Chap 15 - Quiz Flashcards
The founder of the Protestant Reformation was
a. Thomas a Kempis
b. Erasmus
c. John Calvin
d. Martin Luther
d.Martin Luther
Which of the following founded Reformation movements in Switzerland?
a. Calvin
b. Erasmus
c. Zwingli and Calvin
d. Luther
e. Zwingli
c.Zwingli and Calvin
Which of these exemplify corruption in the Catholic Church on the eve of the Reformation?
a. buying of indulgences
b. poorly trained parish priests
c. biblical interpretation
d. buying of indulgences and poorly trained parish priests
e. Zwinglianism
d.buying of indulgences and poorly trained parish priests
Martin Luther came to believe that salvation was possible through
a. avoidance of indulgences
b. good works alone
c. faith alone
d. study of the Bible
c.faith alone
When Luther made his famous statement, “Here I stand; I cannot do otherwise,” he outraged his emperor
a. Charles V
b. Philip I
c. Charles I
d. Philip II
a.Charles V
In 1524, an uprising began in Germany that would become known as
a. The Fronde
b. The Glorious Revolution
c. The Peasants’ War
d. The Wars of Religion
c.The Peasants’ War
Which of the following was the most radical Reformation movement:
a. Lutheranism
b. Zwinglianism
c. Anabaptism
d. Calvinism
c.Anabaptism
John Calvin’s reforms were focused on the city of
a. London
b. Geneva
c. Rome
d. Augsburg
b.Geneva
The English Reformation was initiated by
a. Henry VIII
b. Elizabeth I
c. Thomas Cranmer
d. Edward VI
a.Henry VIII
Which of the following was an important part of the Catholic Reformation?
a. Society of Jesus
b. the Modern Devotion
c. reformed and revived papacy
d. Council of Trent, reformed and revived papacy and the Modern Devotion
e. Society of Jesus, reformed and revived papacy, and Council of Trent
e.Society of Jesus, reformed and revived papacy, and Council of Trent
French protestants were known as
a. politiques
b. Valois
c. Puritans
d. Huguenots
d.Huguenots
Which sixteenth-century monarch was known as the “Most Catholic King”?
a. Philip II
b. Louis XIV
c. Charles V
d. William of Orange
a.Philip II
The Spanish Armada attacked England during the reign of
a. Catherine of Aragon
b. Queen Mary
c. Elizabeth Tudor
d. Mary Tudor
c.Elizabeth Tudor
Who was most likely to be accused of witchcraft during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?
a. women of the upper classes
b. priests
c. women of the lower classes
d. city officers
c.women of the lower classes
The Thirty Years’ War was officially ended by the
a. Peace of Westphalia
b. Toleration Act
c. Edict of Nantes
d. Edict of Worms
a.Peace of Westphalia
Who has traditionally been considered the best example of the practice of absolute monarchy in the seventeenth century?
a. Louis XIV
b. Philip II
c. Peter the Great
d. Elizabeth Tudor
a.Louis XIV
Who was the first Russian ruler to take the title of tsar?
a. Ivan IV the Terrible
b. Muscovy Romanov
c. Peter the Great
d. Ivan I
a.Ivan IV the Terrible
The English civil war of 1642-1648 resulted from conflict between
a. the New Model Army and the Puritans
b. Charles I and James VI
c. Oliver Cromwell and Parliament
d. Charles I and Parliament
d.Charles I and Parliament
What right did the English Bill of Rights of 1689 NOT affirm?
a. the right to keep arms
b. the right To petition the sovereign
c. the right to a jury trial
d. the right to religious freedom
d.the right to religious freedom
The artistic Renaissance came to an end when which new movement emerged in Italy?
a. Mannerism
b. the Glorious Revolution
c. Elizabethanism
d. the Baroque
a.Mannerism
Define: Indulgences
To raise money to build St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Pope Leo X (1475-1521) authorized the sale of indulgences. The purchase of an indulgence allowed a person to shorten their (or a deceased loved one’s) time in purgatory and, in some cases, forgave sins before they were committed.
How did popes during the Middle Ages ensure obedience from Catholics?
Popes such as Leo X (1475-1521) denied those who opposed them the right to participate in the sacraments, a process termed excommunication. Without participation in the sacraments, a Catholic would be sent to hell.
What event signaled the beginning of the Protestant Reformation?
On October 31, 1517, Martin Luther, a priest and professor of theology, nailed his 95 Theses to the door of a Catholic church in Wittenberg, Germany.
Outraged that church members were forced to pay for the forgiveness that was a free gift from God, Luther’s 95 Theses sharply criticized the practice of selling indulgences. The theses were 95 questions designed to provoke debate within the Catholic Church.
What ensured the rapid dissemination of Luther’s 95 Theses?
Since it could reproduce materials rapidly, the printing press allowed for the easy distribution of Luther’s 95 Theses throughout Germany. The printing press had been invented by Johannes Gutenberg, who first used it to print Bibles.
Although Luther insisted that indulgences were errant since only God could forgive sin, he did not intend to break from the Catholic Church, but merely to start a scholarly debate on the subject of indulgences.
How did Luther’s view of salvation differ from that of the Catholic Church?
Luther viewed salvation as stemming from faith alone, as opposed to the Catholic belief that taking the seven sacraments and good works would lead to salvation.
Thus, Luther’s views stood directly against those of the Pope and the Catholic Church. Those who opposed Catholic teaching became known as Protestants.
What attracted many of the rulers of the North German states of the Holy Roman Empire to Luther’s teachings?
Although Luther’s teachings were attractive in their own right, Lutheranism also gave many of the North German rulers the opportunity to seize Church lands, significantly adding to their holdings.
Denmark and Sweden also became Lutheran and, by the 1530s, the Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire had lost control of most of Northern Europe.
Who followed Luther as the dominant figure of the Protestant Reformation?
John Calvin (1509-1564), a French humanist exiled to Geneva, followed Luther as the leader of the Protestant Reformation. Calvin preached predestination, contending that an omniscient God knew in advance who was going to heaven and hell.
Calvin established a theocracy in Geneva, which became home to Protestant exiles from Scotland, the Netherlands, France, and England. Upon their return to their home countries, these exiles brought Calvin’s teachings with them.
What is the most important difference between Lutheranism and Calvinism?
While both Lutheranism and Calvinism share a belief in justification by faith alone, they differ on the concept of predestination.
Lutheranism contends that anyone may attain salvation through faith alone, while Calvinism contends that only those predestined by God will be saved.