Martin Luther, John Calvin, and the Anabaptists Impact

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A new way of thinking erupted throughout Europe starting in 1517 in what is known as the Reformation. Starting with Martin Luther, the new innovations and ideas brought the world to a more secular age. Individuals like Luther and John Calvin lived in a split nation of Catholics and Protestants. The ideas of Lutherans, Calvinists, and the Anabaptists had different ways of paving the road for individualism, secularization, and democracy as their ideas spread for centuries all over the world. On October 31, 1517 Martin Luther’s ideas changed the way Europe thought about God, economics, culture, even the truth. Luther was a monk who read Jon Hus and Erasmus’ criticisms of the Church. Luther believed Christianity was a lot simpler than what the Catholic Church tried to teach. He stated that the way to salvation was through faith, not good works. In his piece, On the Freedom of a Christian he states, “...when any man is made good or bad, this does not arise from his works, but from his faith or unbelief.” As stated in one of his 95 theses, salvation was based on an individual’s own relationship with God. Additionally, to guide faith an individual must interpret the Scripture themselves. The Scripture was infallible. Luther rejected celibacy, purgatory and monasteries because they were inventions outside of the Scripture. Contrary to the Olinski 2 Church’s teaching of laity being inferior to clergy, Luther taught that they were equal, and the Pope was capable of error. This idea of equality was one of the fuels that sparked democracy. In the writing The 12 Articles of the German Peasants, some peasants expressed themselves stating, “...we should be humble, not only towards those in authority, but towards everyone.” Many wanted equal ri... ... middle of paper ... ...re used on how we discover the world, and a scientific revolution began. Without science humans could never have known the truth about nature, or anything surrounding them. All of these groups focused on equality, everyone even the clergy was equal. Calvinists and Anabaptists elected leaders, and the Calvinist church was held together by a covenant, much like America is held together by the Constitution. Calvin also thought revolting against immoral rulers was acceptable with just cause. Anabaptists encouraged free choice by letting an individual choose if they wanted to accept God’s grace or not. Revolution, covenants, equality, the foundations of democracy. Without these beginnings of democracy, America would have been run in a different fashion. All the thoughts that came out of the Reformation changed the culture, the government and how people viewed the world.

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