Martin Luther And The Indulgent Movement

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There was a movement in the Catholic Church called the Indulgent Movement. This was a movement where people could buy forgiveness and salvation, but it could not do what was promised. The Catholic church completely removed God from the act of forgiveness. This did not sit well with a devout monk named Martin Luther. He believed that in order for someone to find salvation, it is up to God to grant it and the church had no power when it came to forgiveness. Martin Luther's disagreement with the Catholic Church about the Indulgent Movement is what ultimately led to the Protestant Reformation.

Martin Luther's background knowledge revealed itself clearly through how he felt about indulgences because he was a devout monk who had many struggles through his journey in finding his path to salvation. When he finally discovered the path to salvation was within oneself and through God, he was very angry when he discovered the Catholic Chruch was running a scam where people could pay the church for their salvation. He knew that the church was selling false promises and was able to prove it through his knowledge of biblical manuscripts that he had studied and nowhere in them did it say that one could but their salvation through the Catholic Church. …show more content…

His thesis number ninety-five says," And thus be confident of entering into heaven through many tribulations rather than through the false security of peace (Acts 14:22)." Through this thesis, he is providing evidence to the people that in the scriptures God is warning people to be aware of the people that promise false security and that entrance in into heaven can only be granted through one's own tribulations, in other words, salvation cannot be bought it can only be worked

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