Your Question About Easy Weight Loss

Lizzie asks…

what happened at the diet of worms?

Who was involved in it and what was the result of the meeting?

weight loss cardiff answers:

You will probably get the best information by websearching it in German, as ‘Reichstag Zu Wurms’ (although it is sometimes also spelled ‘Worms’ even in German).

Here is a link to a very informative radio programme, from the UK, where several prominent academics meet to discuss important historical events:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0038x8z

David asks…

need help with martin luthurs diet of worms speech?

i need to find 3 quotes: 1- that explains his stance on false doctorine 1- that explains his stance on scandoulous examples 1- to explain his stance on irregular lives plz plz help i have writers block and stuck 🙁 PLZ!

weight loss cardiff answers:

Http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diet_of_Worms

Mark asks…

Why is the Diet of Worms famous in this history of reformation?

Involving Martin luther

weight loss cardiff answers:

I hope some of this helps

The Reformation.

“It appealed to the deepest devotional traditions of the Middle Ages, and it rode on a wave of a religious revival which affected not just the scholars but the masses.” Norman Davies.

It was started by men who were trying to keep the Catholic Church in one piece, who were trying their hardest to clean up the Church, when one part of the movement started to break away.

“What started as a broad religious revival gradually divided into two separate and hostile movements, later known as the Catholic Reformation and the Protestant Reformation.”

Blatant decadence in the Church had reached outrageous proportions. Europe was full of stories about Papal nepotism, promiscuous priests, simoniacal bishops, and most of all, the shear wealth of the Church.

The “harbinger of things to come” was Savonarola, (1452-98). He started a revolt in the 1490’s which, temporarily, drove the Medici from Florence, for which he was burned at the stake.. In Spain, the new school of theology at the University of Alcala produced the Polyglot Bible (1510-20). This religious revival coincided with a low point in the churches reputation.

In 1509, Rome was visited by the young Martin Luther who was shocked to the core at what he saw, and within ten years he found himself at the head of the “Protestant” revolt. Friar Johann Tetzel’s sale of indulgences in Germany brought things to a head, the Elector of Saxony, who was Luther’s Prince had banned Tetzl from selling indulgences in his territory. Tradition insists that it was on 31st October 1517, Halloween, or more correctly, All Saints Eve, that he nailed his 95 Thesis , or arguments against indulgences to the door of the Church at Wittenberg, thereby challenging Tetzel’s theological credentials. The Protestant Reformation snowballed from there.

Luther was excommunicated in June !520. He was the summoned to appear, under safe conduct, at the Imperial Diet at Worms by the Emperor Charles V in 1521. The Elector of Saxony spirited him away and hid him at Wartburg Castle. However, the ban pronounced by The Diet could not be enforced, this protest was turning into rebellion. Two outbreaks of dissent occurred in Germany, in 1522-3 the Imperial Knights, “feud”, and the Peasants War of 1524-5, the later of which Luther opposed, it ended with the slaughter of peasants.

The ideological revolt led by Luther took more definite shape during three latter sessions of the Imperial Diet. ( At Speyer in 1526, where they managed to insert the clause for princely liberty in religion, forerunner of the formula, “Cuius regio eius religio” (whoever rules has the right to determine religion.), again at Speyer in 1529, where the name Protestant come from, and at Augsberg 1530-31.( Check up on these dates, my notes are hazy.). The Protestant princess formed the armed League of Schmalkalden and from there the two, “camps”, were clearly defined.

Meanwhile other protests were taking place elsewhere in Europe, Zwingli (1484-1531) in Switzerland, (He was killed in a war against the five Catholic forest cantons that had split the Swiss Confederation. ) Karlstadt quarrelled with Luther and went to Basel. Muentzer((*)) (1490-1525) finished up being executed at Mulhausen, in Thuringia during the Peasants War. The first Christian fundamentalists, the Anabaptists, were a disgruntled set of Swiss Zwinglians. And were persecuted by Protestants and Catholics alike. They recovered as Mennonites.

The English Reformation was more politically driven. Henry VIII, initially because of the refusal of the Pope to grant him a divorce, and after previously denouncing Luther, had little religious motivation, but he gained a great deal of support from Parliament, and “immense material advantage”, by attacking the Church’s privileges and wealth.

1532 The Act of Annates cut financial payments to Rome.
1533 The Act of Appeals curtailed Rome’s ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
1534 The Act of Supremacy abolished Papal authority, making the King, Supreme Head of the Church of England.

“The direct association of Church and State, later called Erastianism, brought Anglicanism closer to Orthodox than to Catholic practice.”

Jean Calvin, (1509-64) was persuaded to take control of the church in Geneva in 1541, at the second attempt. Calvin founded the most widely influential branch of Protestantism, however, in matters of toleration he was no more flexible than the Inquisition or Henry VIII. (See the case of, “Servetus” (1511-1553)).

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