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The Protestant Reformation
The Protestant Reformation
How did a protest led by a provincial monk against corruption in the Catholic Church become a centuries-long religious conflict that transformed global communities?
As this video progresses, key ideas will be introduced to invoke discussion.
Think about the following questions as you watch the video
What sixteenth-century practices of the Catholic Church and its pope led people to accuse the church of corruption?
What criticisms of the Catholic Church did Martin Luther make in his 95 Theses?
Why was Protestantism appealing to women and what contributions did some women make to the movement?
How did the Reformation lead to the deaths of millions of people?
Who were the Jesuits and why was this order created?
What was ironic about the North American colonists fleeing Europe due to religious persecution?
: Let's look at the word Protestantism. You've likely heard it before and know it's a branch of
: Christianity. But do you notice the word "protest" in there? That's no coincidence. The Protestant
: Reformation started as a movement—a protest, if you will—to reform the Catholic Church. What
: resulted was an entirely new Christian church—and a religious conflict that engulfed a continent. In
: the 16th century, the Catholic Church was deeply entwined in politics. The Popes ruled their own
: state and frequently leveraged their religious authority to pressure other European rulers
: and increase their own wealth. Catholic priests and bishops were the frequent beneficiaries of
: bribery and other unsavory practices. For instance they sold indulgences—pieces of paper to certify
: that a person's soul would spend less time in purgatory, a kind of middle zone between Heaven
: and Hell. Reformers saw these practices and the Pope's extravagant lifestyle as corrupt. New ways
: of thinking also turned up the heat. The European Renaissance introduced the philosophy of humanism
: which championed intellectual and artistic pursuits, and the translation of ancient works,
: leading to critique of the Church and its translations of the Bible. And those critiques
: could now spread far and wide thanks to the printing press, including some strong opinions
: by an Augustinian monk named Martin Luther. A professor in Germany, Luther was fed up with
: the Church's corruption. So in 1517 he published his "95 Theses." Luther's Theses objected to the
: sale of indulgences and the idea that people had to earn their way into heaven. He also believed
: that the Bible should be translated from Latin into all languages so that everyone can interpret
: it themselves. As his ideas spread, the powers that be of the Catholic Church excommunicated
: Luther in 1521. But Luther wasn't the first person to challenge Church authority—or the
: last. In Switzerland, Huldrych Zwingli had already been raising similar arguments to Luther's in his
: "67 articles." Later French lawyer John Calvin converted to the newly dubbed "Protestantism" with
: his own interpretations of church teachings. And in England, King Henry VIII took advantage of this
: tumultuous time to create his own church that both increased his power and allowed him to divorce his
: wife. Well, wives. Of course these men weren't the only influential reformers. There were also plenty
: of women behind the movement. Because Protestants believed that everyone should be able to interpret
: the Bible, they supported women's literacy. This movement led to female thinkers like
: the French writer Marie Dentière, who advocated for women preachers. And Olympia Fulvia Morata,
: whose letters and translations of religious texts were influential in Italy. And then
: there's Bavarian scholar Argula von Grumbach. She stirred up controversy when she defended a young
: lecturer after he was expelled from his university and imprisoned for spreading Protestant ideas. Von
: Grumbach published an open letter and it became a best-selling pamphlet. Threatened by Protestant
: ideas and the very notion that a woman could exert power, Catholic superiors allegedly encouraged her
: husband to break her hands and cut off her fingers to keep her from writing. While some, like Luther
: and Morata, protested with words, many others took up arms. During the German Peasants War,
: from 1524 to 1525, the peasantry revolted against the nobility and the church's taxation. And
: hundreds of thousands of peasants were massacred. In France, a 36-year long war pitted Catholics
: and Protestants against each other at the cost of some 4 million lives. Recognizing that they needed
: to regain the people's trust, the Catholic Church launched The Counter- Reformation. This movement
: sought to reform the Catholic Church from within. First, they set the record straight on doctrine
: and abuse of power. Then, to bring more people to the Church, they embraced the intellectual bent
: of Protestantism through religious orders like the Jesuits, who were essential in converting
: people to Catholicism. Many unwillingly across the Americas, Africa and Australasia. Religious
: tensions erupted in 1618 when Ferdinand II, the future Holy Roman Emperor, tried to make his lands
: Catholic territory. The Protestants revolted and the 30 Years War, one of the deadliest
: conflicts in human history began. The end of the 30 Years War is generally considered the end of
: the Reformation. This brutal religious conflict reshaped Europe's politics and social systems
: for centuries to come. But one of the biggest outcomes of the Protestant Reformation happened
: on another continent, with the colonization of North America. Many English Protestants became
: colonial settlers as they sought religious freedom across the Atlantic Ocean. Gradual at first,
: waves of protestant settlers would eventually displace entire indigenous American communities
: and determine the religious character of what would become the United States. Ironically,
: just because colonial settlers sought religious freedom doesn't mean they extended that right to