He said that you needed to have faith in the risen Lord to be saved. He also said that good deeds were not enough to get there.
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Catholic AnswerThe above answer is correct as far as it goes, but then the Council of Trent said exactly the same things, even declaring that anyone who says that they can achieve salvation through good works is to be declared anathema. Martin Luther said that you should go out and "sin mightily" to prove that God could save you regardless of what you did. Martin Luther said what was necessary, but his problem came in what he declared was unnecessary.Martin Luther when he published his "95 theses".
.Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church was never "threatened" by Martin Luther.
No! he never come back to the Catholic church instead he opposed the teaching of his old religion.
.Catholic AnswerThe Church was, and is, the Catholic Church.
Luther was a Catholic monk .
Because several German princes were Protestant as well and opposed the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church has never issued rewards for anybody. The only thing that the Catholic Church did to Martin Luther was to formalize his excommunication, see it at the link below:
No, Martin Luther King was a Baptist, a church which split off from the Church of England. It, as well as the Church of England, is considered as a Protestant denomination and not a part of the Catholic Church.
I think Martin Luther was declared a heretic not Martin Luther King.Martin Luther King, the American civil rights leader, was never declared a heretic by the Catholic Church.His namesake, Martin Luther, a 15th century Catholic monk, was however declared a heretic for teaching ideas and holding positions the Catholic Church understood to be false and a danger to the Faith as taught by the Church. His failure to stop his teaching of matters opposed to Catholic doctrine also brought him the penalty of being excluded from the Catholic community of believers, thus excommunicated.
Martin Luther was a Catholic monk who sought to reform the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church never abducted little girls and, no, this was not a complaint of Martin Luther.
His grievances centered around the sale of "indulgences," luxuries which had been used by the Church to raise money since the early Middle Ages. In essence, a wealthy individual could donate a substantial tithe of money in order to have sins forgiven.