You want all 95 of them? In general, Martin Luther was against the supposition that the Pope could absolve sin by means other than granting abolution, such as by the sale of indulgences. The church was spending most of its time collecting monies in the name of the forgiveness of sins through the sale of indulgences and praying for the dead, that they were not ministering to the needs of the living and unforgiven.
Martin Luther, professor of biblical studies and Augustine monk, initially called only for reforms to the sale and use of indulgences, although not necessarily for them to be abolished altogether. In 1517, he nailed his theses to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg, calling for churchmen to debate the issue. At this time, Pope Leo X needed money to finalise the construction of St Peter's in Rome and planned to declare indulgences for all who contributed. Prierias, Master of the Papal Palace, declared any challenge to the sale of indulgences heretical. Luther soon began to call into question many of the practices and theology of the Catholic Church. He even called into question many of the Books in the biblical canon, including Hebrews, the Epistle of James, Jude, and Revelation in the New Testament, and Esther and II Maccabees in the Catholic Old Testament.
Martin Luther strongly objected to the practice of indulgences (paying money to the Church for freedom from sins). He also believed that salvation is through God's grace and not through good deeds.
The largest thing was that several parts of the catholic mass were based on tradition not The Bible. He criticized the books of James and Revelation (though they are both in the Lutheran Bible). He also criticized the apocrypha books (can't explain these very well).
those are the major things i know but I'm sure there are others
He oppose the church when Luther objected to a saying attributed to Johann Tetzel that "As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory also attested as 'into heaven' springs."He insisted that, since forgiveness was God's alone to grant, those who claimed that indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments and granted them salvation were in error. Christians, he said, must not slacken in following Christ on account of such false assurances.
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Catholic AnswerRoman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is rarely used by the Catholic Church..
His objections were called "The 95 Theses", a staggering display of ignorance of basic Catholic theology, which only went to show the true problem in the Church was the lack of education given to its friars and clergy. See the link below.
The main arguments that Martin Luther started with were the 95 Theses, which you can view below. As he got more and more disconnected from reality and Christianity, he arguments are more far out.
he want to protect his family and do good things for his conuntry he also knew that blacks were been thrown into jail easily so he oppose to fight for the conty
Martin Luther for his refusal to retact his 95 theses was excommunicated by Pope Leo X and declared an outlaw by Holy Roman Emperor Charles V @ 1521. Emperor Charles ordered Martin Luther's arrest at the Diet of Worms. Luther was "accosted" by masked bandits and given protection by Edward III. Martin Luther was branded a heretic. Luther died around 1546.
It led some rulers to oppose the pope in the hopes of seizing that power for themselves.
John Hus, actively promoted Wycliffe's ideas: that people should be permitted to read the Bible in their own language, and they should oppose the tyranny of the Roman church that threatened anyone possessing a non-Latin Bible with execution. For Wycliffe the Bible was the fundamental source of Christianity not the hierarchy of the church. These ideas were a threat to the corrupt leaders of the Roman Catholic Church who kept the scriptures from the common people.
Because he was Catholic
.Catholic AnswerFor the most part, they were more upset with the protestant "reformers" like Martin Luther and Henry VIII then they were with the Church. Luther and Henry were having personal problems dealing with their own sin - they had issues, and instead of confessing their sins and dealing with them, they blamed the Catholic Church In Martin Luther's case, the princes of northern Germany latched on to him and his ideas in order to separate their states from having to pay and be obedient to Rome. In Henry's case, he started his own Church to legitimatize his bastard child by marrying the woman he threw over his Queen for. In the first case the result was the "Lutheran Church", in the second case, the result was the "Anglican Church." In both cases, the people were very upset about losing their Churches, their priests, their sacraments, etc. In the first case, I would recommend The Facts About Luther by Msgr. Patrick F. O'Hare, LL.D., in the second case, I would recommend The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, 1400-1580, by Eamon Duffy.
He oppose the church when Luther objected to a saying attributed to Johann Tetzel that "As soon as the coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory also attested as 'into heaven' springs."He insisted that, since forgiveness was God's alone to grant, those who claimed that indulgences absolved buyers from all punishments and granted them salvation were in error. Christians, he said, must not slacken in following Christ on account of such false assurances.
Another answer from our community:Martin Luther's "stand" against the Catholic Church was that the Catholic Church stood for the Gospel and morality, and Martin Luther failed at both, so he rewrote the Gospel and made up a new "Christianity" which did not call him to be a moral person to be saved.
No. Henry VIII had been dead for four hundred years before Martin Luther King was born.
false
Martin Luther nailed his thesis to the door of the church in 1595 naming many charges against the Catholic church. One example of the wrongs practiced in that day was the marketing of 'Indulgences' or permission to sin for profit. This thesis was the catylist for a church split. At the time the Catholic church had a monopoly over the entire continent of Europe. The Catholic church had brought order and education to Europe which began to reform and pull them out of the Dark Ages. So Luther suffered many long days and nights of indecision before choosing to oppose their power. First reason being, he knew they would use their power to discredit him, even judge and execute him. More importantly, he considered the consequences of the church collapsing and sending Europe back into another Dark Age. Fortunately, that didn't happen, but splitting the church forced the Catholic church to compete and therefor reform and correct many of those bad practices. He also translated the Bible from Latin into language of the common man so they could read it for themselves whereas before, only the educated via the church or the very rich could read it. This too, forced the Catholic church to accountability because their parishioners could now see for themselves how far the church had strayed from the direction of their source material. Not only were new denominations born of Luther's actions, but the original was pulled back under the authority of the scriptures.
Catholics believe that all life is sacred and oppose unnecessary wars.
The National Organization for Marriage, the Roman Catholic Church and the Republican Party all oppose same-sex marriage.
he want to protect his family and do good things for his conuntry he also knew that blacks were been thrown into jail easily so he oppose to fight for the conty
Martin Luther for his refusal to retact his 95 theses was excommunicated by Pope Leo X and declared an outlaw by Holy Roman Emperor Charles V @ 1521. Emperor Charles ordered Martin Luther's arrest at the Diet of Worms. Luther was "accosted" by masked bandits and given protection by Edward III. Martin Luther was branded a heretic. Luther died around 1546.
The Church thought that the Earth was the most important planet, and that it should be in the middle.
False. The Council of Trent was convened for the very purpose of responding to the doctrines of the Protestants and to reform the legitimate abuses in Church practice that had crept into the Church.