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Why the Reformation Occurred in Germany*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Gerhard Ritter
Affiliation:
Freiburg

Extract

At the end of the Middle Ages, the moral prestige of the old papal church was severely shaken in all the countries of Europe. Open criticism of its moral shortcomings and its organizational defects had been going on for centuries. To the diverse splinter-movements of heretical sects (which were never wholly suppressed) had been recently added the great reform movements of the Wyclifites and the Hussites. But even they had brought about no lasting and widespread upheaval. Ultimately the old hierarchy had always prevailed. Why then did the Germans, a people slow to be aroused, fond of order, and faithful to the church, take it upon themselves to carry out the most prodigious revolution in the church? And why did only their revolt against the papal church have such vast and enduring consequences?

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Church History 1958

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References

* Translated from the original “Kirche und geistiges Leben in Deutschland um 1517,” (Chap. 8 of the author's Die Neugestaltung Europas im 16. Jahrundert, Berlin, 1950) by G. H. Nadel.