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Tudor Women who influenced the Reformation despite living in a Patriarchal society where women were considered chattels and subordinate to men |
"Our biggest enemy is terrorism," says Charles Beem, (aka tudorhistorian on the wiki) an historian at the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. "Theirs was the Reformation. You can't overestimate how traumatic the changes in the church would have been." You might get close if you imagined that Monica Lewinsky had been a radical Islamist and Bill Clinton married her and made everyone convert. - Time Magazine - Mar. 22, 2007 "When Royals Become Rock Stars" By Rebecca Winters Keegan |
The "Nursing Mothers" of The Reformation These are women who played important roles in supporting the tenets of the Protestant Reformation in England |
There were several socially prominent and well-educated women who dedicated a great deal of time and attention to the major theological concerns of the sixteenth century. Each in her own fashion zealously supported the Reformation to the point of torture, exile, or martyrdom. Dedicated to promulgating the reformed religion, each attempted to overcome the widespread opposition to their cause. All of these young women were intensely interested in the religious concerns of their day and all but Anne Boleyn left behind a considerable body of written work. Each woman bears witness to her gender as it relates to theology and motivation. The personalities of these women, who spoke their Christian convictions with presence of mind and sharp intelligence within situations of life-and-death duress, are almost totemic in our enduring search for role models. "All of these woman thought theologically, they were lay theologians. They read theological books, most especially the Bible, and anything to which they could gain access from the continental Protestant Reformers. They talked theology. Their inner circles were twenty-four-hours-a-day Bible studies. They saw everything that happened through two lenses: the lens of the providence of God and the lens of the furtherance of the Reformed religion." ~ Author Dean Paul F.M. Zahl in his book 'Five Women of the Reformation'. In his book he states that Anne Boleyn, Anne Askew, Catherine Parr, Jane Grey, and Catherine Brandon nee Willoughby “muscularly and monocularly” strove for the furtherance of the Reformed faith in their nation. |
| Anne Boleyn (1507-1536) introduced the Reformation to England, and Catherine Parr (1514-1548) saved it. Both women were riveted by early versions of the * "justification by faith" doctrine (rather than by good works which threatened the whole basis of the Catholic penitential system with its endowed masses and prayers for the dead as well as its doctrine of purgatory. Neither pious acts, nor prayers nor masses, on this view, can secure the grace of God; only faith) that originated with Martin Luther and came to them through France. Anne had an impressive theological library, supported *William Tyndale, and *Martin Luther developed the teaching of justification by faith alone in response to the excesses of emphasis on faith and prayer for others. During the Middle Ages, many people came to believe that they would be saved from damnation if they said the right words or carried around the right objects. These ideas were never officially endorsed by the Church hierarchy, but they weren't particularly discouraged either--partly because a lot of people were gaining money and prestige from their perceived ability to provide tickets to Heaven.Salvation increasingly came to be seen as something that could be purchased or negotiated.Luther reacted against this by talking about salvation by faith alone, meaning that a personal decision to follow God was all that one needed to be saved--the amulets and special prayers weren't necessary if you had faith, and wouldn't help you if you didn't. Justification by faith alone because the theological epicenter of the Reformation, since it affirmed the individual's ability to be saved without mediation or intervention from an ecclesiastical hierarchy, and without going through any rituals that could be put under human control. |
The Second Phase - the implications of justification by faith for the Mass, the Mass being the central action and transaction of medieval Catholicism |
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| The Third Phase - focus on election and predestination |
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| The Elizabethan Religious Settlement - "The Revolution of 1559" |
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Tudor Women who also had their part, however unwittingly in the rise of the Reformation |
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MsSquirrly |
Latest page update: made by MsSquirrly
, Oct 20 2009, 8:33 AM EDT
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