No. Congregation is the group of people that meet at Church for Mass.
Martin Luther felt that the Catholic Church needed reform because of the bad behavior of his fellow
Martin Luther was a Catholic monk who sought to reform the Catholic Church.
The Puritans had sought to reform the Anglican Church. They believed that the Church of England had not gone far enough in separating itself from Roman Catholicism, and believed the church still pushed forward a lot of catholic based doctrine.
William Tyndale did not reform the Catholic Church, he left it and was excommunicated as a heretic.
Technically, there is no conversion required for the vast majority of Orthodox Jews who might want to be accepted into a Reform congregation. If an Orthodox Jew shows up in a Reform congregation and takes part in a service, they will be counted as fully Jewish without question. The great difficulties come when Reform Jews get interested in Orthodox Judaism, because Reform accepts as Jews people who are not considered as Jews by the Orthodox -- The Orthodox to not recognize the legitimacy of Reform conversions nor do they recognize as Jews those who claim Jewish status through patrilineal descent.(OK, there is one difficult class where Reform Jews might ask for conversion. The child of a Jewish mother and a non-Jewish father who grew up in a non-religious household would be welcome as a Jew in an Orthodox congregation but might face questions in a Reform congregation because, technically, the Reform acceptance of patrilineal descent is contingent on having a religious upbringing.)
The Council of Trent was held to address the Protestant Reformation and to reform and clarify the teachings and practices of the Catholic Church. It aimed to define Catholic doctrine, address abuses within the Church, and assert the authority of the Pope.
The religious protest reform movement that split the church in the 1500s was the Protestant Reformation. It was sparked by figures like Martin Luther, who challenged the teachings and practices of the Roman Catholic Church, leading to a division between those who followed the newly emerging Protestant denominations and those who remained loyal to the Catholic Church.
To help People good.
Respond to the calls coming from within the Catholic Church from people like Martin Lutfur (once a Friar) and Erasmus to reform the church from within by abolishing corrupt practices.
It is the protesting to the teaching of the church particularly Catholic.
Jan Hus
Fred Rosenbaum has written: 'Architects of reform' -- subject(s): Congregation Emanu-El (San Francisco, Calif.), Ethnic relations, History, Jews 'Visions of Reform' 'Architects of Reform Congregational and Co'