Mostly just by removing the influence of the Pope, and reinstalling the Bible as the supreme authority. The true story was Martin went after the biggest sinner in Wittenburg, a guy that had done tremendous damage. He told he was going to hell, and the guy said that isn't possible, he had bought a ticket to heaven from the Catholic Church. Martin became so angry, he wrote up his 95 thesis and nailed them to the door of the Church, and started the Protestant reformation.
2007-06-16 01:58:58
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answer #1
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answered by Steve C 7
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He wrote the 95 Theses which exposed the corruption in the Catholic Church. He campaigned for the Bible to be translated to vernacular, instead of just Latin. Unfortunately, he also started or popularized what's called "replacement theology." God chose Abraham and his seed to save the world in the Old Testament. God made an everlasting covenant with the nation of Israel. However, many people today believe that because the Jews rejected and a few of them killed Jesus, that they have been replaced. Now the Church are God's chosen people. It should be noted that all of the first Christians were Jewish, including all twelve apostles. The Gospel came to the Jews first and later to the Gentiles (Romans 1:16-17).
What actually happened is that the Church was grafted in. The Church became God's chosen people as well as the nation of Israel (Romans 11). Of course everyone must accept Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior to go to heaven but there will always be a special place in God's heart for Abraham's seed. Christianity was born out of Judaism. Christianity is merely the completed form of Judaism. Jesus Christ was their Messiah. It's sad that many Christians don't recognize this and thus, they are anti-Semitic. I would think they should know better, seeing how Jesus told us to love our enemies, but it is difficult to do.
Most of what Martin Luther said and did was good. It was just in this one area that he was at fault, as far as I know. The Reformation was definitely needed. Most of his doctrine was good. The Bible is the Word of God.
2007-06-16 03:39:10
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answer #2
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answered by fuzz 4
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Luther was a catholic monk who discovered some fallacies in the way the Roman catholic church was controlling people and keeping them in the dark by not letting a common language version of the Bible be put into the hands of believers.
Luther's theology challenged the authority of the papacy by emphasizing the Bible as the sole source of religious authority and the church as a priesthood of all believers. According to Luther, salvation was attainable only by faith in Jesus as the messiah, a faith unmediated by the church. These ideas helped to inspire the Protestant Reformation and changed the course of Western civilization.
However, he was still in the dark himself about one thing:
Luther is also known for his writings about the Jews, the nature and consequences of which are the subject of scholarly debate. His statements that Jews' homes should be destroyed, their synagogues burned, money confiscated, and liberty curtailed were revived and given widespread publicity by the Nazis in Germany in 1933–45.
source; wikipedia
He did not want to start a new denomination, he wanted to fix the broken one he was so devoted to.
2007-06-16 02:12:20
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answer #3
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answered by Moose 5
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Martin Luther didn't try to reform the Church, he left it and started his own. He spoke out against the existing problems at that time, but instead of trying to fix it, he simply walked away and started his own. He felt he was more important and his point of view smarter than anyone else's.
2007-06-16 02:00:13
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answer #4
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answered by Uncle John 6
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because of the fact of a few practices interior the Church of that element that weren't in conserving with the coaching of Christ. even with the undeniable fact that, even nevertheless the Church replaced into appearing some issues that's going to not have been doing, the ensures of Christ to the only Church He based - "The Holy Spirit will instruction manual you into all reality", and "in besides you bind upon Earth is definite in Heaven", and "He who hears you hears Me" - have been nevertheless in effect. So, while Luther's delight and conceitedness brought about him to interrupt ties with the actual Christian Church - the Church which the Bible calls "the pillar and beginning place of reality" - he predictably wandered far flung from reality and into heresy, and the famous-day doctrinal chaos of Protestantism is the effect of that wreck.
2016-12-08 10:48:50
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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