Protestant Reformation
Protestant Reformation
Protestant Reformation
The dates of the Reformation are not universally agreed upon. Some scholars date the
event 1400-1750 (from the dissent of Jan Hus to the end of the pre-industrial society),
while others suggest 1517-1685 (from the dissent of Martin Luther to the revocation of
the Edict of Nantes), and there are many other claims regarding dating which have equal
merit. The dates 1517-1648, however, are the most widely accepted, setting the
beginning of the Reformation at Martin Luther's dissent and the end at the Treaty of
Westphalia that concluded the Thirty Years' War which started as a dispute between
Catholics and Protestants.
The Protestant Reformation completely changed the European cultural, religious, social,
& political landscape.
By the 15th century, corruption in the Church was widespread and devout believers
sought to rectify this. The refusal of the Church to address these criticisms eventually
led to the schisms that would establish Protestant Christian sects which developed into
denominations such as Lutheranism, Calvinism, Anglicanism, and others.
The Protestant Reformation completely changed the European cultural, religious, social,
and political landscape and is often referred to as the birth of the modern age as it
coincided with and was encouraged by the Renaissance of the 15th-16th centuries.
Although there were earlier movements in response to the corruption of the Church,
modern technology in the form of the printing press allowed for the dissemination of
protestant literature and the publication of the Bible in the vernacular, resulting in
widespread support for the cause and the end of the monolithic religious, cultural, and
political authority of the Church.
The Church dominated medieval Europe (c. 476-1500) as the sole authority on spiritual
matters and, as it became more powerful, influenced the spheres of politics and culture.
In time, the pope became a significant political presence and, generally speaking, spent
more time and effort on worldly affairs than religious matters. The hierarchy of the
Church – pope, cardinals, bishops/archbishops, priests, and those in monastic orders –
began to exercise their authority more for their own personal gain and comfort than the
spiritual well-being of the people.
The Bible was only available in Latin – which laypeople could not read – and the
Christian Mass was also recited in Latin as were the prayers (such as the Our Father and
Hail Mary) taught to the people. Although the Church mandated adherence to its vision
of Jesus Christ's message, this did not resonate with many laypeople who practiced a
kind of blend of Christianity with pagan folk belief. The inaccessibility of church
teachings, coupled with the obvious display of luxury and comfort by the clergy, led to
reform movements as early as the 7th century, and according to some interpretations,
even earlier.
These movements were condemned by the Church as heresies and were routinely
crushed, often ruthlessly, as the clergy sought to maintain their authority and power.
One of the earliest movements was the Paulicians (7th-9th centuries) who advocated a
return to the simplicity of early Christianity and the life of Saint Paul (l. c. 5 to c. 67)
and rejected the sacraments of the Church. The Paulicians were eventually stoned to
death, burned at the stake, or exiled.
Other movements followed, however, such as the Bogomils in the 11th century and the
Cathars of the 11th-13th centuries, who were followed by still others. The English
cleric, philosopher, and theologian John Wycliffe (l. 1330-1384) challenged the
authority of the clergy, their luxuriant lifestyles, and their arrogance, arguing that
everyone should have access to the Bible and the work should no longer be held hostage
by a privileged few who interpreted it for the many, often in ways that only empowered
the hierarchy. He translated the Bible from Latin to Middle English (the so-called
Wycliffe Bible) or, more likely, directed his friends and associates in the translation.
Wycliffe argued that the scriptures were the only authority and the church hierarchy,
including the pope, was unbiblical. He disseminated his views through lay preachers
and pamphlets printed using xylography (woodblock printing) and inadvertently helped
spark the bloody Peasants' Revolt of 1381 by challenging the established order. He died
of a stroke in 1384 and was afterwards condemned as a heretic and his remains
exhumed and burned.
Wycliffe inspired Jan Hus (l. c. 1369-1415), philosopher, theologian, and rector of the
Charles University in Prague, who preserved Wycliffe's writings and advocated for
reform. He was especially critical of the sale of indulgences – writs sold by the Church
to ostensibly reduce one's time in purgatory – just as Wycliffe had been. His earlier
advocacies were tolerated, but when he challenged the validity of indulgences and the
authority of the pope, he was arrested and burned at the stake in 1415. His followers
continued to fight for reform and then to separate themselves from the Church. Their
efforts continued the Bohemian Reformation and eventually led to the Hussite Wars
(1419 to c. 1434) between Hussite reformers and church loyalists who won the conflict.
Martin Luther & Indulgences
Even though in the present day these reformers are recognized as the pioneers of the
Reformation, there is no evidence they, initially, had any effect on the central reformist
Martin Luther (l. 1483-1546), a German monk who also objected to the sale of
indulgences. No matter how one chooses to date the Protestant Reformation, Martin
Luther stands at its center, and his works, charisma, and intelligence sparked a
movement he never intended and, no doubt, could not have imagined.
The greatest blow to the authority of the Church in the Middle Ages had not come from
any individual or movement but from the Church's inability to address the suffering and
causes of the Black Death pandemic of 1347-1352. The plague ravaged Europe, and
none of the efforts of the Church had any effect on alleviating suffering or curbing the
outbreak. People began to rely on folk remedies and supplications to spirits and
ancestors at the same time they might pray to the Virgin Mary or the saints. At the same
time, there was no other spiritual authority than the Holy Roman Catholic Church.
Heaven, purgatory, and hell were understood as absolute realities, and to avoid hell and
spend less time in purgatory, one had to suppress whatever doubts one had and adhere
to the Church's teachings.
Among these was the efficacy of indulgences, which were purchased to shorten one's
time in purgatory (or the stay of a loved one) and speed the soul on toward heaven.
Martin Luther was an ordained Augustinian monk, doctor of theology, and professor at
the University of Wittenberg in 1516 when the Dominican friar Johann Tetzel arrived in
the area to sell indulgences to help finance the rebuilding of St. Peter's Basilica in
Rome. Tetzel was an effective salesman who became famous for the saying (whether
his own or only attributed to him) "When the gold in the coffer rings, the rescued soul
toward heaven springs", meaning that as soon as one bought an indulgence, their loved
one was released from purgatorial fires. Luther objected to this practice generally but
could not tolerate Tetzel selling indulgences in his region.
Luther claimed that, if God had ordained purgatory, the pope had no authority to
shorten one's stay there and, if the pope did have such authority, he should alleviate the
souls suffering there by freeing them without remuneration:
I claim that the pope has no jurisdiction over purgatory…If the pope does have the
power to release anyone from purgatory, why in the name of love does he not abolish
purgatory by letting everyone out? If for the sake of miserable money he released
uncounted souls, why should he not for the sake of most holy love empty the place? To
say that souls are liberated from purgatory is audacious. To say they are released as
soon as the coin in the coffer rings is to incite avarice. The pope would do better to give
everything away without charge. The only power which the pope has over purgatory is
that of making intercession on behalf of souls, and this power is exercised by any priest
or curate in his parish. (quoted in Bainton, 68)
In challenging the sale of indulgences, Luther challenged the authority of the pope and
so the entire hierarchy of the Church. Citing Romans 1:17 (which reads, in part, "the
just shall live by faith") Luther claimed there should be no intermediary between the
individual believer and God and that scripture alone should dictate the Christian walk,
not the precepts of the Church.
In 1520, Pope Leo X, tired of sending emissaries to reason with Luther, threatened him
with excommunication unless he recanted. Luther publicly burned the edict (known as a
papal bull) at Wittenberg and was excommunicated in 1521, meaning that, according to
church doctrine, he no longer was in a state of grace with God and should be shunned
by believers. He was summoned to appear at a meeting of the secular authorities in the
city of Worms (a conference known as the Diet of Worms) where he was told to recant
but refused.
Luther had been promised safe conduct by Frederick III (the Wise, l. 1463-1525), a
nobleman and elector (one who elected the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire) of
Saxony who sympathized with Luther's views. After the Diet of Worms, Luther was
declared an outlaw and could be legally killed, but Frederick III had him taken in a fake
kidnapping and hid him in Wartburg Castle where Luther would write some of his best-
known works, including his translation of the Bible into German.
Again, owing to the printing press, Luther's German Bible was made available cheaply
to the people and became a bestseller. His defiance of religious authority inspired others
to do the same and, although he never intended it and did not support it, launched the
German Peasants' War (1524-1525) which failed, in part, when he denounced the
violence that threatened the aristocracy, including his patron Frederick the Wise. His
actions, however, had ignited a flame that spread from Germany to other countries.
Luther's radical concepts were made more palatable to European intelligentsia, codified,
and streamlined by his friend and collaborator Philip Melanchthon (l. 1497-1560) who
is also responsible for the story of the dramatic nailing of Martin Luther's 95 Theses to
the door of the Wittenberg church. Melanchthon was an early defender of Luther, who
had brought him to Wittenberg as a professor of Greek, and the two worked in concert,
with some periods of conflict over doctrinal issues, to establish what would become
Lutheranism, a belief system that would influence the development of others.
Some reformers during this time came to their conclusions independent of Luther's
revolution, however, and among them was the priest and philosopher Huldrych Zwingli
(l. 1484-1531) in Switzerland who was already preaching reform of the Church in 1519.
Zwingli was directly influenced by the Dutch philosopher, priest, scholar, and
theologian Desiderius Erasmus (l. 1466-1536) who sought to reform the Church from
within.
Zwingli and Luther had much in common in their views including the objection to
indulgences, the veneration of the saints, fast days, and church icons, but could not
agree on the interpretation of the Eucharist, as Zwingli felt that too much emphasis on
the recreation of the Last Supper bordered on idolatry while Luther understood it as
essential to the Christian walk.
The theologian John Calvin (l. 1509-1564), on the other hand, was directly influenced
by Luther. Born Jehan Cauvin in France, Calvin was a lawyer whose friend, Nicholas
Cop, advocated for reform and was forced to leave his position at the College Royal in
Paris and flee to Basel, Switzerland when threatened by hostile Catholic loyalists.
Calvin's association with Cop forced his own exile to Basel, where he published his
famous Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536 which established his theology and
understanding of the reform movement.
Institutes of the Christian Religion emphasized the primacy of the individual in relation
to God, maintaining there was no need for an intermediary and the Catholic Church was
unbiblical. In Calvin's view, God himself had given the individual the means to
commune with the divine and simplicity was at the heart of the Christian message.
Calvin's conservative views and insistence on the primacy of scripture, as well as his
persecution of those considered heretics or libertines, elevated his status from rebel-
reformer to a defender of the faith which, by this time, meant Christianity as defined
outside the strictures of the Catholic Church.
These reformers - and many others, including women such as Marie Dentiere (l.c. 1495-
1561) and Argula von Grumbach (l. 1490-c. 1564) - were responding to spiritual
concerns and the abuses of the Church, but there were others who recognized the purely
practical value of the Reformation movement. King Henry VIII of England (r. 1485-
1509) is the most famous of these, who understood that by throwing off the power of
the Church, he could assume that power – and its attendant wealth – for himself. Henry
VIII is frequently referenced as the king who asked the pope for a divorce, was denied,
and so founded the Church of England in response. Henry VIII's marital problems were
only one aspect of the beginning of the Reformation in England, however, as the
Church held significant tracts of land which went untaxed, and by separating from it, the
king could gain substantial revenue while also eliminating the political power of the
pope and clergy.
Conclusion
Many other princes and nobles supported the Reformation for this same reason. The
Church as a powerful political entity had been influencing land rights, successions, even
wars, for centuries, and by aligning themselves with the Protestant cause, these nobles
gained greater autonomy and power. The separation from the Church was not a peaceful
or amicable one, however, and many people were killed while monasteries, churches,
and works of religious art were destroyed. In Scotland, the reformer John Knox (l. c.
1514-1572) encouraged the destruction of monasteries, nunneries, and churches so
thoroughly that many were reduced to ruins.
The conflicts were ended, at least officially, by the Peace of Augsburg of 1555 which
mandated that monarchs could choose either Roman Catholicism or Lutheranism for
their region and that would be the official confession of faith of the people. The
Counter-Reformation (1545-c. 1700), however, which was the Church's response to the
Protestant movement, while it remedied abuses (including reforming the policy of
indulgences) and made other significant changes, prolonged the conflict in trying to
reconvert regions.
The tensions between Protestants and Catholics informed, though did not cause, the
Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), which killed approximately 8 million people and
devastated the region of the Holy Roman Empire. This war was concluded by the Peace
of Westphalia, which simply recognized the same tenets as the Peace of Augsburg in
1555 and extended religious freedom to practice one's faith in private if it differed from
the official version of Christianity of one's country or principality. This peace is widely
considered the end of the Reformation.
The effects of the Protestant Reformation were profound on every level. Literacy rates
improved dramatically as Protestants were encouraged to read the Bible for themselves,
and education became a higher priority. The concept of propaganda was established and
used to advance personal or group agendas. The printing press and mass-produced
books became more central to society. Democratic ideals became more acceptable and
nation-states formed into countries as nationalism became more prevalent.
The Age of Exploration was also informed by the Reformation as European Catholic
countries sought to colonize the so-called 'New World' for their faith, and Protestant
groups did the same. The consequences of the Reformation, in fact, were so wide-
ranging that they are almost impossible to enumerate, but in the beginning, none of the
principal players had anything like it in mind.
The initial response of the Church to Luther's arguments was that if everyone could
interpret the Bible as they saw fit and there was no accepted central authority, then
anyone could consider their interpretation as the right one in God's eyes. The Catholic
Church claimed there had to be a single, governing body for believers to turn to in
seeking God's will, or else each faction would claim their own interpretation as God-
given truth. This is exactly what happened and led to the establishment of many
Protestant denominations offering their own vision of Christianity. In dating the
Protestant Reformation, in fact, some scholars claim it is still in progress as different
sects continue to claim their particular truth as God's own truth.