25 September 1555 A.D. Peace at Augsburg, 2-Religion Solution: Good for Lutherans but Calvinists Need Not Apply; Meanwhile Queen Mary 1 had brought England back to the Roman fold; Latimer and Ridley would burn 3 weeks later, 16 Oct 1555
25 September 1555 A.D. Peace at
Augsburg, 2-Religion Solution: Good for
Lutherans but Calvinists Need Not Apply; Meanwhile Queen Mary 1 had brought
England back to the Roman fold; Latimer and Ridley would burn 3 weeks later, 16
Oct 1555
Graves, Dan. “Peace at Augsburg.” Christianity.com. Apr 2007.
http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1501-1600/peace-at-augsburg-11629989.html#comments. Accessed 23 May
2014.
Great was the turmoil and many
the monstrous crimes committed in the name of Christ in the wake of the
Reformation in Europe. Religious passions quickly passed into political
conflict.
At the Diet (a formal assembly of
princes) of Worms in 1521, Emperor Charles V outlawed Lutheranism . But he was
unable to stamp out the reform movement at the time because of other crises.
Not until 1529 was Charles able to follow up on the Lutheran issue. He sent
word that Catholicism was to be restored everywhere in Germany. Many German
cities and princes protested. These were called the "Protesting
estates" and from them we got the name "Protestant."
Charles saw that some sort of
conciliation would be in order. In 1530 he attended an assembly known as the
Diet at Augsburg. Lutherans presented the Confession of Augsburg in an attempt
to prove to Rome that their views were Biblical. This confession remains the
basis of the Lutheran faith. However, reconciliation proved impossible and
Charles ordered Lutherans to reunite with the Catholic church by April 15,
1531. This had the effect of stiffening opposition against him. A military
alliance of Protestants, known as the Schmalkaldic League came into being.
Charles crushed this, but Elector Maurice switched sides and declared war on
the emperor, forcing him to negotiate with the Protestants. In 1552, at the
Peace of Passau, Charles accepted the existence of the evangelical church and
promised to hold a "diet" to settle the controversy.
The diet was not convened until
1555. Again it was held in Augsburg. Peace was arranged between the Lutherans
and Catholics on this day, September 25,
1555. In many respects it was imperfect. Although Lutherans were given
legal standing, Anabaptists and Calvinists were not. "[A]ll such as do not
belong to the two above-named religions shall not be included in the present
peace but be totally excluded from it." Each German territory must take
the faith of its prince. This inbuilt religious divisiveness crippled Germany's
ability to unite as a nation. There was no toleration within a territory.
The Peace of Augsburg did,
however, permit people to transplant to a region whose faith was more congenial
to each. "In case our subjects, whether belonging to the old religion or to the Augsburg Confession,
should intend leaving their homes, with their wives and children, in order to
settle in another place, they shall neither be hindered in the sale of their
estates after due pay, net of the local taxes nor injured in their honor…”
The Peace of Augsburg offered the
merest hint of toleration. Weak as was the treaty, it brought increased
stability. However, not until the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 were Calvinists
added to the list of tolerated religions.
Bibliography:
"Augsburg, Peace of."
The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
Durant, Will. The Reformation; A
history of European civilization from
Wyclif to Calvin: 1300 - 1564.
The Story of Civilization, Part VI. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1957.
Kidd, B. J. Documents
illustrative of the Continental Reformation; edited by B. J. Kidd. Oxford,
Clarendon Press, 1967.
Simon, Edith and the editors of
Time/Life. The Reformation. Great Ages of Man. New York: Time Inc., 1966.
Various encyclopedia articles.
Last updated April, 2007.
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