The Holy Roman Empire in the sixteenth …

Years: 1540 - 1540
August

The Holy Roman Empire in the sixteenth century is a centralized state in name only, divided into many princely and city states that provide a powerful check on the rule of the Holy Roman Emperor.

The division of power between the emperor and the various states have made the Reformation in Germany possible, as individual states defend reformers within their territories.

Martin Luther has been supported in the Electorate of Saxony, by Frederick III and his successors John and John Frederick.

Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse—whose lands lie midway between Saxony and the Rhine—also supports the Reformation, and he figures prominently in the lives of both Luther and Martin Bucer.

Bucer had acted as a mediator between Luther and the other leading reformer, the late Huldrych Zwingli, who had differed on the doctrine of the eucharist.

Bucer had later sought agreement on common articles of faith such as the Tetrapolitan Confession and the Wittenberg Concord, working closely with Philipp Melanchthon on the latter.

The Emperor Charles V, who has to balance the demands of his imperial subjects, is often distracted by war with France and the Ottoman Empire and in Italy.

The political rivalry among all the players greatly influences the ecclesiastical developments within the Empire.

In addition to the princely states, free imperial cities, nominally under the control of the Emperor but really ruled by councils that act like sovereign governments, are scattered throughout the Empire.

As the Reformation has taken root, clashes have broken out in many cities between local reformers and conservative city magistrates.

In the Truce of Frankfurt of 1539, Emperor Charles and the leaders of the Schmalkaldic League, a defensive alliance of Lutheran princes within the Empire, had agreed on a major colloquy to settle all religious issues within the imperial domains.

Bucer has placed great hopes on this meeting: he believes it will be possible to persuade most German Catholics to accept the doctrine of sola fide as the basis for discussions on all other issues.

Under various pseudonyms, he has published tracts promoting a German national church.

A conference in Haguenau had begun on June 12, 1540, but during a month's discussion the two sides had failed to agree on a common starting point, and decided to reconvene in Worms.

Melanchthon leads the Protestants, with Bucer a major influence behind the scenes.

When the colloquy again makes no progress, the imperial chancellor, Nicholas Perrenot de Granvelle, calls for secret negotiations.

Bucer now begins working with Johannes Gropper, a delegate of the archbishop of Cologne, Hermann von Wied.

Aware of the risks of such apparent collusion, he is determined to forge unity among the German churches.

The two agree on twenty-three articles in which Bucer concedes some issues toward the Catholic position.

These include justification, the sacraments, and the organization of the church.

Four disputed issues are left undecided: veneration of the saints, private masses, auricular confession, and transubstantiation.

The results are published in the "Worms Book", which they confidentially present to a prince on each side of the religious divide: Philip of Hesse and Joachim II, Elector of Brandenburg.

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