Thant myint u biography of martin luther
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Communicants received the elements in both kinds, i.e., wine as well as bread. He was especially unnerved by the way Luther enlisted the support of the German princes. Luther appealed to German national pride in opposing Rome, as exemplified in his early Appeal to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation. It also indicated his high regard for German princes.
This endeared him to the German public, who regarded him as one of the best orators of his day. New York, NY: W. W Norton, reissue ed 1993. However, to his surprise, he was well-received and returned as if from a triumph. No longer in disagreement with his father, he was then selected for advanced theological study at the University of Erfurt. Meanwhile, both Lutheran and Catholic camps established political and military alliances.
He also helped set in play forces that reshaped Catholicism and ushered in the modern world. Retrieved April 14, 2015.
References
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Primary sources
- Luther, Martin.
In January 1521, the Pope Leo X excommunicated Luther. Nevertheless, unusual circumstances provided him with a bride.
ISBN 0801041856
- Kittelson, James M. Luther the Reformer: The Story of the Man and His Career. As a consequence, his reform movement lost its mass appeal as the poorer classes tended to funnel into the Anabaptist movement. It was granted. He promoted marriage and the family but sanctioned divorce and, in exceptional cases, even bigamy.
His tract, Concerning Monastic Vows, took the position that there was no scriptural foundation for monastic vows and that there was no such "special religious vocation." Another tract, On the Abolition of Private Mass, argued that the mass did not repeat the sacrifice of Christ on the cross and called upon Fredrick the Wise to abolish all endowed private masses for which twenty-five priests had been employed in Wittenberg’s Castle Church.
This became public knowledge in 1539, when in one of the reformation’s most bizarre and scandalous episodes, Luther sanctioned a bigamous union between Philip of Hesse and a 17-year-old daughter of his sister’s court. To Luther, all political revolution was rebellion against God in that it threatened the social order that God had ordained.
"…safe-conduct on the highways be abolished completely for the Jews…" 6.