Reformation in Switzerland

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    There is a new Queen, who was born among royalty during the year of 1558 in Hatfield, England. She is one of the three surviving children of King Henry VIII and the most unlikely to be next in line for the throne. She would rule during a time period where her Protestant faith would be tested in the highest regard due to her mother and her brother previous rule before her. She never knew her mother, Anne Boylan, for she was beheaded before the people for being “unfaithful” to the king. The main…

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    In 1573, Paolo Veronese, a Venetian artist, painted the Last Supper within the Church of San Giovanni e Paolo Venice. Venice was essentially the trading port for all of Europe at the time. There were pathways through the Mediterranean to other European countries as well as to Africa and the Middle East. Thus, Venice was the point where multiple cultures came together and interconnected, and this greatly influenced Veronese’s work. Veronese’s main focus in the work of art was the individuals.…

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    Catholicism Vs Prothero

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    Prothero believes that Protestantism is actually more sexist than Catholicism because, as he states, “it was Catholics who put angels’ wings on women and gave us a litany of female saints. “ Protestants on the other hand, do not really give female visionaries in the church recognition. I think I agree with Prothero’s argument because, although Catholics do not give many rights to females in the church, they do celebrate and recognize the achievements of the women who have good deeds, inside or…

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    guilty of treason. Thomas More was beheaded on July 6, 1535. He left behind the final words: "The king's good servant, but God's first." More was beatified in 1886 and canonized by the Catholic Church as a saint in 1935. He has also been deemed a "Reformation martyr" by the Church of England. Around 1494, his father, a prominent attorney, brought More back to London to study common law. And in February 1496, More was admitted to Lincoln's Inn, one of England's four legal societies, to prepare…

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    Finney and Tocqueville: What America Needs The second Great Awakening was another revival of man’s connection with God; however, this time God is reaching out to individuals and providing them with atonement and salvation. In this time period, America was beginning to expand out West. Religious lectures that lasted weeks, were known as “camp meetings” and they became popular in frontier culture. Frontiersmen would venture out into the wilderness and congregate to celebrate God with weeks of…

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    The world unfailingly evolves in an attempt to improve and advance humanity. As new discoveries are made, perceptions are altered, and people are left with a choice to either accept societal transformations, or stand against them. Looking back, this trend can be seen in virtually every aspect of history. During the Renaissance, people either accepted the new secularist views or rejected them in favor of the church, and amid the Scientific Revolution, people either supported new discoveries, or…

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    While the stupendousness of the Renaissance began to ease, a myriad amount of complaints arouse towards against the church. These issues escalated so high to the point where a reform movement of the Roman Catholic Church being the Reformation needed to transpire; some of these issues included the clergy being less religious and incompetent of basic church teachings, the pope becoming too involved in politics, the massive wealth of the church, and their common method of raising money, selling…

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    The diversity of baroque is brought out by several factors, political, religious, and social being the major ones. Religion is believed to be the source of this era as a result of the Catholic Church requiring new artistic work. The art used in the church was supposed to draw individuals back to church and reinstate their faith. The visual arts played a significant role in guiding the faithful. For it to be transparent to the illiterate, art had to be powerful, clear and persuasive.…

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    The Puritans sought to purify, and strived to only partially reform the Church of England. They believed, whether they stated it or not, solely in social order and made that very clear by limiting the individual freedom of their followers. The Puritans read the Bible in a religious or continuous manner and interpreted every word literally. They believed in Calvinism, or predestination. Under predestination, it says that one is predetermined as saved or damned. Though the people of…

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    Andrew, Pettegree. Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. The main question Andrew Pettegree seeks to answer in Reformation and the Culture of Persuasion is why people chose to adopt the ideas of the Reformation. Often the choice to follow the new ideas of the Reformation resulted in persecution, incarceration, great personal loss, or death. Why risk so much for a new idea? What persuaded them to change? The dominant theory on the modes of…

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