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The Protestant Reformation (2011-2012)
The Protestant Reformation (2011-2012)

... During the Middle Ages, the Catholic Church was the dominant religion in Western Europe Without a common government in Europe, the Catholic Pope became an important political leader ...
Spread of Protestantism
Spread of Protestantism

... • Anabaptists would not hold office or bear arms. • They took literally the biblical commandment to not kill. • Their political and religious beliefs caused Anabaptists to be branded dangerous radicals. ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... peace came in 1648 at the Peace of Westphalia where Spain relinquished all rights to the Northern Provinces (Netherlands). ...
The Protestant Reformation
The Protestant Reformation

... Improvements in the education and behavior of local clergy helped revive parish life. ...
PowerPoint
PowerPoint

... beforehand (He has movement gave way to the pre-determined,) teachings of John Calvin. who will be saved.. Calvin wrote an important book that gave structure to Protestant beliefs. He taught that people are sinful by nature. ...
Martin Luther and the Reformation
Martin Luther and the Reformation

...  God chooses who will be saved – predestination  Ideal government is a theocracy – rule by religious leaders  Calvinism  Followers in France = Huguenots ...
Along Comes Calvin Martin Luther wasn`t the last word in Church
Along Comes Calvin Martin Luther wasn`t the last word in Church

... Calvin was a brilliant Classics scholar at the University of Paris when the Reformation began. He was steeped in Greek and Roman philosophy as well as Christian theology. (Those Greeks keep popping up, don’t they?) His thinking reached back to St. Augustine’s Christian version of Platonic thought, w ...
Student Writing Samples: The ID
Student Writing Samples: The ID

... 4. The Council of Trent was a meeting called to reform Catholicism. In the meeting they addressed several issues such as pluralism, the sale of indulgences, and clerical ignorance and moved to reform the areas along with others. From this the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) was formed. The Jesuits went a ...
The Protestant Reformation
The Protestant Reformation

... • They were more concerned with the political interests. • Julius II, the “warrior-pope,” even led armies against his enemies. • Indulgences: release from all or part of punishment for sin. ...
The Protestant Reformation 2
The Protestant Reformation 2

... • The Catholic church was not caught unawares by the Reformation. It had been steadily battling opposition, resistance, and heresy for over four hundred years; much of the opposition against the church throughout the fifteenth century involved issues that closely paralleled those splitting the churc ...
The Reformation - Cloudfront.net
The Reformation - Cloudfront.net

... and Protestantism She and Parliament required conformity to Anglican Church, but people allowed to worship privately – Lutheran – Services in English – Clergy could marry – Everyone required to attend ...
Inventions: The Printing Press
Inventions: The Printing Press

...  Some believed the church was more interested in money than religion (example: if a person sinned, they could buy a document which freed them from any punishment of their sin – called an indulgence.)  Some Christians protested against this Catholic teaching and began being called “protestants”  A ...
The family of churches known around the world as
The family of churches known around the world as

... proposals in this foundation document of the Christian Church includes the statement that the church is 'essentially, intentionally and constitutionally one' - which was to become one of our important slogans. Alexander Campbell arrived in The United States two years after his father and quickly dis ...
Chap 7 ID Worksheet
Chap 7 ID Worksheet

... Established by the Act of Uniformity during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Becomes the official government sponsored church within England. All subjects of the kingdom must be members and worship at the local Anglican Church. Becomes a big umbrella church containing a rainbow of theology from low A ...
Section 2.9
Section 2.9

... • France policy is to keep Germany divided • Charles defeated the League in 1547 but never restored Catholicism • Peace of Augsburg 1555 – permanent division of Germany into Lutheran and Catholic areas – Cius regio eius religio ...
File
File

...  As a result of the Reformation, revolts and wars broke out, causing loss of life, property, prestige and power. a. War between Spain and the Netherlands: A large number of Dutch people who had become Calvinists rose in opposition to Philip II, the ruler of the Netherlands. A terrible war took plac ...
The Protestant Reformation (1450-1565) - mr
The Protestant Reformation (1450-1565) - mr

... complaints against the ...
Objectives
Objectives

... Christian Religion”. By the 1600s Calvinist churches were well established in many parts of Europe. ...
Reformation and Counter-Reformation - APEH
Reformation and Counter-Reformation - APEH

... Archbishop Thomas Cranmer, 42 Articles of Religion: grants Henry his ...
I. The Protestant Reformation
I. The Protestant Reformation

... 2. Preached doctrine of ______________________: God knows who will be saved, guides lives of those destined for salvation. 3. Geneva became ________________ under Calvin; strict laws regulated behavior - strictness at heart of Calvinism’s ________, gave sense of mission, discipline. 4. Calvinists ma ...
View Presentation
View Presentation

... • Civil war erupted in Germany for the next 20 years. • Charles V seeks to stop Protestantism and preserve hegemony of Catholicism ...
The Diversification of the Reformation
The Diversification of the Reformation

... AND MORAL REFORM WITHIN THE CHURCH. EDUCATED PEOPLE SHOULD READ THE BIBLE AND FOLLOW IT. ...
Anglican – the religion of the Church of England, also adhered to by
Anglican – the religion of the Church of England, also adhered to by

1 The Catholic (Counter) Reformation ______
1 The Catholic (Counter) Reformation ______

... in an effort to prevent further growth of the Reformation, the Catholic Church printed the Index of Forbidden Books. This list of books and other printed documents was distributed throughout Europe. Some of the works on the Index of Forbidden Books was not from Protestant Reformers. The listed of ba ...
Chapter 1
Chapter 1

... The Peasants’ War (1524) ...
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Beeldenstorm



Beeldenstorm in Dutch, roughly translatable to ""statue storm"", or Bildersturm in German (""image/statue storm""), also the Iconoclastic Fury, is a term used for outbreaks of destruction of religious images that occurred in Europe in the 16th century. During these spates of iconoclasm, Catholic art and many forms of church fittings and decoration were destroyed in unofficial or mob actions by nominally Calvinist Protestant crowds as part of the Protestant Reformation. Most of the destruction was of art in churches and public places. The Dutch term usually specifically refers to the wave of disorderly attacks in the summer of 1566 that spread rapidly through the Low Countries from south to north. Similar outbreaks of iconoclasm took place in other parts of Europe, especially in Switzerland and the Holy Roman Empire in the period between 1522 and 1566, notably Zürich (in 1523), Copenhagen (1530), Münster (1534), Geneva (1535), and Augsburg (1537).In England there was both government-sponsored removal of images and also spontaneous attacks from 1535 onwards, and in Scotland from 1559. In France there were several outbreaks as part of the French Wars of Religion from 1560 onwards.
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