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  1. Feb 25, 2024 · Also known as the Disputation on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences, these propositions were famously nailed to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany on October 31, 1517. This moment is often referred to as the beginning of the Protestant Reformation. The Ninety-Five Theses were primarily concerned with the practice of selling ...

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  3. Jul 20, 2023 · One crucial phenomenon that brought about the Protestant Reformation was the selling of indulgences by the Church. (An indulgence was a certificate that offered the same spiritual power as the sacrament of confession and penance: to have one’s sins absolved.) Catholic doctrine held that souls did not go straight to heaven on death.

  4. Apr 8, 2017 · Indulgences Then and Now. Posted April 8, 2017. by Rev. A. Brian Flamme. The events of October 31 st 1517, the day that Luther nailed his Ninety-Five Theses to the church door in Wittenberg, were not set in motion by a man’s ambitious vision to revolutionize the spirituality of the west. Nor were they set in motion by Luther’s iconoclastic ...

  5. May 25, 2018 · The Papal Bull of indulgence gave no sanction whatever to this proposition. It was a vague scholastic opinion, rejected by the Sorbonne in 1482, and again in 1518, and certainly not a doctrine of ...

  6. Aug 26, 2022 · 7.2: Indulgences. The specific phenomenon that brought about the Protestant Reformation was the selling of indulgences by the Church. An indulgence was a certificate offered by the Church that offered the same spiritual power as the sacrament of confession and penance: to have one’s sins absolved. Each indulgence promised a certain amount of ...

  7. Nov 30, 2020 · Boniface VIII introduced the jubilee indulgence associated with a pilgrimage to Rome in 1300. Additionally, the bishops and popes continued to offer indulgences for deathbed confessions and other religious acts of devotion. By the fifteenth century the complete doctrine and practice of indulgences, which Martin Luther later attacked in 1517 ...

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