“reformation” how to use?

How to use in-sentence of “reformation”:

+ Puritans thought that the English Reformation had not gone far enough.

+ The University was one of the most important places where the Protestant Reformation began.

+ The diocese is the only Roman Catholic one in Sweden since the Protestant Reformation back in the 16th century.

+ The Reformation which created Protestant sects in Europe was not allowed into Spain, it was kept out and, as with Jews or Muslims, its believers were killed.

+ The Protestant Reformation in Scotland, however, was based more on the teachings of Martin Luther and John Calvin, so it was more like the Reformation in continental Europe.

+ In the Protestant Reformation Bern Bern favoured the new Protestant teaching and demanded liberty of preaching for the Reformers Fribourg renounced in its union with Geneva in 1511.

+ The Reformation did not spread to England straight away.

reformation how to use?
reformation how to use?

Example sentences of “reformation”:

+ When the Reformation started in 16th century Europe, the Bible was translated into several languages.

+ Huldrych was the leader of the Protestant Reformation in Switzerland, and founder of the Swiss Reformed churches.

+ Unlike other reform movements, the English Reformation began by royal influence.

+ The leaders of the Reformation said that this means that keeping the Ten Commandments could not make us holy in God’s eyes.

+ Some reformation era groups had rejected the Mass entirely.

+ The Counter Reformation reconverted approximately 33% of Northern Europe to Catholicism and initiated missions in South and Central America, Africa, Asia, and even China and Japan.

+ Worcester Cathedral was not destroyed by Henry VIII during the English Reformation because of his brother’s chantry in the cathedral.

+ See Reformation for an older historical precedent.

+ The monastery itself flourished until the Reformation when buildings were demolished and all but three of the 360 carved crosses destroyed.

+ When the Reformation started in 16th century Europe, the Bible was translated into several languages.

+ Huldrych was the leader of the Protestant Reformation in Switzerland, and founder of the Swiss Reformed churches.

+ Until 1415 it was under the control of Mont Saint Michel and then Eton College until the Reformation when it was closed and fell into disrepair.

+ The famous reformation places in the old town, and the buildings developed in different epochs, make up the architecture of the town.

+ It was a very important part of the Radical Reformation and is still a very important document to many Anabaptist groups today, such as the Amish.

+ Because of the reformation the people of the village of “Dudenhofen” became protestant, but all the others remained catholic.

+ The Catholic Church responded to the Protestant reformation with the counter-reformation.

+ The three most important traditions to emerge directly from the Protestant Reformation were the LutheranismLutheran, Reformed Anglican traditions, though the latter group identifies as both “Reformed” and “Catholic”, and some subgroups reject the classification as “Protestant”.

More in-sentence examples of “reformation”:

+ Churches based on Reformation ideas have multiplied into different forms, especially in historically Protestant countries.

+ Other reformation leaders who separated from the Roman Catholic Church agreed with Luther on some things, but criticized him for not separating himself far enough from Roman Catholic doctrine.

+ Even after the reformation and the dissolution of the abbey in 1552, the church continued to serve as the main burial place for the ruling Mecklenburg nobility as well as the place of worship for the Evangelical-Lutheran congregation.

+ After the reformation they were moved and set into the church floor.

+ This belief in faith as the only way to be saved was a principle of the Protestant Reformation of the reformer of the Catholic Church Martin Luther and is a principle of Protestants today.

+ It was not until the Protestant Reformation that it was called the Lord’s Prayer.

+ Hence, the Tyndale Bible, as it was known, played a key role in spreading Reformation ideas.

+ He was influenced by the strict Scottish Reformation very much.

+ It was part of the Protestant Reformation in England.

+ Pope Paul III saw that the Protestant Reformation was getting bigger.

+ The Sunni-Shi’a split has been compared to the Protestant Reformation within the Christian church much later in 1517.

+ The denominations listed below did not emerge from the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century or its commonly acknowledged offshoots.

+ Often it was seen as the end of the English Reformation and the foundation of Anglicanism.

+ During the time of the reformation Vienna was a Protestant city, but in the times of the Counter Reformation, Austria and Vienna were mostly Roman Catholic.

+ The cycle of supercontinent formation, breakup, dispersal and reformation by plate tectonics occurs every 450 million years or so.

+ Her work focused on Renaissance and Reformation political thought.

+ They arose as part of the Radical wing of the Reformation of 16th century Europe.

+ The term Anglicanism includes those who have accepted the English Reformation as embodied in the Church of England or in the offshoot Churches in other countries that have followed closely to its doctrines and its organisation.

+ Many Protestant churches started during the Protestant Reformation in about 1600.

+ The English Reformation was part of the Protestant Reformation.

+ The English Reformation led to the first Anglican archbishop.

+ After the Reformation many anthems were composed.

+ This is different from the Reformation on the European continent, where the reformers wanted big changes right away.

+ After the Reformation the church received several smaller carved altars from other churches.

+ During the Reformation of Christianity in the 16th century, most Finns became Protestants.

+ In 1968 there was a reformation movement within the Communist party, but reforms were stopped by the invasion of Warsaw pact armies.

+ Churches based on Reformation ideas have multiplied into different forms, especially in historically Protestant countries.

+ Other reformation leaders who separated from the Roman Catholic Church agreed with Luther on some things, but criticized him for not separating himself far enough from Roman Catholic doctrine.
+ Even after the reformation and the dissolution of the abbey in 1552, the church continued to serve as the main burial place for the ruling Mecklenburg nobility as well as the place of worship for the Evangelical-Lutheran congregation.

+ Then, the Protestant Reformation happened, and Catholic and Protestant Christians fought each other.

+ In the 16th century Eilenburg was a centre of the reformation events.

+ The Protestant Reformation was introduced to Themar on 5th of October 1544 by the count Ernst von Henneberg.

+ Protestant Reformation started with Martin Luther and the posting of the 95 theses on the door of the castle church in Wittenberg, Germany.

+ The festival was retained after the Reformation in the calendar of the Church of England and in many Lutheran churches.

+ The Protestant Reformation was a series of events that happened in the 16th century in the Christian Church.

+ Roman Catholicism was the biggest religion in Germany up to the 15th century, but a major religious change called the Reformation changed this.

+ Protestants use guidelines from the 16th-century Protestant Reformation to understand the Bible.

+ Soon after, at the Council of Trent, the Catholic Church tried to respond to the problems that led to the Reformation and the sale of indulgences was stopped.

+ The Reformation made the region around Montreux and Vevey an attractive haven for Huguenots from Italy, who brought their artisanal skills and set up workshops and businesses.

+ The Reformation started in Germany, where Martin Luther sent his demands for change to the Church.

+ November 6, 1976 is a political activist in Cameroon He leads the Cameroon Reformation Party which he founded in August 2010.

+ During the Protestant Reformation many did not agree with this.

+ In 1541 the Protestant Reformation reached the convent and the town and everybody changed their beliefs to the Protestant religion.

+ With the rise of Modernity and the Reformation during the early 16th century the understanding changed to a modern idea of a tolerant and diverse society that consists of many different communities.

+ During the period called Reformation some Protestant groups broke away from the Catholic Church.

+ In August 2010, Lang formed the Cameroon Reformation Party.

+ Swiss emigration to America predates the formation of the United States, often as the result of the persecution of Anabaptism during the Swiss Reformation and the formation of the Amish community.

+ In the previous century, the Protestant Reformation and England’s break with the Catholic Church had encouraged new ideas and struggles.

+ John Calvin’s international influence on the development of the doctrines of the Protestant Reformation began at the age of 25, when he started work on his first edition of the “Institutes of the Christian Religion” in 1534.

+ In his book “History of the Reformation in Scotland” he writes about his five “conversations” with the Roman Catholic queen.

+ Jean Cauvin, also Jean Calvin, was a French peopleFrench theologian during the Protestant Reformation and was a central developer of the system of Christian theology called Calvinism or Reformed theology.

+ After the Reformation and the religious wars there was a large group of Protestants living in the city.

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