The Catholic Church's Role In The Reformation

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What was most at stake in Reformation was freedom. The Catholic Church was freedom's defender, and not merely by defending Europe against the Turks. It was the Church that nurtured the artistic freedom of the Renaissance and the Baroque. It was the Protestants who smashed religious art as idolatry and sensualist. It was the Church that sponsored the literary freedom of the humanists, and the Protestants who condemned it as paganism. It was the Church that affirmed man's free will, and the Protestants who insisted that every man's fate was determined before he was born. Most of all it was the Catholic Church that stood opposed to the absolute power of the state.

The Catholic Church had converted most by means of missionaries, as with Hungary, Ireland, England, the Nordic countries, etc. It was the Church that claimed to be universal, independent, and superior court of appeals to the edicts of kings, while Protestants made
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The Protestant policy of church under state would make in the XVIII century for Catholics the same, the Church no longer had power over the state, and in the XX century made it irrelevant for the state.

The reformation would make each time increase the number of religions, and since Luther said that knowledge wasn't necessary, but just the Bible, protestants would become ignorant in matters of their past and make new religions interpreting in any way they want, believing in more truths and more Holy Spirits, and reforming old heresies. It has weakened the look of