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Church Reform
The Reformation of European religion in the 16th century cannot be
generally attributed to the secular spirit of the Italian Renaissance.
Although the peasants saw bishops and abbots as part of a wealthy and
oppressive ruling class and rebelled against the Roman Catholic Church
for reasons primarily pertaining to the lavish adornments used by those
aforementioned, their power was not great enough, nor did their reasons
carry enough clout to start a reformation movement throughout Europe:
that job was accomplished by those already having some, however small,
social or religious power, such as the monk Martin Luther, the
accomplished priest and lawyer Jean Cauvin, and King Henry VIII of
England.
The Lutheran and Calvinist Reformations were very similar in principle,
although the Lutheran Reformation was less widespread. Luther and Calvin
held that not mere abuses of the Roman Catholic Church needed
correcting, but that the Catholic Church itself was wrong in principle.
Luther s cause for reformation of 16th century European religion came
from his unnatural paranoia that he was damned. He had problems
convincing himself that his spirit was pure and that he would go to
heaven; internal distress raged within him about the awful omnipotence
of God, his own insignificant existence in comparison, and his
apprehensiveness of the devil. His personal problems would not yield to
the existing manners of assuring oneself that he/she was headed for
heaven such as sacraments, alms, prayer attendance at Mass, and assorted
"good works." Luther solved the problem, however, by believing that good
works were the consequence and external evidence of an inner grace, but
in no way the cause of this grace. He felt that if one had faith in
themselves, the religion, and God, then good works would manifest
themselves because of it. This was Luther s doctrine of justification by
faith. Luther was then involved in various events that provided for the
spreading of Lutheranism, albeit sometimes indirectly. The agitation
that Lutheranism was creating throughout Europe had revolutionary side
effects where the reforming religious spirit was mistaken for that of a
social and economic one, especially in Germany in the 1520s. A league of
imperial knights, adopting Lutheranism, attacked their neighbors, the
church-states of the Rhineland, hoping by annexations to enlarge their
own meager territories. In 1524, the peasants of a large part of Germany
revolted due to thoughts stirred up by preachers that took Luther s
ideas a little too far: anyone could see for himself what was right. The
peasants aims dealt not with religion, however. They demanded a
regulation of rents and security of common village rights and complained
of exorbitant exactions and oppressive rule by their manorial overlords.
Luther, in seeing his original intentions fractured for other uses,
redefined his position more conservatively. Nonetheless, Lutheranism
spread throughout the Scandinavian and Baltic regions as well as
Germany. Lutheranism was closely associated with established states,
inhibiting its widespread acceptance. The most widely accepted form of
Protestantism was Calvinism, to be discussed shortly hereafter. It is
apparent, however, that the Lutheran Reformation was clearly not because
of the secular spirit of the Italian Renaissance, but more because of
the personal conviction of a apprehensive monk.
At the age of 24, John Calvin, a Frenchman born Jean Cauvin, experienced
a sudden conversion; a fresh insight into the meaning of Christianity.
He joined forces with the religious revolutionaries of whom the best
known was then Luther. His book, Institutes of the Christian Religion,
appealed to human reason itself. If dissatisfied with the Roman church,
people of all countries could find an idea that would most appropriately
fit their beliefs or the situation they were in. In general, Calvin was
in agreement with Luther s criticisms of the Roman church and Luther s
fundamental religious ideas, such as justification by faith and not by
works. However, the two differed in the area of Catholic Mass. Although
both of them rejected transubstantiation, Luther maintained that God was
somehow actually present in the bread and wine used in the service while
Calvin regarded it as an act of symbolic nature. Calvin also took
exception to two other areas that Luther did not touch on: the idea of
predestination and Calvinism s attitude toward society and state. Calvin
felt that God, being Almighty, knew and willed in advance all things
that happened, including the way in which every life would turn out. He
knew and willed, from all eternity, that some were saved and some were
damned. Calvin, being a severe critic of human nature, felt that an
elite few were saved. One could believe in his own mind that he was
among the saved, God s chosen few, if throughout all trials and
temptations he persisted in a saintly life. Thus, the idea of
predestination became a challenge to unrelenting effort, a sense of
burning conviction, a conviction of being on the side of that Almighty
Power which must in the end be everlastingly triumphant. Only the most
resolute people were attracted to Calvinism. Calvinists, like Jesuits,
were militant, uncompromising, perfectionist. Calvinists also believed
that true Christians, the elect or saved, should Christianize the state.
They would not be recognized as subordinate to the state. Calvinists
hoped to remake society into a religious community. In rejecting the
institution of bishops, Calvinists felt that the church should be
governed by presbyteries and devout laymen, breaking up the monopoly of
priestly power and promoting secularization. At the same time, however,
they were trying to Christianize all of society (see Forward). The wide
adoption of Calvinism came mainly from groups who found Calvin s
Institutes to be a method of organization. Because of Calvinism s
instrumental role in the development of democracy and the Institutes s
ability to appeal to a large audience, Calvinism spread throughout
Europe, although in places like Germany where Lutheranism had already
taken root it was scorned by those who had already reformed (another
paradox between the similar religions, see Forward). Another
instrumental religion during the Reformation had formed due to religious
differences with the Catholic church.
Throughout both of these major reformations, England remained virtually
unchanged, most likely due to its rather remote location in relation to
the rest of Europe. England s religious orientation changed, however,
because of a reason completely unrelated to those of personal conviction
or in revolt to the secular spirit of the Italian Renaissance. In fact,
Henry VIII prided himself on his Roman Catholic orthodoxy. In response
to some whisperings about the stir being made by Luther in the 1520s,
Henry wrote a Defense of the Seven Sacraments in refutation, for which
the pope gave him the title of "Defender of the Faith." The reason for
the change of religion in England was for the simple fact of a lack of a
male heir to the throne. Henry felt that an heir was essential,
especially when one recalled the anarchy from which the Tudor dynasty
had extricated England. Because his existing wife, Catherine of Aragon
was old and unable to have a child, Henry asked the pope to annul his
marriage to her so that he may marry someone else and have a son. The
pope, however, would not annul the marriage due to the fact that
Catherine was the aunt of Emperor Charles V, whom the pope was in no
position to offend. Henry had no patience for the pope to balk at such a
request when demands for other annuls had been made in the past. He
drove matters forward, putting in a new archbishop of Canterbury, broke
off connections with the Roman church, named himself "Protector and Only
Supreme Head of the Church and Clergy of England," and married Anne
Boleyn. Thus, in one fell swoop, the situation had been alleviated.
Henry s original intent was to maintain the Catholic practices while
taking control of the religious situation of his country. However, in
1536, he forcibly suppressed a predominantly Catholic rebellion. The
practice of continuing Catholic doctrines under a different leader would
not last long in England, as many people in England began to favor one
or another of the ideas of Continental Reformers. Upon 10-year old
Edward s, Henry s son, succession to the throne, Protestantism became
the religion in England. However, Edward died a short time later and was
succeeded by his older half-sister, Mary, a devout Roman Catholic. She
tried to re-institute the Roman church in England and made it more
unpopular in the process. Upon her death, Elizabeth, Anne Boleyn s
daughter, took the throne and England became Protestant once more.
England s Reformation was associated the least with the Italian
Renaissance, making it a perfect example of the non-factor that the
secular spirit of the Renaissance was.
The 16th Century Reformations represented a significant wave of change
for all of Europe subsequent to the Italian and Northern Renaissances.
However, the various Reformations of 16th century Europe by Martin
Luther, John Calvin, and King Henry VIII of England had little or
nothing to do with the worldly and decided non-religious attitude of the
Italian Renaissance.
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