Martin Luther did not agree with the beliefs of the Catholic Church. Some of his complaints were that the Catholic Church had a system that left sinners in sin, they thought they could buy their way into heaven, and that The Bible should be available to everyone.
Heresy
St. Martin's Catholic Church was created in 1861.
Acting on this belief, he wrote the "Disputation on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences," also known as "The 95 Theses," a list of questions and propositions for debate. Popular legend has it that on October 31, 1517 Luther defiantly nailed a copy of his 95 Theses to the door of the Gutenberg Castle church.From Hunter
1517
Martin Luther
The Catholic Church never abducted little girls and, no, this was not a complaint of Martin Luther.
They were known as the 95 Theses, you may view them at the link below.
Heresy
No, Martin Luther was a German monk who started the Reformation of the Catholic Church and the Protestant Movement during the Renaissance. This happened in the early 16th century.
He nailed a list of complaints to the door of a catholic church, and some churches split away and became lutheran instead of Catholic.
Martin Luther became dissatisfied with a number of elements the Catholic Church had introduced such as the sale of indulgences. He protested these things and nailed a list of complaints to the door of a church. Martin Luther was the force behind the Protestant Reformation.
that the church was a great place and the only pace you can hve peace.
That is pretty simple, Martin Luther was trying to remove Christ's duly appointed Vicar over His Church: the pope in Rome, and replace him, as the final arbiter of religious doctrine with himself!
well he was a pastor at Ebenezer baptist church.
He was declaired a heritic and an outlaw.
Martin Luther taught that people are "justified" by faith and not works. The Roman Catholic Church taught salvations was not just through Jesus, but also through the Church. This ran counter to the teaching of Martin Luther who taught that faith was all that was needed.
.Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church was never "threatened" by Martin Luther.