Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySamantha Walsh Modified over 8 years ago
2
Radical Reformers As the Reformation continued, hundreds of new Protestant sects sprang up. These sects often had ideas that were even more radical than those of Luther and Calvin. One radical group, the Anabaptists, rejected infant baptism. (They argued that infants are too young to understand what it means to accept the Christian faith.) Reasons for REFORM 4
3
Some Anabaptists wanted to abolish private property. Others wanted use violence to speed up judgment day. Most called for religious tolerance and separation of Church and state. Despite harsh persecution, these groups influenced Protestant thinking in many countries. Today, the Baptists, Quakers, Mennonites, and Amish all trace their ancestry to the Anabaptists.
4
Church of England: (The English Reformation The Church of England, aka the Anglican Church (or Episcopalian Church in the US) was started because King Henry VIII wanted to get a divorce from his wife Catherine of Aragon. But the Catholic Church did not grant divorces. Henry VIII created a new Church in 1534 based on the same doctrine as the Catholic Church but that allowed divorces. He then married Anne Boleyn.
6
Henry’s oldest daughter under his marriage with Catherine was named Mary. His daughter with Anne was named Elizabeth. When Henry died, Mary was the rightful heir of the English crown. She had remained Catholic and so when she came into power, she tried to do away with the newly created Church of England. Queen Mary I, who succeeded him, returned England again to the authority of the Pope, thereby ending the first attempt at an independent Church of England. During Mary's reign, many leaders and common people were burnt for their refusal to recant of their reformed faith. These are known as the Marian martyrs and the persecution has led to her nickname of "Bloody Mary".
7
Mary also died childless and so it was left to the new regime of her half-sister Elizabeth to resolve the direction of the church. For years, Elizabeth had survived court intrigues, including the religious swings under Edward (yes, Henry did eventually have a son!) and Mary. As queen, Elizabeth had to determine the future of the Church of England. She slowly enforced a series of reforms that later were called the Elizabethan settlement.
8
The settlement under Elizabeth I (from 1558), was known as the Elizabethan settlement. The queen’s policies were a compromise, or acceptable middle ground, between Protestant and Catholic practices. The Church continued to thrive under Queen Elizabeth and has remained, even today, as the official church of the country of England.
9
England and the Church In 1528, King Henry VIII asked the pope to annul, or cancel, his marriage. The pope refused Henry’s request. Henry took the Church from the pope’s control and created the Church of England. Protestant King Edward VI brought Protestant reforms to England. Queen Mary wanted to restore Catholicism to England. She had hundreds of English Protestants burned at the stake. Queen Elizabeth forged a compromise between Protestants and Catholics. 4
10
English Reformation
11
Which English monarch had thousands of Protestants burned at the stake? a) Elizabeth b) Mary c) Henry VIII d) Edward VI Which of the following was not an effect of the Protestant Reformation? a) the Catholic Reformation b) Increased anti-Semitism c) religious wars in Europe d) the invention of the printing press 4
12
4 Which English monarch had thousands of Protestants burned at the stake? a) Elizabeth b) Mary c) Henry VIII d) Edward VI Which of the following was not an effect of the Protestant Reformation? a) the Catholic Reformation b) Increased anti-Semitism c) religious wars in Europe d) the invention of the printing press
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.