The Events Leading Up To and Following Martin Luther and His Ninety-Five Thesis

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What events led up to and followed Martin Luther and his Ninety-Five Thesis? Its hard for most people to imagine it possible that one man, like Martin Luther, could affect the world so profoundly in such a short period of time. However, that is infact exactly what he did and in a period of only sixty-three years. Some of the most spectacular events in religious reform took place during Martin Luther's life. He forced the scholarly to stop and take a good, hard look at the practices of the church and he allowed the layman to do the same. At a time when indulgences and pardons were at there height, and the Catholic church reigned supreme, Martin Luther chose to preach against them and the church's doctrine. With one document, his Ninety-Five Theses, he raddled the halls of the Vatican, broke the strong hold of the Catholic church, and brought Christian reform to all parts of Europe and the world. No one can deny, after his Ninety-Five Theses, Martin Luther was on the road to serious reform, but he wasn't always on that track. He was born in 1483, the son of a coal miner and had a strong will from the beginning of his life (Mullett, 26). In his childhood, Luther was sometimes beaten up to 15 times in a morning while attending school. Martin Luther's father had first arranged for him to be a lawyer and began training him for this even at an early age, insisting that he learn Latin (Mullett, 29). In 1505, he received his master's degree and upon his fathers wishes he enrolled in law school at the University of Erfurt. That same year though, he would become derailed after a traumatic experience on his way home from school to his parent's house. As Martin Luther was walking home, he suddenly became trapped in a terrible lightning s... ... middle of paper ... ...oping in his lectures. They struck at the roots of papal sovereignty, and they were bound to create a scandal among churchman in high places. By questioning the practice of Indulgences (the collection of money to offset sins) and the belief in Purgatory (a middle between heaven and hell that one might suspend in) Luther struck cords with the very core of the Catholic Church’s foundation and would ultimately separate from them with a very strong following. In 1520-2 ‘Lutheranism’ became a sect. When he realized what was happening the reformer was appalled; he insisted that people must follow Christ, not Luther. But by then he had become, in the popular imagination, a saint, a miracle- worker, a prophet, the apostle of the last days, almost a reincarnated Christ. He had been allotted a place in the multi- layered mythology of the German people.

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