Martin Luther's Influence On Religion

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Martin Luther, born on the 10th of November, 1483, has been one of the most influential person in the entire history of man kind. He essentially challenged the Roman Catholic church, one of the biggest and strictest religions at the time. Changing, challenging and confront religion as we know it as well as bringing up his own religion and giving it life, which later branches off into other a nameless amount of religions under the name of Christianity. Martin, born to his farther Hans Luther and Han's wife, Magrathee, was born under a very strict Roman Catholic family and baptized as a Catholic exactly one day after his birth on the feast day of “Saint Martin of Tours” , which is where Martin obtained his name. Him, his farther and mother moved to a small town know as Mansfield in 1484, where Han's Luther served as a copper miner and smelter. Martin had several brothers and sisters, known for being closest to one named Jacob. Hans has been noted to be a strict farther who had his children's job's and careers picked out for them before they even had a coming to age. Hans wanted Martin to become a lawyer, sending him to several Latin schools that dotted the face of Germany, mainly Mansfield and Magdeburg, where he studied grammar, rhetoric and logic, where Martin compared the education to Purgatory and Hell. When Martin was 23, in the year …show more content…

A life-long feud between Catholics and Protestants had already been cemented and stood solid. People from all around the globe, mainly the Germanic area in Europe began noticing the corrupt actions of the Church and had began to convert to Protestantism, teaching that redemption and salvation is a gift of God's grace, teaching people another way to be saved that was completely different from the Catholic ways. Martin also condemned celibacy, allowing his pastors to have wives, children,

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