Copernicus surely deserves a mention, and Magellan and Columbus. And there was the Henrician Brexit, the withdrawal of England from papal and Roman authority by Henry VIII that would make Britain, for the purposes of European power alignments, Protestant, a matter of great historical consequence.” Martin Luther’s relationships Luther was honest about his relationship with his wife. “A major event which helped Luther to appraise the past and caused him to modify the whole structure of his life was his marriage with the former Cistercian nun Katharina von Bora.” He had changed his name and his life. “The role of a husband helped him terminate the guilt caused by his father’s excessive criticism and anger towards his celibacy. …show more content…
He also felt that the best way to learn is by close observation of a teacher’s action. By staying in a close group the students were able to learn and find comfort in the fact that the skills being taught to them by Luther were being lived out daily by him their teacher. Luther wrote of his teachings in some of his works; “In the second tract, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, Luther laid out his teaching on the sacraments, the rituals through which the medieval Church claimed to convey grace to the believer. Luther reduced their number from seven to just two: communion and baptism. Only these, he argued, had biblical foundations and only these two consisted of bota a visible sign - bread and wine or water and a promise of the forgiveness of sin.” Luther’s reduction of the sacraments to two simplified the ritualist requirement to bring it more in line with the way the Bible mentioned it is done. His students were vital in spreading what they learned in their studies with him; a new way of doing things, along with the use of the printing press, it allowed the word to be passed to a greater number of …show more content…
This period in the history of Europe had a lot of political power plays and a powerful Roman Catholic Church that had controlling relationships with the leaders of countries and the people. The Church led by the Pope held power unchecked by its members. “Luther’s meteoric rise to celebrity transformed a sleepy nowhere into a center of the German printing world. Pettegree, one of the leading historians of print culture, tells us in this beautifully crafted book how printing created Martin Luther and the Reformation, an event he rightly regards as having changed the course of Western culture. The twist in the tale, however, lies in the fact that Luther was a canny innovator who understood well the potential and value of the printing