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GC unit 8 PP 2 The Northern Renaissance The Protestant Reformation. The Northern Renaissance. Differences : Deeply concerned with religion (groundwork for reformation ) Father of Northern Humanism Desiderus Erasmus The Praise of Folly
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GC unit 8 PP 2The Northern RenaissanceThe Protestant Reformation
The Northern Renaissance • Differences: Deeply concerned with religion (groundwork for reformation) • Father of Northern Humanism • Desiderus Erasmus The Praise of Folly • Called for a return to an earlier simple Christian faith • Sir Thomas More Utopia (“Nowhere”) social reform • William Shakespeare (themes of common man) • Northern Artists: work on a smaller scale more landscapes etc…(also themes of religious upheaval) • Jan Van Eyck • Albrecht Durer
Albrecht Durer Northern Renaissance Painter and engraver
Jan Van Eyck Flemish painter Famous for portraits of common people The Arnolfini Wedding
Causes of the Reformation • Social and political unrest • New faith seen as a way of remaining Independent of outside control (HRE) • Commoners, Lords and Kings were all tired of Church authority over them • Tax money (Tithe) leaving their regions and winding up in Rome • Clerical immunity to temporal law • TENSION with the RC Church
Catalysts • Wycliffe and Huss had begun the movement by laying out the themes • Religious simplicity, poverty of clergy, a more egalitarian Church, vernacular bible • Numerous abuses (Indulgences, clerical ignorance and immorality, too much spending) • The Printing Press helped spread the ideas (and vernacular Bibles) • Johann Guttenberg (1455)
Martin Luther (1483-1546) • His father, Hans, was a miner • Extremely strict Middle class parents • Studied liberal arts at the University of Erfurt • Earned his masters, begins law school • Conversion experience • Joins an Augustinian Monastery and is ordained in 1507 • 1512 he earned his doctorate in Theology and joined the theology department at University of Wittenberg
Luther’s main beliefs • Justification by faith alone (not faith and good works and ceremonies) • You could never earn it through works and ceremonies but only trust and belief in Jesus Christ • Requires the Bible to be in the Vernacular • He only believed in only 2 sacraments: Baptism and Eucharist and that lay authority more important than the Church • He attacked Papal infallibility and stressed the “priesthood of all believers” lowering the importance of the clergy (more egalitarian)
The Indulgence Problem • Begun in 1343 when the Pope claimed to possess a “treasury of merit” • In 1517AugustinianJohn Tetzel was selling a special “Jubilee indulgence which prompts Luther to post his 95 thesis on October 31st 1517 • Reactions • Luther condemned as a Heretic and excommunicated by Pope Leo X
Diet of Worms • 1521 The new Emperor Charles V convenes the Diet of Worms to allow Luther an opportunity to recant his beliefs • He refused, was placed under Imperial ban (Edict of Worms) and hidden by Frederick of Saxony translates New Testament (dies in 1546) • Charles V distracted by wars (with France and Turks) needed the help of the German Princes • Eventually offers the Peace of Augsburg (1555) which allowed German Princes to decide the religion of their land
John Calvin (1509-1564) • French lawyer trained at the University of Paris (Jean Cauvin) upper class background • Converted to Protestantism in 1534 • Author of The Institutes of the Christian Religion • Inspired massive political resistance in France where Protestants were called Huegonots • He moves to Geneva in July of 1536 to escape and became a part of their governing body • Eventually exiled and would not return until 1540
Calvinism in Practice • Predestination (However: the elect should live in a manifestly pleasing way) • Everyone should try to re-order society according to God’s plan • He ran Geneva Switzerland as a theocracy (refuge for protestants) • Bible # 1 authority (life governed by faith) • No dance, drink etc….
The English Reformation • Irony? (1522 Henry was dubbed “Defender of the Faith by Pope Leo X) • Henry VIII (1509-1547) • Catherine of Aragon (Spanish Princess) • Problems? (widow of Henry’s brother) • Henry wants Anne Boyleyn • The annulment controversy They had been married 18 years, no male heir, just “Bloody Mary”) • Henry breaks with RC Church and creates the Church of England
The New Church • Thomas Cranmer becomes Archbishop of Canterbury and grants the annulment • The Act of Supremacyis passed by Parliament and the English King is recognized as the leader of the English Church • Sir Thomas More executed for failing to recognize the new Church • No more tax money to Rome
The other wives of Henry VIII • Anne Boyleyn • Mother of Elizabeth I, Beheaded for treason • Jane Seymour • Mother of Edward VI • Anne of Cleaves • Political marriage, eventually annuled • Catherine Howard (beheaded for adultery) • Catherine Parr (Her third marriage)
Henry’s Church • How Protestant was he? • Kept the RC ban on clerical marriage • Also denied Eucharistic cup to the laity • Kept Confession as a sacrament • Full Protestantism Edward VI (1547-1553) • Only 10 years old when he became King • His regents brought England to “Full Protestantism” • The Book of Common Prayer
The Counter Reformation • The Council of Trent (1545-1563) • 3 sessions over 18 years • Reaffirmed many beliefs • Pope infallible, faith and good works = salvation, only Church can interpret Bible, Indulgences OK, withhold cup from laity (no doctrinal changes) • Changes • The Jesuits, cut into Simony, Seminaries to train clergy, the Index, The Inquisition, Bishops supervision more active