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Catholic AnswerMartin Luther got "angry" if you will because of sin. He was a solemnly professed friar with lifelong vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience which he had taken before the altar of God after many years of careful reflection, prayer, and consideration. When, later, which NO reflection, prayer, or consideration, he ditched all its solemn vows and left to lead a life of dissolution, no prayer, no reflection, and certainly no chastity, poverty, or obedience, the Church, surprise, surprise, didn't go along with it. Of course, he didn't ask the Church to be released from his solemn vows, which were signed and sealed on the altar, he just expected the Church to smile. The Pope, in the normal course of affairs has nothing whatsoever to do with the affairs of individual friars - except if they petition to be released from their vows - which, I repeat, Martin Luther did NOT do. However, when the princes of northern Germany started to use Martin Luther as an excuse to close all the Churches in northern Germany and deny the Sacraments to people, then, yes, the Pope got a little upset. M. Luther might have been angry with the Catholic Church and the Pope but I certainly don't see why - they didn't do anything wrong, he did.Nothing, Martin Luther was never angry with the true Invisible, Christian Church.
Martin Luther was angry at the church because he believed that the church was corrupt and people only needed to follow the bible and not traditions made by the church hope this helps. I'm in 9th grade btw sorry if I'm wrong.
.Catholic AnswerFirst of all, let's try and get some things straight. The Catholic Church is the Mystical Body of Christ, it is here to bring people to God, and God, through the Sacraments and prayer, to the people; in other words, it does not get "angry". The Catholic Church is the Love of God incarnate in His Church. Secondly, Martin Luther did not try to stop the practice of indulgences, if you actually read his 95 Theses, he was all for indulgences, he was trying to stop the abuse involved in some individual's preaching and use of indulgences, he certainly was not trying to stop them. The Holy Father, at that time, tried to straighten things out with Martin Luther, and due to Luther's intransigent and refusal to listen to reason, they failed as Martin Luther went further and further afield into outright heresy and refused to reconsider his positions. So, the short answer to your question is that the question itself is nonsense and doesn't make sense - in other words, No.
Luther had come to believe that Christians are saved through faith and not through their own efforts. Luther became increasingly angry about the clergy selling 'indulgences' - promised remission from punishments for sin, either for someone still living or for one who had died and was believed to be in purgatory. On 31 October 1517, he published his '95 Theses', attacking papal abuses and the sale of indulgences. with money and balls in your mouth
Martin Luther did not "split" from the Catholic Church, he left the Catholic Church and started his own. That is technically known as apostasy and heresy. The Orthodox Churches split from the Catholic Church, Martin Luther apostatized from the Catholic Church - two completely different things.
.Catholic AnswerThe first "reformers", if you will, were Martin Luther, and Henry VIII. People now say that they were angry at the Catholic Church and the Pope and this is true to an extent as the Pope refused to issue them a license to indulge in sin, in both of their cases, it involved sex. Martin Luther left his religious order and abandoned his sacred vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, without even bothering to ask permission. He then proceeded to flaunt all of them by marrying a runaway nun and indulging his fondness for beer. Henry VIII formed his own Church to do away with his first wife, and liked it so much, he went through five more. The fact that they were angry at not being allowed to indulge in their passions and remain Catholics hardly justifies the question as asked.
Martin Luther was primarily angered by the Catholic Church's sale of indulgences, which he believed undermined true repentance and the core tenets of Christianity. He was also frustrated by the church's corruption and the moral decay of its leaders, which he saw as a betrayal of Christian values. Additionally, Luther opposed the church's emphasis on tradition and human authority over Scripture, advocating instead for the principle of "sola scriptura," or Scripture alone as the basis for faith and practice.
very sad and angry.
German princes supported Martin Luther's idea because some shared the same beliefs and others just supported for selfish reasons..AnswerIn England, Henry VIII declared himself head of the Church, and thus confiscated all the Catholic Church's property, distributing houses and land (and effects) to his nobility as a reward for good behavior. In the Holy Roman Empire, the princes of different kingdoms differed in belief, but one over-riding belief in those that turned against the Church was that they would prefer to keep all their income themselves instead of supporting a Pope in Rome. Those that accepted Martin Luther's urging to become "Evangelists" - his term for his new Church, emphasising a return to the purity of the New Testament - as rewritten and interpreted by Martin Luther) became defacto head of the Church's in their kingdoms - gaining an immense amount of land, buildings, income, and effects at practically no effort - a stupendous reward to apostatize!
Because he was angry about the tax collectors.
You know Catholics and Protestants are very controversial when it comes to their different believes, for you to truly understand what the problem would be, then you would most likely go back into history and read about Martin Luther King the founder of all Protestants and be sure not to confuse Martin Luther King Jr. (African American who wrote the poem ''I have a Dream'') to Martin Luther King the founder since they are both, after all, completely different people. Martin Luther King Jr. was named after Martin Luther King since his mother truly admired him or so the rumors say. Despite these, Martin Luther King was a strong faithful Christian and Catholic who strongly believed in the Church. Back in the day, only the wealthiest of all people were allowed to read the Bible and it was a privilege since the Bible was yet not translated into different languages. Since Martin Luther King was one of the most supportive people of the Church, one of the priests granted him permission to translate the Bible. It was then when Martin Luther King realized that the Bible itself was very different from what Catholics would preach. There were no saints mentioned in the Bible and it was then when he realized that the Bible contained a different interpretation from the one he was given and taught. Angry, it was then that he decided to face the priests about the lies that they were teaching and the misunderstanding that they were told. The priests soon turned on Martin and told him to forget what he learned from the Bible and change what they believed in. He didn't agree with such things and realized that the Catholic Church had one purpose only. To rule and power. He then left the Catholic Church and started the Protestant Movement where they could finally preach the true definition of the Bible and its beliefs. There are many different stories about Martin Luther King and what really did happen. This is one of the many popular stories that are told about the problems between Protestants and Catholics.
He went to prison because the whites protested against Martin Luther King Jr. and that made them angry so......... he got arrested and went to jail.