchable Flame: Discovering the Heart of the Reformation (2nd ed. 2016)
- Spitz, Lewis William (2003). The Protestant Reformation: 1517–1559.
TheologyEdit
- Bagchi, David, and David C. Steinmetz, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Reformation Theology (2004)
- Template:Cite book
- Barrett, Matthew, and Michael Horton. Reformation Theology: A Systematic Summary (2017).
- Braaten, Carl E. and Robert W. Jenson. The Catholicity of the Reformation. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996. Template:ISBN.
- Cunningham, William. The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation (2013).
- Payton, James R. Jr. Getting the Reformation Wrong: Correcting Some Misunderstandings (IVP Academic, 2010)
- Template:Cite book
Primary sources in translationEdit
- Fosdick, Harry Emerson, ed. Great Voices of the Reformation [and of other putative reformers before and after it]: an Anthology, ed., with an introd. and commentaries, by Harry Emerson Fosdick. (Modern Library, 1952). xxx, 546 pp.
- Janz, Denis, ed. A Reformation Reader: Primary Texts with Introductions (2008) excerpt and text search
- Littlejohn, Bradford, and Jonathan Roberts eds. Reformation Theology: A Reader of Primary Sources with Introductions (2018).
- Luther, Martin Luther's Correspondence and Other Contemporary Letters, 2 vols., tr. and ed. by Preserved Smith, Charles Michael Jacobs, The Lutheran Publication Society, Philadelphia, Pa. 1913, 1918. vol.2 (1521–1530) from Google Books. Reprint of Vol. 1, Wipf & Stock Publishers (March 2006). Template:ISBN.
- Spitz, Lewis W. The Protestant Reformation: Major Documents. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1997. Template:ISBN.Template:Refend
HistoriographyEdit
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite book 443 pp. excerpt
- Template:Cite journal
- Gasquet, F. A. (1900) The Eve of the Reformation
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- Howard, Thomas A. and Mark A. Noll, eds. Protestantism after 500 Years (Oxford UP, 2016) pp. 384.
- Template:Cite book
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Kooi, Christine. "The Reformation in the Netherlands: Some Historiographic Contributions in English." Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte 100.1 (2009): 293–307.
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Template:Cite journal
- Walsham, Alexandra. "Toleration, Pluralism, and Coexistence: The Ambivalent Legacies of the Reformation." Archiv für Reformationsgeschichte-Archive for Reformation History 108.1 (2017): 181–190. Online
- Template:Cite journal
External linksEdit
- Internet Archive of Related Texts and Documents Hannover U.
- 16th Century Reformation Reading Room: Extensive online resources, Tyndale Seminary
- The Reformation Collection From the Rare Book and Special Collections Division at the Library of Congress
- An ecumenical official valuation by Lutherans and Catholics 500 years later, Vatican.
- TLW's Protestantscope™ (Protestant Historyscope)
- Template:Cite EB1911
Template:Martin Luther Template:History of the Catholic Church Template:Christian History Template:Christianity footer Template:History of Europe Template:Western culture Template:Portal bar Template:Authority control