PROTESTANT REFORMERS


The 'Protestant Reformers' are those theologians, churchmen, and statesmen whose careers, works, and actions brought about the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century. Historically speaking, "Protestant" was the name given to those theologians, magnates, and delegations present at the Holy Roman Imperial Diet of Speyer in 1529 who protested the revocation of the suspension, granted at a prior Diet of Speyer in 1526, of Edict of Worms of 1521, which had outlawed Martin Luther and his followers.
The meaning of the label "Protestant" widened over time to embrace all Western Christians as distinguished from the Roman Catholic Church, except for the Anabaptists and other Radical Reformers. This reflected the widening spread of the Protestant Reformation over Europe into diversifying movements like Lutheranism, Anglicanism, Calvinism, and Arminianism. Today, all Western Christian denominations other than the Roman Catholic Church are loosely known as Protestant churches.

Contents
Precursors
Reformers proper
Radical Reformers
Counter-reformers
Second Front Reformers
See also

Precursors


There were a number of people who contributed to the development of the Reformation, but lived before it, including:

John Hus

Jerome of Prague

Savonarola

William Tyndale

Peter Waldo

Wessel Harmenz. Gansfort

John Wycliffe

Reformers proper


The Protestant Reformation, popularly thought to have begun on October 31, 1517 with the posting of Martin Luther's 95 theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, divided Western Christendom, as distinguished from Eastern Christendom, into the Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant churches.
There were a number of key reformers within the movement, including:

Martin Bucer

Heinrich Bullinger

John Calvin

Andreas von Carlstadt, later a Radical Reformer

Wolfgang Fabricius Capito

Martin Chemnitz

Thomas Cranmer

William Farel

Matthias Flacius

★ Caspar Hedio

Justus Jonas

John Knox

Jan Åaski

Martin Luther

Philipp Melanchthon

Johannes Oecolampadius

Peter Martyr

Joachim Vadian

Laurentius Petri

Olaus Petri

Pierre Viret

Huldrych Zwingli

Aonio Paleario

Radical Reformers


Because these reformers were those of the Radical Reformation and the Anabaptist movement, they have not been traditionally listed with the mainline Protestant reformers. (Compare the reformers of the "Second Front" of the Reformation below):

John of Leiden

Thomas Müntzer

Kaspar Schwenkfeld

Menno Simons

Counter-reformers


Catholics who worked against the Reformation include:

Jerome Cardinal Aleander

★ Augustine Alveld

Thomas Cardinal Cajetan

Johann Cochlaeus

Johann Eck

★ Jerome Emser

Pope Leo X

John Tetzel

Second Front Reformers


There were also a number of people who initially cooperated with the Reformers, but who separated from them to form a "Second Front", principally in objection to the Reformers' sacralism. Among these were:

Hans Denck

Conrad Grebel

Balthasar Hubmaier

Felix Manz

See also



List of Protestant Reformers (alphabetical)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves