Corruption In The Catholic Church

745 Words2 Pages

The reformation was a time of change and chaos in the Catholic Church due to the corruption. There were reformers or an adjustment group like as Martin Luther that called for change. After the Protestants broke away the Catholic Church started small reforms to find a balance. Using the Culture Epoch Theory this paper will explore the causation, the adjustments, and the balancing of the Reformation.
The Catholic Church and its corruption created chaos among the clergy and the people of the church. Catholic mass was spoken in and the Bible was written in Latin. The clergy were the only ones who spoke and read Latin during the time before the Reformation (Detrick, “Reformation”). The people did not know if the mass was being said or performed correctly. As long as it sounded about right the people never questioned the mass. Many wealthy families “owned” a priest or Pope (Detrick, “Reformation”). This allowed for powerful families like the Medici’s to control large cities and churches. …show more content…

To get Protestants to at least think about rejoining the Catholic Church there is a holding of the Council of Trent. During the 1st Council of Trent the following Five Statements were determined:
“Scripture and Tradition have equal authority
Catholic Church had the sole right to interpret the Bible
Good Works required for Salvation
Upheld the 7 sacraments rather than the 2 accepted of by the Protestants
Communion only to be giving by permission of the Pope”(Detrick, “Reformation”).

There were three meetings of the Council of Trent that spanned over the course twenty years and three popes (“Council Of Trent: The Catholic-Reformation”). Over the course of these meetings the doctrine was reaffirmed. To be against the Catholic Church was considered heresy. (Detrick, “Reformation”). This did not falter the Protestant movements only amplified the

Open Document