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please explain and be detailed

2007-01-20 14:48:24 · 11 answers · asked by Sami M 1 in Arts & Humanities History

11 answers

One of the main ones was called indulgences. This was basically supposed to buy your way into Heaven by giving money to the church.

2007-01-20 14:51:52 · answer #1 · answered by thrill88 6 · 1 0

He initially had only one objection to practices in the Catholic Church and in particular a specific person, John Tetzel. Most things in life come down to a handful of people.

To go back a step, indulgences do not forgive sins. Indulgences remit the obligation to do justice. For example, imagine you were really mad at your neighbor and burned their fences down. You are forgiven, under Catholic theology, when you are truly penitent. God forgives those who truly have turned from their sin. However, a Christian is to be a bringer of justice as well. So as a Catholic you are also obligated to rebuild the fence and cover any damages as well.

Now imagine you could not fix what you broke, it doesn't alter your salvation but it does impair your obligation to bring justice. An indulgence relieves you of the obligation to bring that justice. It is a forgiveness of the obligation to make things right. It is an act of mercy. There are circumstances where one cannot make right what harm they have done.

Tetzel was charged with raising money to build a better tomb for the Apostle Peter. Unfortunately, Tetzel's method was to sell indulgences rather than just grant them. Like simony, or the selling of clerical offices, selling indulgences was a sin. That did not stop Tetzel however. When you combine with this, the German concept of purgatory, which differed from the rest of the Catholic Churches understanding of purgatory, you got a weird theology. Purgatory is simply the idea that there is a transition between this life and the Resurrection. The idea is that you are imperfect and that God perfects you at death. This transition to perfection is called purgatory. It is not a place of punishment but of loving purification. The Germans saw this as being like purifying steel in fire. Most people see being hammered in fire as a bad thing, hence the desire not to be purified and so indulgences became important in Germany. It is a rather unfortunate combination of visions and ideas on ancient ones.

This was the start. It gets comlicated after that because Luther attacked people with money and money people tend not to take things like that well. Had it been handled locally it probably would have died down, but it became a systemic issue. It did not help that the people involved, both Luther and the Pope were naturally pig headed types of people. The problem escalated until Luther was excommunicated by the Diet of Worms, or a congress of the Empire in the city of Worms.

He was ultimately saved by Prince Frederick the Elector of Saxony and the split turned the one Christian community into two and then gradually into many. The Reformation turned into a tax revolt and then into a civil war in which 1/3rd of all Germans died.

There are now 46,000 Protestant denominations, each independent and each believing they have figured it out correctly because of a handful of very pig headed individuals.

2007-01-23 00:16:30 · answer #2 · answered by OPM 7 · 0 1

the sell of indulgences was his chief objections to the RCC in the 95 Theses but he also objected to the Catholic Church belief of good works and money grant salvation. He believed that faith alone would merit salvation and the priests were not needed. This idea came from studying the ancient Hebrew texts first, then reading the ancient Greek and Roman texts.

2007-01-20 15:03:01 · answer #3 · answered by "Hello, I Love You" 3 · 0 0

Reading Martin Luther's "95 Thesis" is a good start in understanding his objections to the Church. It's actually not that long of a document:

http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/luther/web/ninetyfive.html

2007-01-24 03:26:39 · answer #4 · answered by Daver 7 · 0 0

There were 95 things. Hard to be detailed with that many. His most well known is selling indulgences. And that did get cleaned up.Luther was excommunicated Jan 3 1521.Luther wroth a German translation of the bible in l530. Back then the bible was not mass produced. And i do not know how many people knew how to read.

2007-01-20 14:52:36 · answer #5 · answered by swamp elf 5 · 1 0

Luther grew up as a Catholic and as an grownup grew to grow to be a Catholic monk. in spite of the undeniable fact that, contained in the 1520s, Luther found out that, whilst the Catholic Church grow to be certainly Christ's Church, the people the ran it have been imperfect in basic terms like certainly everybody else. some issues the human clergy had carried out over the centuries grow to be corrupting the Church. subsequently Luther pursued a reformation of the Church that could convey it lower back to that's non secular roots. regrettably in spite of the undeniable fact that, Luther's reformation flow spiraled completely out of control while his warm-headed followers led an entire schism and breakaway from Jesus's Church. This radicalist group grew to grow to be widespread because of the fact the protestants, who conventional churches of their own that practiced incomplete Christianity and obeyed heretic doctrines that are in conflict with the two the Bible, and the classes of Christ. Why those radicals might try this sort of component, I haven't any clue. Luther in no way had any purpose of ultimate a breakaway flow from the Catholic Church. He in basic terms had to reform it and shrink the corruption that had resulted from years of imperfect human rule (plus, the term - darkish a while - grow to be a procedures from good). it is gloomy that his followers desperate to ascertain an fullyyt knew variety of Christianity - one which does no longer worship completely as Christ desires - that has by way of now broken into extra suitable than 38,000+ denominations. Christ called us to be united below Him. This "Protestant flow" is the furthest component from what Christ needs from us. Eddie - No element of the Catholic Catechism, the writings of Luther, or maybe the writings of the early Church Fathers lower back up any element of the fake doctrines you have provided.

2016-10-07 11:45:42 · answer #6 · answered by elidia 4 · 0 0

He did not like the Catholic Church selling indulgences. The poor people would buy these and it was supposed to rid them of all of their sins and they were supposed to have a free ride to heavan. He did not like the church taking the people's money and thought these indulgences were wrong. You can't buy your way into heaven.

2007-01-20 14:54:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

he had a lot of complaints with the Catholic Church, but his basic complaint was their practice for selling "salvation" and remitance of sins for money. They were trying to raise money to rebuild St. Peters in Rome, and staged a major fund raising campaign in Germany, selling "indulgences" for cash.

2007-01-20 15:00:41 · answer #8 · answered by lochmessy 6 · 0 0

he objected to the doctrine of papal infallibility and the coruption such as simony that was common.
He thought people should be allowed to read the bible and understand it on their own terms, not just the dictates of the church fathers.

2007-01-20 14:52:32 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not enough space to answer in detail so instead here is a link you may find helpful.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_luther_king

2007-01-20 14:56:39 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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