Learn about the varieties of Protestant religion that emerged from the Reformation. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
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Dr. Steven Zucker: [0:00] To recap from the last video, Luther refused to renounce his teachings at the Diet of Worms, and was kidnapped as he left the Diet of Worms by the Elector of Saxony, and secreted away in a castle where he translated the New Testament into German.
Dr. Beth Harris: [0:30] This is an enormous undertaking, which he completes in a matter of months, and it’s important to Luther because it means that everyone can read the Bible for themselves. Luther’s main ideas are scripture alone and the priesthood of all believers.
[0:38] You don’t need to go to the church to understand the Word of God, to understand the path to salvation. All you need to do is to read the Bible — scripture alone — so putting the Bible in the hands of everyone.
[0:48] This other idea, of the priesthood of all believers, is this notion that we can have a direct relationship with God that’s unmediated by the priest, by a local bishop or by the pope, it’s just us and our creator.
Dr. Zucker: [1:06] We’ve come across three major ideas, then, from Luther, faith alone, scripture alone, and the priesthood of all believers. Now, these ideas — that we can look directly at the scriptures, that we can have that kind of direct relationship with God — means that lots of people can come up with slightly varying understandings of what that relationship is.
Dr. Harris: [1:28] Right. As soon as the Word of God is not mediated by the church, as soon as everyone can read it for themselves, it becomes clear just how ambiguous much of what’s in the New Testament and the Old Testament really is, and how differently it can be interpreted by different people.
Dr. Zucker: [0:00] That’s why we have so many different Protestant sects.
Dr. Harris: [1:43] Immediately, Luther’s words spread very quickly. If we go to Zurich, to Switzerland, we find Zwingli. Like Luther, he looks to scripture as the sole authority — not the church, but scripture.
Dr. Zucker: [1:57] Now, he differed from Luther in one important regard, the Eucharist. Now, Luther had already broken with the Catholic church’s understanding of the Eucharist, that there was transubstantiation. That is, that the bread and the wine was, by miracle, transformed into the actual flesh and the actual blood of Christ.
[2:15] Luther believed that the blood of Christ and the flesh of Christ was present in the bread and the wine, but not that the priest had this kind of special power that allowed for the transformation itself. Then Zwingli changes that interpretation and says that the Eucharist is entirely symbolic and that there is no actual blood and no actual flesh present in the church.
Dr. Harris: [2:41] Actually, Luther and Zwingli got together to debate this issue to try to create a more unified Protestant church, but they were unable to agree. So you can see these very serious doctrinal disputes that are going on during this time, everything is being questioned.
Dr. Zucker: [3:00] In Zurich, at the same time, also we have another group, the Anabaptists. They’re fascinating, because they take issue with the practice of baptism close to birth. That is, an infant is brought and baptized. They look back to the belief that Christ was baptized as an adult, that is, he was baptized of his own free will.
[3:15] They were called the Anabaptists by people who didn’t like them because they saw this spiritual awakening later in life when we could take responsibility for our spiritual lives.
Dr. Harris: [3:24] Anabaptist actually means “re-baptism,” which was completely against Catholic church doctrine.
Dr. Zucker: [0:00] The Amish and the Mennonites actually come directly from the Anabaptists.
Dr. Harris: [3:33] And those are maybe more familiar to us. John Calvin, another really important reformer during this period, who we might know for his doctrine of predestination. This is really following very much what Luther also taught, that all you needed to have was faith.
[3:48] God had already decided, for Calvin, from the beginning of time, who was elect — in other words, who was blessed — and who would go to heaven, and who would go to hell. In other words, completely disregarding the possibility of free will of choice.
Dr. Zucker: [4:02] It’s interesting, because we generally think that we have some agency, that we can make our way into heaven if only we are really, truly good. But Calvin and Luther are both saying, “No, this is entirely God’s will, and we only enact it.”
Dr. Harris: [4:17] God exists in an eternal realm. It’s not like God woke up on Monday and said, “You’re damned and you over there, you’re going to hell,” but something that’s predetermined.
Dr. Zucker: [4:26] Now, Calvin was French. He was a lawyer originally, but he fled to Switzerland. But let’s go to England. What’s happening there?
Dr. Harris: [4:33] Well, Henry VIII wants an annulment from his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, because she’s failed to produce any male heirs to the throne.
Dr. Zucker: [4:42] Well, she had produced, or I should say they had produced male heirs, they just hadn’t survived infancy.
Dr. Harris: [4:58] And so Henry VIII applies to the pope for an annulment. And the pope is actually worried about offending the Holy Roman Emperor, there’s all sorts of political issues, but says, “Sorry, I can’t grant you an annulment.” Henry then goes to the head of the church in England and says, “Will you grant me an annulment?” And that is granted.
[5:12] And so the power of the pope is usurped in this case, and soon after that, an act of Parliament makes the king, the monarch of England, the head of the church in England.
Dr. Zucker: [5:23] I think we need to be careful, because we don’t want to say that the Anglican Church, that is, the Church of England that Henry is now heading, is entirely the result of his desire for a divorce or an annulment.
[5:31] There are strong spiritual and also political issues here. Just like in the Germanic countries, many felt that the pope had too much power. Henry was not only getting his annulment, he was also getting the lands of the church.
Dr. Harris: [5:44] Protestantism is spreading in primarily German-speaking countries, up in Scandinavia, and England, and Scotland, in Switzerland, but if we look to southern Germany and Italy, or France, or Spain, those countries remain predominantly Catholic.
Dr. Zucker: [6:02] All true. But focusing too much on the politics and focusing too much on Henry’s marriages — because ultimately Henry VIII will have six marriages — is to miss the brutality, the violence of this period.
Dr. Harris: [6:15] On both sides, Catholics and Protestants. Thousands of people were hanged, burned at the stake, tortured, simply because of their beliefs. Each side was convinced that they were in the right, and the other side was not only in the wrong, but actually somehow in the power of the devil.
Dr. Zucker: [6:32] This was one of the most violent periods in Europe, and some of the worst violence took place in France. Now, the French Protestants were known as Huguenots, and initially there was some tolerance, but that ended fairly quickly. The Huguenots were declared, en masse, heretical. That is, Protestantism was outlawed in France.
Dr. Harris: [0:00] There was a civil war in France for much of the end of the 16th century.
Dr. Zucker: [6:55] But just like in the German countries and just like in England, the issues were not only spiritual, they were also political. What you had is an alignment of the ruling families of France pitted against each other on both the Protestant and the Catholic sides.
Dr. Harris: [7:09] We also see attempts at tolerance. For example, in the German states, the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 establishes this principle of “whose realm, his religion,” this idea that the local princes in the Holy Roman Empire could choose the religion for their area.
[7:27] In other words, they could choose between Protestantism and Catholicism. It’s not going to be declared by the Holy Roman Emperor. The ruler of each region is going to get to decide. Similarly, in France, we have the Edict of Nantes in 1598, which establishes a principle of religious toleration.
Dr. Zucker: [7:49] That really ends this long period in the second half of the 16th century, known as the French Wars of Religion. Finally, there is some peace, but ultimately, things just got worse. By the early 17th century, we see the beginning of the Thirty Years War, which pitted Protestants and Catholics against each other, especially in the Holy Roman Empire.
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