Reformation - Religious Situation in Europe

Religious Situation in Europe

Lutheranism
Luther's Rose
Book of Concord
  • Apostles' Creed
  • Nicene Creed
  • Athanasian Creed
  • Augsburg Confession
  • Apology of the Augsburg Confession
  • Luther's Small Catechism
  • Luther's Large Catechism
  • Smalcald Articles
  • Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope
  • Formula of Concord
Theology
  • Homosexuality and Lutheranism
  • Justification
  • Law and Gospel
  • Sola gratia
  • Sola scriptura
  • Christology
  • Sanctification
  • Two Kingdoms
  • Priesthood of all believers
  • Divine Providence
  • Marian theology
  • Theology of the Cross
  • Sacramental Union
Sacraments & Rites
  • Baptism
  • Eucharist
  • Confession
  • Confirmation
  • Matrimony
  • Anointing of the Sick
  • Holy Orders
Globally
  • Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference
  • International Lutheran Council
  • Lutheran World Federation
  • List of Lutheran church-bodies
History
  • Protestant Reformation
  • The start of the Reformation
  • Reformation in Denmark-Norway and Holstein
  • Reformation in Finland
  • Reformation in Germany
  • Reformation in Iceland
  • Reformation in Sweden
  • Lutheran Orthodoxy
  • Gnesio-Lutherans
  • Pietists
  • Haugeans
  • Laestadians
  • Finnish Awakening
  • Old Lutherans
  • Neo-Lutherans
  • High Church Lutherans
  • Confessional Lutherans
Missionaries
  • John Campanius
  • Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg
  • Hans Egede
  • Johann Heinrich Callenberg
  • Johann Phillip Fabricius
  • Paul Henkel
  • John Christian Frederick Heyer
  • Karl Graul
  • Martti Rautanen
  • Wilhelm Sihler
  • F. C. D. Wyneken
  • Hans Paludan Smith Schreuder
  • Lars Olsen Skrefsrud
  • Ludwig Ingwer Nommensen
  • Onesimos Nesib
  • Paul Olaf Bodding
  • Johann Flierl
  • Christian Keyser
Bible Translators
  • Martin Luther
  • Casiodoro de Reina
  • Kjell Magne Yri
  • Onesimos Nesib
  • Aster Ganno
  • Jurij Dalmatin
  • Kristian Osvald Viderø
  • Jákup Dahl
  • Bartholomäus Ziegenbalg
  • Johann Phillip Fabricius
  • William Tyndale
  • John Rogers (Bible editor and martyr)
  • George Constantine (Archdeacon)
  • Jozef Roháček
  • Johannes Avetaranian
  • Guðbrandur Þorláksson
  • Ludvig Olsen Fossum
  • Hans and Paul Egede
  • Otto Fabricius
  • Nils Vibe Stockfleth
  • Olaus and Laurentius Petri
  • Martti Rautanen
  • Primož Trubar
  • Jurij Dalmatin
  • Ludwig Ingwer Nommensen
  • Joachim Stegmann
  • Primož Trubar
  • Sebastian Krelj
  • Mikael Agricola
  • Norwegian Bible Society
  • Samuel Ludwik Zasadius
  • Stanislovas Rapalionis
  • Victor Danielsen
  • Jákup Dahl
  • Laurentius Andreae
  • Hans Tausen
  • Olaf M. Norlie
  • Jonas Bretkūnas
  • Hans Paludan Smith Schreuder
  • Antonio Brucioli
  • Mikołaj Jakubica
  • Matthias Bel
  • Johann Ernst Glück
  • William F. Beck
Theologians
  • Martin Luther
    • Wife: Katharina Luther
  • Philipp Melanchthon
  • Johannes Bugenhagen
  • Johannes Brenz
  • Justus Jonas
  • Lucas Cranach the Elder
  • Hans Tausen
  • Laurentius Petri
  • Olaus Petri
  • Mikael Agricola
  • Matthias Flacius
  • Martin Chemnitz
  • Johann Gerhard
  • Abraham Calovius
  • Johannes Andreas Quenstedt
  • Johann Wilhelm Baier
  • David Hollaz
  • Henry Muhlenberg
  • Lars Levi Læstadius
  • Charles Porterfield Krauth
  • C. F. W. Walther
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  • Paul Tillich
Lutheranism portal

The Reformation began as an attempt to reform the Roman Catholic Church, by priests who opposed what they perceived as false doctrines and ecclesiastic malpractice—especially the teaching and the sale of indulgences or the abuses thereof, and simony, the selling and buying of clerical offices—that the reformers saw as evidence of the systemic corruption of the Church's Roman hierarchy, which included the Pope. In Germany, reformation ideals developed in 1520 when Martin Luther expressed doubts over the legitimacy of indulgences and the plenitudo potestatis of the pope. Martin Luther's excommunication on January 3, 1521, from the Catholic Church, was a main cause for the Protestant Reformation.

Martin Luther's spiritual predecessors included John Wycliffe and Jan Hus, who likewise had attempted to reform the Roman Catholic Church. The Protestant Reformation began on 31 October 1517, in Wittenberg, Saxony, where Martin Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences to the door of the Castle Church, in Wittenberg. The theses debated and criticized the Church and the Pope, but concentrated upon the selling of indulgences and doctrinal policies about purgatory, particular judgment, Catholic devotion to Mary, "The Mother of God", the intercession of and devotion to the saints, most of the sacraments, the mandatory clerical celibacy, including monasticism, and the authority of the Pope. In the event, other religious reformers, such as Ulrich Zwingli, soon followed Martin Luther's example.

The reformers soon disagreed among themselves and divided their movement according to doctrinal differences—first between Luther and Zwingli, later between Luther and John Calvin—consequently resulting in the establishment of different and rival Protestant Churches. Denominations, such as the Lutheran, the Reformed, the Puritans, and the Presbyterian. Elsewhere, the religious reformation causes, processes, and effects were different; Anglicanism arose in England with the English Reformation, and most Protestant denominations derive from the Germanic denominations. The reformers also accelerated the development of the Counter-Reformation by the Catholic Church.

Read more about this topic:  Reformation

Famous quotes containing the words religious, situation and/or europe:

    Good religious men, with the love of men in their hearts, and the means to pay their toll in their pockets.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    There had been no thievery or venality. We had all simply wandered into a situation unthinkingly, trying to protect ourselves from what we saw as a political problem. Now, suddenly, it was like a Rorschach ink blot: others, looking at our actions, pointed out a pattern that we ourselves had not seen.
    Richard M. Nixon (1913–1994)

    Can we never extract the tapeworm of Europe from the brain of our countrymen?
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)