<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P304"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapL"></SPAN>L<br/> THE REFORMATION OF THE LATIN CHURCH</h2>
<p>The Latin Church itself was enormously affected by this mental rebirth. It was
dismembered; and even the portion that survived was extensively renewed.</p>
<p>We have told how nearly the church came to the autocratic
leadership of all Christendom in the eleventh and twelfth
centuries, and how in the fourteenth and fifteenth its power
over men’s minds and affairs declined. We have
described how popular religious enthusiasm which had in
earlier ages been its support and power was turned against it
by its pride, persecutions and centralization, and how the
insidious scepticism of Frederick II bore fruit in a growing
insubordination of the princes. The Great Schism had reduced
its religious and political prestige to negligible
proportions. The forces of insurrection struck it now from
both sides.</p>
<p>The teachings of the Englishman Wycliffe spread widely
throughout Europe. In 1398 a learned Czech, John Huss,
delivered a series of lectures upon Wycliffe’s
teachings in the university of Prague. This teaching spread
rapidly beyond the educated class and aroused great popular
enthusiasm. In 1414-18 a Council of the whole church was
held at Constance to settle the Great Schism. Huss was
invited to this Council under promise of a safe conduct from
the emperor, seized, put on trial for heresy and burnt alive
(1415). So far from tranquillizing the Bohemian people, this
led to an insurrection of the Hussites in that country, the
first of a series of religious wars that inaugurated the
break-up of Latin Christendom. Against this insurrection
Pope Martin V, the Pope specially elected at Constance as the
head of a reunited Christendom, preached a Crusade.</p>
<p>Five Crusades in all were launched upon this sturdy little
people and all of them failed. All the unemployed ruffianism
of Europe was <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P305"></SPAN></span>turned upon Bohemia in the
fifteenth century, just as in the thirteenth it had been
turned upon the Waldenses. But the Bohemian Czechs, unlike
the Waldenses, believed in armed resistance. The Bohemian
Crusade dissolved and streamed away from the battlefield at
the sound of the Hussites’ waggons and the distant
chanting of their troops; it did not even wait to fight
(battle of Domazlice, 1431). In 1436 an agreement was
patched up with the Hussites by a new Council of the church
at Basle in which many of the special objections to Latin
practice were conceded.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-305"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-305.jpg" alt="PORTRAIT OF LUTHER" width-obs="400" height-obs="597" /> <p class="caption">
PORTRAIT OF LUTHER
<br/>
<small>
<i>(From an early German engraving in the British Museum)
</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>In the fifteenth century a great pestilence had produced much
social disorganization throughout Europe. There had been
extreme misery and discontent among the common people, and
peasant risings against the landlords and the wealthy in
England and France. After the Hussite Wars these peasant
insurrections increased in gravity in Germany and took on a
religious character. Printing came in as an influence upon
this development. By the middle of the fifteenth century
there were printers at work with movable type <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P306"></SPAN></span>in Holland and
the Rhineland. The art spread to Italy and England, where
Caxton was printing in Westminster in 1477. The immediate
consequence was a great increase and distribution of Bibles,
and greatly increased facilities for widespread popular
controversies. The European world became a world of readers,
to an extent that had never happened to any community in the
past. And this sudden irrigation of the general mind with
clearer ideas and more accessible information occurred just
at a time when the church was confused and divided and not in
a position to defend itself effectively, and when many
princes were looking for means to weaken its hold upon the
vast wealth it claimed in their dominions.</p>
<p>In Germany the attack upon the church gathered round the
personality of an ex-monk, Martin Luther (1483-1546), who
appeared in Wittenberg in 1517 offering disputations against
various orthodox doctrines and practices. At first he
disputed in Latin in the fashion of the Schoolmen. Then he
took up the new weapon of the printed word and scattered his
views far and wide in German addressed to the ordinary
people. An attempt was made to suppress him as Huss had been
suppressed, but the printing press had changed conditions and
he had too many open and secret friends among the German
princes for this fate to overtake him.</p>
<p>For now in this age of multiplying ideas and weakened faith
there were many rulers who saw their advantage in breaking
the religious ties between their people and Rome. They
sought to make themselves in person the heads of a more
nationalized religion. England, Scotland, Sweden, Norway,
Denmark, North Germany and Bohemia, one after another,
separated themselves from the Roman Communion. They have
remained separated ever since.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-307"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-307.jpg" alt="A MAJOLICA DISH PAINTED IN COLOURS" width-obs="600" height-obs="600" /> <p class="caption">
A MAJOLICA DISH PAINED IN COLOURS
<br/><small>An allegory of the Church triumphant over heretics
and infidels. Italian (Urbino), dated 1543
<br/>
<i>(In the Victoria and Albert Museum)</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>The various princes concerned cared very little for the moral
and intellectual freedom of their subjects. They used the
religious doubts and insurgence of their peoples to
strengthen them against Rome, but they tried to keep a grip
upon the popular movement as soon as that rupture was
achieved and a national church set up under the control of
the crown. But there has always been a curious vitality in
the teaching of Jesus, a direct appeal to righteousness and a
man’s self-respect over every loyalty and every
subordination, lay or ecclesiastical. None of these princely
churches broke <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P307"></SPAN></span>off without also breaking off a
number of fragmentary sects that would admit the intervention
of neither prince nor Pope between a man and his God. In
England and Scotland, for example, there was a number of
sects who now held firmly to the Bible as their one guide in
life and belief. They refused the disciplines of a state
church. In England these dissentients were the Non-
conformists, who played a very large part in the polities of
that country in the seventeenth <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P308"></SPAN></span>and eighteenth centuries. In
England they carried their objection to a princely head to
the church so far as to decapitate King Charles I (1649), and
for eleven prosperous years England was a republic under Non-
conformist rule.</p>
<p>The breaking away of this large section of Northern Europe
from Latin Christendom is what is generally spoken of as the
Reformation. But the shock and stress of these losses
produced changes perhaps as profound in the Roman Church
itself. The church was reorganized and a new spirit came
into its life. One of the dominant figures in this revival
was a young Spanish soldier, Inigo Lopez de Recalde, better
known to the world as St. Ignatius of Loyola. After some
romantic beginnings he became a priest (1538) and was
permitted to found the Society of Jesus, a direct attempt to
bring the generous and chivalrous traditions of military
discipline into the service of religion. This Society of
Jesus, the Jesuits, became one of the greatest teaching and
missionary societies the world has ever seen. It carried
Christianity to India, China and America. It arrested the
rapid disintegration of the Roman Church. It raised the
standard of education throughout the whole Catholic world; it
raised the level of Catholic intelligence and quickened the
Catholic conscience everywhere; it stimulated Protestant
Europe to competitive educational efforts. The vigorous and
aggressive Roman Catholic Church we know to-day is largely
the product of this Jesuit revival.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />