The
Protestant Reformation (1517–1648) was the
European
Christian reform movement that established
Protestantism as a constituent branch of
contemporary
Christianity; it began in
1517, when
Martin Luther published
The Ninety-Five
Theses, and concluded in 1648, with the
Peace of Westphalia that ended one
hundred thirty-one years of consequent
European religious wars.
Introduction
The Protestant Reformation began as an attempt to
doctrinally reform the
Catholic Church, effected by Western
European
Catholics who opposed what they
perceived as false doctrines and ecclesiastic malpractice —
especially the teaching and the sale of
indulgences, and
simony,
the selling and buying of clerical offices — that the reformers saw
as evidence of the systemic corruption of the
church’s hierarchy, which included
the
Pope.
Martin Luther's spiritual predecessors included
John Wycliffe and
Johannes Hus, who likewise had attempted to
reform the 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 All Saints'
Church
(a university notice board), the theses debated and
criticised the Church and the Pope, but concentrated upon the
selling of indulgences and doctrinal policies about purgatory, particular
judgement, Mariology
(devotion to Mary, Jesus’s
Mother), 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.
Moreover, 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
Calvinist,
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 Catholic
Counter-Reformation
of the
Catholic Church. The
Protestant Reformation is also referred to as the
German
Reformation,
Protestant Revolution or
Protestant
Revolt.
History and origins
All mainstream Protestants generally date their doctrinal
separation from the Roman Catholic Church to the 16th century,
occasionally called the
Magisterial Reformation, because
the ruling magistrates supported them; unlike the
Radical Reformation, which the
State did not support. Older Protestant churches, such as the
Unitas Fratrum (
Unity of the Brethren),
Moravian Brethren (Bohemian Brethren) date
their origins to
Jan Hus in the early 15th
century. As it was led by a Bohemian noble majority, and
recognized, for a time, by the Basel Compacts, the Hussite
Reformation was Europe’s first Magisterial Reformation. One hundred
years later, in Germany the protests erupted simultaneously, whilst
under threat of
Islamic Ottoman invasion ¹,
which especially distracted the German princes responsible for
military defense.
Roots and precursors: 14th century and 15th century
Unrest due to the
Great Schism of Western
Christianity (1378–1416) excited wars between princes,
uprisings among the peasants, and widespread concern over
corruption in the church. A new
nationalism also challenged the relatively
internationalist medieval world.
The first of a series of disruptive and new
perspectives came from John Wycliffe
at Oxford
University
, then from
Jan Hus at the University of Prague.
The
Catholic Church officially concluded this debate at the Council of
Constance
(1414–1417). The conclave condemned Jan Hus,
who was executed by burning in spite of a promise of safe-conduct.
Wycliffe was posthumously burned as a
heretic.
The Council of Constance confirmed and strengthened the traditional
medieval conception of church and empire. It did not address the
national tensions, or the theological tensions which had been
stirred up during the previous century. The council could not
prevent
schism and the
Hussite Wars in
Bohemia.
The outcome of the
Black Death
encouraged a radical reorganization of the economy, and eventually
of European society. In the emerging urban centers, however, the
calamities of the fourteenth and early fifteenth century, and the
resultant labor shortages, provided a strong impetus for economic
diversification and technological innovations.
Following the Black
Death, the initial loss of life due to famine, plague, and
pestilence contributed to an intensification of capital
accumulation in the urban areas, and thus a stimulus to trade,
industry, and burgeoning urban growth in fields as diverse as
banking (the Fugger banking family in
Augsburg
and the
Medici family of Florence
being the
most prominent); textiles, armaments,
especially stimulated by the Hundred
Years' War, and mining of iron ore due, in large part, to the
booming armaments industry. Accumulation of surplus,
competitive
overproduction, and
heightened competition to maximize economic advantage, contributed
to civil war, aggressive
militarism, and
thus to centralization. As a direct result of the move toward
centralization, leaders like
Louis XI
of France (1461–1483), the "spider king", sought to remove all
constitutional restrictions on the exercise of their authority.
In
England
, France
, and
Spain
the move toward centralization begun in the
thirteenth century was carried to a successful
conclusion.
But as recovery and prosperity progressed, enabling the population
to reach its former levels in the late 15th and 16th centuries, the
combination of both a newly-abundant labor supply as well as
improved productivity, were 'mixed blessings' for many segments of
Western European society. Despite tradition, landlords started the
move to exclude
peasants from "
common lands". With trade stimulated, landowners
increasingly moved away from the
manorial economy.
Woollen manufacturing
greatly expanded in France
, Germany
, and the
Netherlands
and new textile industries began to
develop.
The invention of
movable type would
lead to the Protestant zeal for translating the
Bible and getting it into the hands of the laity. This
would advance the culture of biblical literacy.
The "humanism" of the
Renaissance period
stimulated unprecedented academic ferment, and a concern for
academic freedom. Ongoing, earnest
theoretical debates occurred in the universities about the nature
of the church, and the source and extent of the authority of the
papacy, of councils, and of princes.
16th century

Luther's 95 Theses
The
protests against Rome began in earnest when Martin Luther, a friar of
the Order of Saint
Augustine and professor at the university of Wittenberg
, called in 1517 for a reopening of the debate on
the sale of indulgences. Luther's
dissent marked a sudden outbreak of a new and irresistible force of
discontent which had been pushed underground but not resolved. The
quick spread of discontent occurred to a large degree because of
the
printing press and the resulting
swift movement of both ideas and documents, including
The Ninety-Five Theses.
Information was also widely disseminated in manuscript form, as
well as by cheap prints and woodcuts amongst the poorer sections of
society.

Loci Communes (Latin for "Common
Points") were summaries of Luther's theological points and were
widely distributed.
Parallel
to events in Germany, a movement began in Switzerland
under the leadership of Ulrich Zwingli. These two movements
quickly agreed on most issues, as the recently introduced
printing press spread ideas rapidly from
place to place, but some unresolved differences kept them separate.
Some followers of Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too
conservative, and moved independently toward more radical
positions, some of which survive among modern day
Anabaptists. Other Protestant movements grew up
along lines of mysticism or humanism (
cf.
Erasmus), sometimes breaking from Rome or
from the Protestants, or forming outside of the churches.
After this
first stage of the Reformation, following the excommunication of Luther and condemnation
of the Reformation by the Pope, the work and writings of John Calvin were influential in establishing a
loose consensus among various groups in Switzerland, Scotland
, Hungary, Germany and elsewhere.
The Reformation foundations engaged with
Augustinianism. Both Luther and Calvin thought
along lines linked with the theological teachings of
Augustine of Hippo. The Augustinianism of
the Reformers struggled against
Pelagianism, a heresy that they perceived in the
Catholic Church of their day.
In the course of this religious upheaval,
the Peasants' War of 1524–1525 swept
through the Bavarian
, Thuringian
and Swabian principalities,
leaving scores of Catholics slaughtered at the hands of Protestant
bands, including the Black Company of
Florian Geier, a knight from Giebelstadt
who joined the peasants in the general outrage
against the Catholic hierarchy.
Even though Luther and Calvin had very similar theological
teachings, the relationship between their followers turned quickly
to conflict. Frenchman
Michel de
Montaigne told a story of a Lutheran pastor who declared over
dinner that he would rather hear a hundred masses than take part in
one of Calvin's sacraments.
The political separation of the
Church
of England from Rome under
Henry VIII, beginning in 1529 and
completed in 1536, brought England alongside this broad Reformed
movement. However, religious changes in the English national church
proceeded more conservatively than elsewhere in Europe. Reformers
in the Church of England alternated, for centuries, between
sympathies for Catholic traditions and Protestantism, progressively
forging a stable compromise between adherence to ancient tradition
and Protestantism, which is now sometimes called the
via media.
Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Ulrich Zwingli are considered
Magisterial Reformers because their reform movements were supported
by ruling authorities or "magistrates".
Frederick the Wise did not support
Luther, who was a professor at the university he founded, but he
protected him by hiding Luther in Wartburg Castle
in Eisenach
. Frederick the
Wise was a very devout Catholic, but only protected Luther in
hopes of obtaining greater political autonomy from the Church.
Zwingli
and Calvin were supported by the city councils in Zurich and Geneva
.
Since the term "magister" also means "teacher", the Magisterial
Reformation is also characterized by an emphasis on the authority
of a teacher. This is made evident in the prominence of Luther,
Calvin, and Zwingli as leaders of the reform movements in their
respective areas of ministry. Because of their authority, they were
often criticized by
Radical
Reformers as being too much like the Roman Popes. For example,
Radical Reformer
Andreas Karlstadt
referred to the Wittenberg theologians as the "new papists".
Humanism to Protestantism
The frustrated reformism of the humanists, ushered in by the
Renaissance, contributed to a growing
impatience among reformers.
Erasmus and
later figures like Martin Luther and Zwingli would emerge from this
debate and eventually contribute to another major schism of
Christendom. The crisis of theology beginning with
William of Ockham in the fourteenth
century was occurring in conjunction with the new
burgher discontent. Since the breakdown of the
philosophical foundations of
scholasticism, the new
nominalism did not bode well for an institutional
church legitimized as an intermediary between man and
God. New thinking favored the notion
that no religious
doctrine can be supported
by philosophical arguments, eroding the old alliance between
reason and
faith of the
medieval period laid out by
Thomas
Aquinas.
The major individualistic reform movements that revolted against
medieval scholasticism and the institutions that underpinned it
were
humanism,
devotionalism, (see for example, the
Brothers of the Common Life and
Jan Standonck) and the
observantine tradition.
In Germany
, "the modern way" or devotionalism caught on in the
universities, requiring a redefinition of God, who was no longer a
rational governing principle but an arbitrary, unknowable will that
cannot be limited. God was now a ruler, and religion would
be more fervent and emotional. Thus, the ensuing revival of
Augustinian theology, stating that man cannot be saved by his own
efforts but only by the grace of God, would erode the legitimacy of
the rigid institutions of the church meant to provide a channel for
man to do good works and get into
heaven.
Humanism, however, was more of an educational reform movement with
origins in the
Renaissance's revival of
classical learning and thought.
A revolt against
Aristotelian logic, it
placed great emphasis on reforming individuals through eloquence as
opposed to reason. The European Renaissance laid the foundation for
the Northern humanists in its reinforcement of the traditional use
of
Latin as the great unifying language of
European culture.
The polarization of the scholarly community in Germany over the
Reuchlin (1455–1522) affair,
attacked by the elite clergy for his study of
Hebrew and Jewish texts, brought
Luther fully in line with the humanist educational reforms who
favored
academic freedom. At the
same time, the impact of the Renaissance would soon backfire
against traditional Catholicism, ushering in an age of reform and a
repudiation of much of medieval Latin tradition. Led by Erasmus,
the humanists condemned various forms of corruption within the
church, forms of corruption that might not have been any more
prevalent than during the medieval zenith of the church.
Erasmus held that true religion was a matter of
inward devotion rather than outward symbols of ceremony and ritual.
Going back to ancient texts, scriptures, from this viewpoint the
greatest culmination of the ancient tradition, are the guides to
life. Favoring
moral reforms and
de-emphasizing
didactic ritual,
Erasmus laid the groundwork for Luther.
Humanism's intellectual
anti-clericalism would profoundly influence
Luther. The increasingly well-educated
middle sectors of Northern Germany, namely the
educated community and city dwellers would turn to Luther's
rethinking of religion to conceptualize their discontent according
to the cultural medium of the era. The great rise of the burghers,
the desire to run their new businesses free of institutional
barriers or outmoded cultural practices, contributed to the appeal
of humanist
individualism. To many,
papal institutions were rigid, especially
regarding their views on just price and
usury.
In the
North, burghers and monarchs were united in their frustration for
not paying any taxes to the nation, but
collecting taxes from subjects and
sending the revenues disproportionately to the Pope in Italy
.
These trends heightened demands for significant reform and
revitalization along with anticlericalism. New thinkers began
noticing the divide between the priests and the flock. The clergy,
for instance, were not always well-educated. Parish priests often
did not know
Latin and rural parishes often
did not have great opportunities for theological education for many
at the time. Due to its large landholdings and institutional
rigidity, a rigidity to which the excessively large ranks of the
clergy contributed, many
bishops studied
law, not theology, being relegated to the role
of property managers trained in administration. While priests
emphasized works of religiosity, the respectability of the church
began diminishing, especially among well educated urbanites, and
especially considering the recent strings of political humiliation,
such as the apprehension of
Pope
Boniface VIII by
Philip IV of
France, the "Babylonian Captivity", the Great Schism, and the
failure of conciliar reformism.
In a sense, the campaign by Pope Leo X to raise funds to rebuild St. Peter's
Basilica
was too much of an excess by the secular Renaissance church, prompting high-pressure
indulgences that rendered the clergy establishments even more
disliked in the cities.
Luther borrowed from the humanists the sense of individualism, that
each man can be his own priest (an attitude likely to find popular
support considering the rapid rise of an educated urban middle
class in the North), and that the only true authority is the
Bible, echoing the reformist zeal of the
conciliar movement and opening up
the debate once again on limiting the authority of the Pope. While
his ideas called for the sharp redefinition of the dividing lines
between the
laity and the clergy, his ideas
were still, by this point, reformist in nature. Luther's contention
that the human will was incapable of following good, however,
resulted in his rift with Erasmus finally distinguishing Lutheran
reformism from
humanism.
Lutheranism adopted by the German princes
Luther affirmed a theology of the
Eucharist called
Real
Presence, a doctrine of the presence of Christ in the Eucharist
which affirms the real presence yet upholding that the bread and
wine are not "changed" into the body and blood; rather the divine
elements adhere "in, with, and under" the earthly elements. He took
this understanding of Christ's presence in the Eucharist to be more
harmonious with the Church's teaching on the Incarnation. Just as
Christ is the union of the fully human and the fully divine (cf.
Council of Chalcedon) so to the Eucharist is a union of Bread and
Body, Wine and Blood. According to the doctrine of real presence,
the substances of the body and the blood of Christ and of the bread
and the wine were held to coexist together in the consecrated Host
during the communion service. While Luther seemed to maintain the
perpetual consecration of the elements, other Lutherans argued that
any consecrated bread or wine left over would revert to its former
state the moment the service ended. Most Lutherans accept the
latter.
Lutheran understanding of the Eucharist is distinct from the
Reformed doctrine of the Eucharist in that Lutherans affirm a real,
physical presence of Christ in the Eucharist (as opposed to either
a "spiritual presence" or a "memorial") and Lutherans affirm that
the presence of Christ does not depend on the faith of the
recipient; the repentant receive Christ in the Eucharist worthily,
the unrepentant who receive the Eucharist risk the wrath of
Christ.
Luther, along with his colleague
Philipp Melanchthon, emphasized this
point in his plea for the Reformation at the
Reichstag in 1529 amid charges
of
heresy. But the changes he proposed were
of such a fundamental nature that by their own logic they would
automatically overthrow the old order; neither the Emperor nor the
Church could possibly accept them, as Luther well knew. As was only
to be expected, the edict by the
Diet of
Worms (1521) prohibited all innovations. Meanwhile, in these
efforts to retain the guise of a Catholic reformer as opposed to a
heretical revolutionary, and to appeal to German princes with his
religious condemnation of the peasant revolts backed up by the
Doctrine of the Two
Kingdoms, Luther's growing conservatism would provoke more
radical reformers.
At a religious conference with the Zwinglians in 1529, Melanchthon
joined with Luther in opposing a union with
Zwingli. There would finally be a schism in the
reform movement due to Luther's belief in
real presence—the real (as opposed to
symbolic) presence of Christ at the Eucharist. His original
intention was not schism, but with the
Reichstag of Augsburg (1530)
and its rejection of the Lutheran "Augsburg Confession", a separate
Lutheran church finally emerged. In a sense, Luther would take
theology further in its deviation from established Catholic dogma,
forcing a rift between the humanist Erasmus and Luther. Similarly,
Zwingli would further repudiate ritualism, and break with the
increasingly conservative Luther.
Aside from the enclosing of the lower classes, the middle sectors
of northern Germany, namely the educated community and city
dwellers, would turn to religion to conceptualize their discontent
according to the cultural medium of the era. The great rise of the
burghers, the desire to run their new businesses free of
institutional barriers or outmoded cultural practices contributed
to the appeal of individualism. To many, papal institutions were
rigid, especially regarding their views on just price and
usury. In the North, burghers and monarchs were united
in their frustration for not paying any taxes to the nation, but
collecting taxes from subjects and sending the revenues
disproportionately to Italy. In northern Europe, Luther appealed to
the growing national consciousness of the German states because he
denounced the Pope for involvement in politics as well as religion.
Moreover, he backed the nobility, which was now justified to crush
the Great Peasant Revolt of 1525 and to confiscate church property
by Luther's
Doctrine of the
Two Kingdoms. This explains the attraction of some territorial
princes to Lutheranism, especially its Doctrine of the Two
Kingdoms. However, the Elector of Brandenburg,
Joachim I, blamed Lutheranism for the revolt and
so did others. In Brandenburg, it was only under his successor
Joachim II that Lutheranism was established, and the old religion
was not formally extinct in Brandenburg until the death of the last
Catholic bishop there,
Georg von
Blumenthal, who was
Bishop of
Lebus and sovereign
Prince-Bishop of Ratzeburg.
With the church subordinate to and the agent of civil authority and
peasant rebellions condemned on strict religious terms, Lutheranism
and German nationalist sentiment were ideally suited to
coincide.
Though
Charles V
fought the Reformation, it is no coincidence either that the reign
of his nationalistic predecessor
Maximilian
I saw the beginning of the movement. While the centralized
states of western Europe had reached accords with the Vatican
permitting them to draw on the rich property of the church for
government expenditures, enabling them to form state churches that
were greatly autonomous of Rome, similar moves on behalf of the
Reich were unsuccessful so long as princes and prince bishops
fought reforms to drop the pretension of the secular universal
empire.
The Reformation outside Germany
Switzerland
Zwingli
Parallel to events in Germany, a movement began in Switzerland
under the leadership of
Huldrych
Zwingli. These two movements quickly agreed on most issues, as
the recently introduced
printing
press spread ideas rapidly from place to place, but some
unresolved differences kept them separate. Some followers of
Zwingli believed that the Reformation was too conservative, and
moved independently toward more radical positions, some of which
survive among modern day
Anabaptists.
Other Protestant movements grew up along lines of mysticism or
humanism (
cf. Erasmus),
sometimes breaking from Rome or from the Protestants, or forming
outside of the churches.

Ulrich Zwingli
John Calvin
Following
the excommunication of Luther and
condemnation of the Reformation by the Pope, the work and writings
of John Calvin were influential in establishing a loose consensus
among various groups in Switzerland, Scotland
, Hungary, Germany and elsewhere. Geneva
became the unofficial capital of the Protestant movement, led by
the Frenchman Calvin, until his death (when Calvin's ally,
William Farel, assumed the spiritual
leadership of the group).
The Reformation foundations engaged with
Augustinianism. Both Luther and Calvin thought
along lines linked with the theological teachings of
Augustine of Hippo. The Augustinianism of
the Reformers struggled against
Pelagianism, a heresy that they perceived in the
Catholic Church of their day. Ironically, even though both Luther
and Calvin had very similar theological teachings, the relationship
between Lutherans and Calvinists evolved into one of
conflict.
Scandinavia
All of
Scandinavia ultimately adopted
Lutheranism over the course of the sixteenth century, as the
monarchs of Denmark
(who also ruled Norway
and Iceland
) and Sweden
(who also
ruled Finland
) converted to that faith.
In Sweden the Reformation was spearheaded by
Gustav Vasa, elected king in 1523. Friction with
the pope over the latter's interference in Swedish ecclesiastical
affairs led to the discontinuance of any official connection
between Sweden and the papacy from 1523. Four years later, at the
Diet of Västerås, the king succeeded in forcing the diet to accept
his dominion over the national church. The king was given
possession of all church property, church appointments required
royal approval, the clergy were subject to the civil law, and the
"pure Word of God" was to be preached in the churches and taught in
the schools—effectively granting official sanction to Lutheran
ideas.
Under the reign of
Frederick
I (1523–33), Denmark remained officially Catholic. But though
Frederick initially pledged to persecute Lutherans, he soon adopted
a policy of protecting Lutheran preachers and reformers, of whom
the most famous was
Hans Tausen. During
his reign, Lutheranism made significant inroads among the Danish
population. Frederick's son, Christian, was openly Lutheran, which
prevented his election to the throne upon his father's death. In
1536, the authority of the Catholic bishops was terminated by
national assembly. The next year, following his victory in the
civil war, he became
Christian
III and continued the reformation of the state church.
England
Church of England
The separation of the
Church of
England (or Anglican Church) from Rome under
Henry VIII, beginning in
1529 and completed in
1536, brought
England alongside this broad Reformation movement; however,
religious changes in the English national church proceeded more
conservatively than elsewhere in Europe. Reformers in the Church of
England alternated, for centuries, between sympathies for Catholic
tradition and more reformed principles, gradually developing into a
tradition which is considered a middle way (
via media) between the Roman Catholic and
Protestant traditions.
The
English Reformation followed
a different course from the Reformation in continental Europe.
There had long been a strong strain of anti-clericalism, and
England had already given rise to the
Lollard movement of
John
Wycliffe, which played an important part in inspiring the
Hussites in
Bohemia.
Lollardy was suppressed and became an underground movement so the
extent of its influence in the 1520s is difficult to assess. The
different character of the English Reformation came rather from the
fact that it was driven initially by the political necessities of
Henry VIII. Henry had once
been a sincere Catholic and had even authored a book strongly
criticizing Luther, but he later found it expedient and profitable
to break with the Papacy. His wife,
Catherine of Aragon, bore him only a
single child,
Mary. As England had
recently gone through a lengthy dynastic conflict (
see Wars of the Roses), Henry feared that
his lack of a male heir might jeopardize his descendants' claim to
the throne. However, Pope
Clement VII,
concentrating more on Charles V's "sack of Rome", denied his
request for an annulment. Had Clement granted the annulment and
therefore admitted that his predecessor,
Julius II, had erred, Clement would have given
support to the Lutheran assertion that Popes replaced their own
judgement for the will of God. King Henry decided to remove the
Church of England from the
authority of Rome. In 1534, the
Act of
Supremacy made Henry the
Supreme
Head of the Church of England. Between 1535 and 1540, under
Thomas Cromwell,
the policy known as the
Dissolution of the
Monasteries was put into effect. The veneration of some
saints, certain pilgrimages and some pilgrim
shrines were also attacked. Huge amounts of church land and
property passed into the hands of the crown and ultimately into
those of the nobility and gentry. The vested interest thus created
made for a powerful force in support of the dissolutions.
There were some notable opponents to the
Henrician Reformation, such as
Thomas More and Bishop
John Fisher, who were executed for their
opposition. There was also a growing party of reformers who were
imbued with the Zwinglian and Calvinistic doctrines now current on
the Continent. When Henry died he was succeeded by his Protestant
son
Edward VI, who, through his empowered
councillors (with the King being only nine years old at his
succession and not yet sixteen at his death) the Duke of Somerset
and the Duke of Northumberland, ordered the destruction of images
in churches, and the closing of the
chantries. Under Edward VI the reform of the
Church of England was established
unequivocally in doctrinal terms. Yet, at a popular level, religion
in England was still in a state of flux. Following a brief Roman
Catholic restoration during the reign of
Mary 1553–1558, a loose consensus
developed during the reign of
Elizabeth I, though this point is one
of considerable debate among historians. Yet it is the so-called
"
Elizabethan Religious
Settlement" to which the origins of
Anglicanism are traditionally ascribed. The
compromise was uneasy and was capable of veering between extreme
Calvinism on the one hand and Catholicism
on the other, but compared to the bloody and chaotic state of
affairs in contemporary France, it was relatively successful until
the Puritan Revolution or
English
Civil War in the seventeenth century.
Puritan movement
The success of the
Counter-Reformation on the Continent and
the growth of a
Puritan party dedicated to
further Protestant reform polarized the
Elizabethan Age, although it was not until
the 1640s that England underwent religious strife comparable to
that which its neighbours had suffered some generations
before.
The early
Puritan movement (late 16th century-17th
century) was
Reformed or
Calvinist and was a movement for reform in the
Church of England. Its origins lay
in the discontent with the
Elizabethan Religious
Settlement.
The desire was for the Church of England to
resemble more closely the Protestant churches of Europe, especially
Geneva
. The
Puritans objected to ornaments and ritual in the churches as
idolatrous (vestments, surplices, organs,
genuflection), which they castigated as "
popish pomp and rags". (See
Vestments controversy.) They also
objected to ecclesiastical courts. They refused to endorse
completely all of the ritual directions and formulas of the
Book of Common
Prayer; the imposition of its liturgical order by legal
force and inspection sharpened Puritanism into a definite
opposition movement.
The later Puritan movement were often referred to as
dissenters and
nonconformists and eventually led to the
formation of various
reformed denominations.
The most
famous and well-known emigration to America
was the migration of the Puritan separatists from
the Anglican Church of England, who fled first to Holland
, and then later to America, to establish the
English colonies of New
England
, which later became the United States
.
These Puritan separatists were also known as "the
Pilgrims". After establishing a colony at
Plymouth (which would become part of
the colony of
Massachusetts) in 1620, the Puritan
pilgrims received a charter from the
King of England which legitimized their
colony, allowing them to do trade and commerce with merchants in
England, in accordance with the principles of
mercantilism. This successful, though initially
quite difficult, colony marked the beginning of the Protestant
presence in America (the earlier French, Spanish and Portuguese
settlements had been Catholic), and became a kind of oasis of
spiritual and
economic freedom, to
which persecuted Protestants and other minorities from the British
Isles and Europe (and later, from all over the world) fled to for
peace, freedom and opportunity.
The Pilgrims of New England
disapproved of Christmas
and celebration was outlawed in Boston
from 1659 to 1681. The ban was revoked in
1681 by
Sir Edmund Andros, who
also revoked a Puritan ban against festivities on Saturday night.
However it wasn't until the mid 1800's that celebrating Christmas
became fashionable in the Boston region.
The original intent of the colonists was to establish spiritual
Puritanism, which had been denied to them in England and the rest
of Europe to engage in peaceful commerce with England and the
native
American
Indians and to Christianize the peoples of the
Americas.
Scotland
The
Reformation in Scotland's case culminated ecclesiastically in the
re-establishment of the 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, which repudiated the pope's authority,
forbade the celebration of the mass
and approved a Protestant Confession of Faith, 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).
The
Scottish reformation decisively shaped the Church of
Scotland
and, through it, all other Presbyterian churches worldwide.
A
spiritual revival also broke out among Catholics soon after Martin
Luther's actions, and led to the Scottish
Covenanters' movement, the precursor to Scottish
Presbyterianism. This movement spread,
and greatly influenced the formation of Puritanism among the Anglican Church in England
. The
Scottish covenanters were persecuted by the Roman Catholic Church.
This
persecution by the Catholics drove some of the Protestant
covenanter leadership out of Scotland, and into France
and later,
Switzerland
.
France
Protestantism also spread into France, where the Protestants were
nicknamed "
Huguenots", and this touched off decades of
warfare in France, after initial support by
Henry of Navarre was lost due to the
"
Night of the Placards"
affair. Many French Huguenots, however, still contributed to the
Protestant movement, including many who emigrated to the English
colonies.
Though he was not personally interested in religious reform,
Francis I (1515–47) initially
maintained an attitude of tolerance, arising from his interest in
the
humanist movement. This
changed in 1534 with the
Affair
of the Placards. In this act, Protestants denounced the mass in
placards that appeared across France, even reaching the royal
apartments. The issue of religious faith having been thrown into
the arena of politics, Francis was prompted to view the movement as
a threat to the kingdom's stability. This led to the first major
phase of anti-Protestant persecution in France, in which the
Chambre Ardente ("Burning
Chamber") was established within the
Parlement of Paris to handle with the
rise in prosecutions for heresy.
Several thousand French Protestants fled
the country during this time, most notably John Calvin, who settled in Geneva
.
Calvin continued to take an interest in the religious affairs of
his native land and, from his base in Geneva, beyond the reach of
the French king, regularly trained pastors to lead congregations in
France. Despite heavy persecution by
Henry II, the
Reformed Church of France, largely
Calvinist in direction, made steady
progress across large sections of the nation, in the urban
bourgeoisie and parts of the
aristocracy, appealing to people alienated by
the obduracy and the complacency of the Catholic
establishment.
French Protestantism, though its appeal increased under
persecution, came to acquire a distinctly political character, made
all the more obvious by the noble conversions of the 1550s. This
had the effect of creating the preconditions for a series of
destructive and intermittent conflicts, known as the
Wars of Religion. The civil wars
were helped along by the sudden death of
Henry II in 1559, which saw the beginning
of a prolonged period of weakness for the French crown.
Atrocity and outrage became the defining
characteristic of the time, illustrated at its most intense in the
St. Bartholomew's Day
massacre of August 1572, when the Catholic Church annihilated
between 30,000 and 100,000 Huguenots across France. The wars only
concluded when
Henry IV, himself
a former Huguenot, issued the
Edict of
Nantes, promising official toleration of the Protestant
minority, but under highly restricted conditions. 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—which revoked the Edict of Nantes and made
Catholicism the sole legal religion of France.
In response to the
Edict of Fontainebleau, Frederick
William of Brandenburg
declared the Edict of
Potsdam, giving free passage to French Huguenot refugees, and
tax-free status to them for ten years.
Netherlands
The Reformation in the Netherlands, unlike in many other countries,
was not initiated by the rulers of the
Seventeen Provinces, but instead by
multiple popular movements, which in turn were bolstered by the
arrival of Protestant refugees from other parts of the continent.
While the
Anabaptist movement enjoyed
popularity in the region in the early decades of the Reformation,
Calvinism, in the form of the
Dutch Reformed Church, became the
dominant Protestant faith in the country from the 1560s
onward.
Harsh
persecution of Protestants by the Spanish government of Phillip II contributed to a desire for
independence in the provinces, which led to the Eighty Years' War and eventually, the
separation of the largely Protestant Dutch Republic from the Catholic-dominated
Southern Netherlands
(present-day Belgium
).
Hungary
Much of the population of the
Kingdom
of Hungary adopted Protestantism during the sixteenth century.
After the
1526 Battle of
Mohács
the Hungarian people were disillusioned by the
ability of the government to protect them and turned to the faith
which would infuse them with the strength necessary to resist the
invader. They found this in the teaching of the Protestant
reformers such as
Martin Luther. The
spread of Protestantism in the country was aided by its large
ethnic German minority, which could understand and translate the
writings of Martin Luther.
While Lutheranism gained a foothold among the German-speaking
population,
Calvinism became widely
accepted among ethnic Hungarians.
In the more independent northwest the rulers and priests, protected
now by the
Habsburg Monarchy which
had taken the field to fight the Turks, defended the old Catholic
faith. They dragged the Protestants to prison and the stake
wherever they could. Such strong measures only fanned the flames of
protest, however. Leaders of the Protestants included Matthias Biro
Devai, Michael Sztarai, and Stephen Kis Szegedi.
Protestants likely formed a majority of Hungary's population at the
close of the sixteenth century, but
Counter-Reformation efforts in the
seventeenth century reconverted a majority of the kingdom to
Catholicism. A significant Protestant minority remained, most of it
adhering to the Calvinist faith.
In 1558
the Transylvanian Diet of Turda
declared
free practice of both the Catholic and Lutheran religions, but prohibited Calvinism. Ten years later, in 1568, the
Diet extended this freedom, declaring that "It is not allowed to
anybody to intimidate anybody with captivity or expelling for his
religion". Four religions were declared as accepted (recepta)
religions, while
Orthodox
Christianity was "tolerated" (though the building of stone
Orthodox churches was forbidden).Hungary entered the
Thirty Years' War, Royal (Habsburg)
Hungary joined the catholic side, until Transylvania joined the
Protestant side.
There were a series of other successful and unsuccessful
anti-Habsburg /i.e. anti-Austrian/ (requiring equal rights and
freedom for all Christian religions) uprisings between 1604 and
1711, the uprisings were usually organized from Transylvania. The
constrained Habsburg Counter-Reformation efforts in the seventeenth
century reconverted the majority of the kingdom to
Catholicism.
Conclusion and legacy
The Reformation led to a
series of religious wars that
culminated in the
Thirty Years'
War.
From 1618 to 1648 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 Spanish
Netherlands and much of Germany
and Italy
, were
staunch defenders of the Catholic Church. Some historians
believe that the era of the Reformation came to a close when
Catholic France allied itself, first in secret and later on the
battlefields, with Protestant states against the Habsburg dynasty.
For the first time since the days of Luther, political and national
convictions again outweighed religious convictions in Europe.
The main tenets of the
Peace of
Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years' War, were:
- All parties would now recognize 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 cuius regio, eius
religio)
- 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 Pope's pan-European political
power. Fully aware of the loss,
Pope
Innocent X declared the treaty "null, void, invalid,
iniquitous, unjust, damnable, reprobate, inane, empty of meaning
and effect for all times." European sovereigns, Catholic and
Protestant alike, ignored his verdict.
See also
Notes and references
- Hussites
- The Complete Works of Michel de Montaigne
- The journal of Montaigne's travels in Italy by way of
Switzerland and Germany in 1580 and 1581; translated by W.G.
Waters, John Murray, London, 1903
- The Sacking of Rome & The English
Reformation
- Chapter 12 The Reformation In Germany And
Scandinavia, Renaissance and Reformation by William
Gilbert.
- When Christmas Was Banned - The early colonies and
Christmas
- Article 1, of the
Articles Declaratory of the Constitution of the Church of
Scotland 1921 states 'The Church of Scotland adheres to the
Scottish reformation'.
- Paris and the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre: August 24,
1572
- Revesz, Imre, History of the Hungarian Reformed Church, Knight,
George A.F. ed., Hungarian Reformed
Federation of America (Washington, D.C.: 1956).
- The Forgotten Reformations in Eastern Europe -
Resources
- The Avalon Project : Treaty of Westphalia
Further reading
Scholarly secondary resources
Chronological order of publication (oldest first)
- The Cambridge Modern History. Vol 2: The Reformation (1903).
- Kirsch, J.P. "The
Reformation", The Catholic Encyclopedia (1911).
(Catholic view)
- Smith, Preserved. The Age of Reformation. (1920).
- (a Catholic perspective; reprinted 2009)
- (focuses on religious teachings)
- Gonzales, Justo. The Story of Christianity, Vol.
2: The Reformation to the Present Day. San Francisco:
Harper, 1985. ISBN 0-06-063316-6.
- Estep, William R. Renaissance & Reformation. Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1986. ISBN 0-8028-0050-5.
- Spitz, Lewis W. The Renaissance and Reformation Movements:
Volume I, The Renaissance. Revised Edition. St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1987. ISBN 0-570-03818-9; The
Renaissance and Reformation Movements: Volume II, The
Reformation. Revised Edition. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing
House, 1987. ISBN 0-570-03819-7.
- Kolb, Robert. Confessing the Faith: Reformers Define the
Church, 1530-1580. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1991. ISBN 0-570-04556-8.
- Cameron, Euan. The European Reformation. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1991. (a standard textbook)
- Braaten, Carl E. and Robert W.
Jenson. The Catholicity of the Reformation. Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans, 1996. ISBN 0-8028-4220-8.
- MacCulloch, Diarmaid.
The Reformation: A
History. New York: Penguin 2003. Most important recent
synthesis
- Hendrix, Scott H. "Recultivating the Vineyard: The Reformation
Agendas of Christianization." Louisville & London: Westminster
John Knox Press, 2004. ISBN 0-664-22713-9.
- Bagchi, David, and David C. Steinmetz, eds. The Cambridge
Companion to Reformation Theology (2004) 289 pp.
- Collinson, Patrick. The Reformation: A History (2006)
excerpt and text search
- Hillerbrand, Hans J. The Protestant Reformation (2nd
ed. 2009) excerpt and text search
- Marshall, Peter. The Reformation: A Very Short
Introduction (2009) excerpt and text search
Primary sources in translation
- Gorham, George
Cornelius, Gleanings of a few scattered ears, during the
period of Reformation in England and of the times immediately
succeeding : A.D. 1533 to A.D. 1588:, London, Bell and Daldy,
1857.
- Janz, Denis, ed. A Reformation Reader: Primary Texts With
Introductions (2008) excerpt and text search
- 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.I (1507-1521) and vol.2 (1521-1530) from Google Books. Reprint of Vol.1, Wipf &
Stock Publishers (March 2006). ISBN 1-59752-601-0.
- Spitz, Lewis W. The Protestant Reformation: Major
Documents. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1997. ISBN
0-570-04993-8
External links