Title: History%20320%20The%20European%20Reformation
1History 320The European Reformation
2NEW HEAVEN NEW EARTH, 1517-1524
- Evangelical Challenges Zwingli and Radicalism
1521-2 - Zürich and Wittenberg 1522-4
- The Years of Carnival, 1521-4
- WOOING THE MAGISTRATE, 1524-40
- Europes Greatest Rebellion 1524-5
- Princely Churches or Christian Separation
1525-30 - The Birth of Protestantisms 1529-33
3Evangelical Challenges Zwingli and Radicalism,
1521-1522
- Zwingli Zürich (1519), Lent (1522)
4Evangelical Challenges
- Wittenberg radical teaching, radical actions
Zwickau Prophets, Melanchthon, Karlstadt - Luther returns March 1522
5Zürich and Wittenberg 1522-4
- Zürich disputations (January, October, 1523)
- Ten Commandments and images
- sacraments Eucharist, baptism
- The spirit gives life, but the flesh is of no
use (John 6 63) - God ? humanity community
- Zürich radicals, rebaptism (1525), Anabaptists
- Erasmus vs. Luther
6The Years of Carnival, 1521-4
- the uses of liberty
- On Secular Authority (1523)
- two-kingdoms theory
7Europes Greatest Rebellion 1524-5
- Peasants / Farmers War
- Luthers response
- Admonition to Peace (1525)
- Against the Robbing and Murdering Hordes of
Peasants (1525) - Thomas Müntzer an impractical mystic and
dreamer (161) - Twelve Articles (1525)
8Princely Churches or Christian Separation
1525-30
- Albrecht of Brandenburg-Ansbach, Grand Master of
the Teutonic Order - Duke Johann of Electoral Saxony Landgraf Philipp
of Hessen - cuius regio, eius religio (Speyer, 1526)
- visitation, Electoral Saxony
- prince as emergency bishop or responsible for the
care of religion
9Princely Churches or Christian Separation, 1525-30
- Anabaptism
- Balthasar Hubmair (d. 1528),
Nikolsburg (Mikulov) - believers baptism
- separation / suffering
- community of goods
- Jakob Hutter (d. 1536)
- Schleitheim Confession
10The Birth of Protestantisms 1529-33
- Marburg Colloquy (1529)
- Diet of Augsburg (1530), Augsburg Confession
(1530) - Schmalkaldic League (1531)
- Reformed Protestantism
- Christian Civic Union (1529-31)
- Heinrich Bullinger (d. 1575)
- covenant theology
11Marburg Colloquy (1529) Philip of Hessen
12Diet of Augsburg (1530)
13Chapter 3 New Heaven New Earth, 1517-1524
- Identify Zwingli, Melanchthon, Karlstadt,
Zwickau Prophets, priesthood of all believers,
theory of two kingdoms, Anabaptism, two
Anabaptists, Magisterial Reformation, Radical
Reformation - 1. Who was Zwingli? (You will find more
information in Chapter 4). - 2. What constituted radicalism in the early years
of the Reformation? Who was radical? Who was not?
14Chapter 3 New Heaven New Earth, 1517-1524
- 3. MacCulloch quotes Owen Chadwick "At the
beginning of the sixteenth century everyone that
mattered in the Western Church was crying out for
reformation" (153). MacCulloch agrees with this.
Did Chadwick's assertion ring true when you read
Chapters 1 and 2? - 4. In what way was the Reformation carnivalesque
in the earliest phase of its development?
15Wooing the Magistrate, 1524-40
- Identify cuius regio, eius religio Schleitheim
Confession (1527) Swiss Brethren Marburg
Colloquy (1529) Diet of Augsburg (1530)
Augsburg Confession (1530) Schmalkaldic League,
Reformed Protestantism, Christian Civic Union,
synodical system of church government - Why did Romans 13 1-7 play an important role in
the history of the relationship between
Christianity and government?
16Wooing the Magistrate, 1524-40
- 1. What is the connection between the Reformation
and the German Peasants' War? - 2. Who were the first princes to support the
Reformation? - 3. How and why did Anabaptism deny "the concept
of Christendom"(169)? Read Article 4 of the
Schleitheim Confession. How does this contribute
to your knowledge of Anabaptism? - 4. MacCulloch mentions a process of definition
and separation, capped by three momentous
failures (172). Why were the Marburg Colloquy,
the Diet of Augsburg, and the events of 1531 in
Switzerland failures?