Luther's Theses

What does it look like?

It contains 95 theses statements calling out what Luther thought were the church's malpractices

It contains 95 theses statements calling out what Luther thought were the church's malpractices

These these are carefully thought out and worded showing Luther put much time into it, it was not a rush job

It was nailed to a church door in Wittenberg, Germany

It was nailed to a church door in Wittenberg, Germany

How does the author communicate ideas?

He uses theses statements to try and get across his points leaving them open for discourse

Presents them as theories with no further evidence so they can be discussed

He uses written word to get his point across

His choice of words is clearly thought out and carefully selected

He's firm but very professional when getting his point across

He writes concisely not using flowery language, straight to the point

What ideas are left out?

The document I examined was missing 45 of the theses from the 95 theses

Only contained 1-50

He generally avoids directly criticizing the pope harshly

Phrased instead as "the pope should.." for example, not "the pope must..."

Understandable as the pope was the most powerful man in Europe at the time

Sticks solely to religious issues, doesn't really talk about social issues of the time

Social justice in Catholicism is mostly left out, sticks to talking about things directly related to religion and money

For example, he spends a lot of time on the purchase of indulgences, but does not mention the corruption of popes before Leo the X

Whose perspective does it reflect?

This document clearly reflects Martin luther's perspective and opinions

Therefore, the perspective of an educated European monk in the 16th century

He's trying to show us how he thinks the church should run, ideally

Who wrote it?

Martin Luther

Martin Luther

He was a German priest and monk from the 16th century who took issue with the catholic church and spurred forward the protestant reformation

They chose to create the document as a way to protest against the church's corruption

Its purpose was to call out corruption in the church

What are the big ideas

Indulgences go against Catholicism as a religion

Heaven is earned through repentance and self reflection, not with cash

St Peter's basilica should be made with honest money

Says it has been built instead with the believers's livelihood, their flesh

Only god can forgive sin

The pope can only forgive those who have acted against him, not those who have acted against god

Who perspectives are omitted/questioned/challenged

The church

Their authority is being challenged

This was a bold move as the church essentially wielded all power during this time period

The pope and clergy

They are essentially being called frauds by Luther

These were the highest ranking members of society in the 16th century

The people's

They are being told the church is wrong and they're being cheated

The people had been buying indulgences for years now, so this was like a slap in the face wake up call for them

Which questions can this source help me answer?

This source can help me to better understand the issues of the Catholic church during this time period

Calls out all the sources of corruption Luther believes there are by stating how they should be changed

However, it is Luther's perspective therefore it's not completely unbiased and needs more sources to back it up

What was wrong with the catholic church at the beginning of the 16th century?

How could some of the issues with the catholic church in the 16th century be fixed?