POPE LEO X OPPONENT OF THE REFORMATION

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POPE LEO X OPPONENT OF THE REFORMATION b y R o b i n S. D o a k Content Advisers: James F. Korthals, Professor of Church History, Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary Dr. Michael J. Hollerich, Associate Professor of Theology, University of St. Thomas Reading Adviser: Rosemary G. Palmer, Ph.D., Department of Literacy, College of Education, Boise State University SPECIAL LIVES IN HISTORY THAT BECOME

Signature Lives REFORMATION ERA Compass Point Books 3109 West 50th Street, #115 Minneapolis, MN 55410 Visit Compass Point Books on the Internet at www.compasspointbooks.com or e-mail your request to custserv@compasspointbooks.com The winds of change howled through Europe during the 1500s. The continent that had been united by the Catholic Church found itself in an uproar. In an attempt to reform the church, some people left the established religion, while others worked from within. The changes that began in Germany in 1517 when Martin Luther wrote his Ninety-Five Theses would transform everything. The Protestant Reformation s impact would be felt in all aspects of life at home, in government, and in economics. Straddling the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, the Protestant Reformation would change the church, religion, and the world itself. Editor: Sue Vander Hook Page Production: Bobbie Nuytten Photo Researchers: Bobbie Nuytten and Svetlana Zhurkin Cartographer: XNR Productions, Inc. Library Consultant: Kathleen Baxter Art Director: Jaime Martens Creative Director: Keith Griffin Editorial Director: Carol Jones Managing Editor: Catherine Neitge Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Doak, Robin S. (Robin Santos) Pope Leo X: Opponent of the Reformation / by Robin S. Doak p. cm (Signature lives) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-7565-1594-2 (hardcover) ISBN-10: 0-7565-1594-7 (hardcover) ISBN: 0-7565-1918-7 (ebook) 1. Leo X, Pope, 1475-1521 Juvenile literature. 2. Popes Biography Juvenile literature. I. Title. II. Series. BX1315.D63 2006 282.092 dc22 2005025213 Copyright 2006 by Compass Point Books All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. The publisher takes no responsibility for the use of any of the materials or methods described in this book, nor for the products thereof. Printed in the United States of America.

Pope Leo X Table of Contents Silence That Priest! 9 Growing Up Medici 15 Teenage Cardinal 23 Life in Exile 29 A Medici Pope 39 The Pope as Politician 47 A Chance for Change 57 Reign of Pleasure 65 Patron of the Arts 73 The Protestant Reformation 85 Life and Times 96 Life at a Glance 102 Additional Resources 103 Glossary 105 Source Notes 106 Select Bibliography 108 Index 109 Image Credits 112

Pope Leo X Chapter 1 Silence That Priest! PPope Leo X was annoyed with Martin Luther. The uproar about this German priest and the criticisms of the Catholic Church were a distraction. The pope was tired of what Luther was saying against the church. Leo had more important things to do, like planning an attack on Jerusalem. But as head of the powerful Catholic Church, Leo could not completely ignore this priest. He appointed Catholic scholars to study Luther s criticisms 95 of them, to be exact. In March 1518, Leo spent three days reading what priest Sylvestro Mazzolini Prierias had written about Luther. When he finished, he was convinced that Luther was guilty of heresy. There was no doubt he had seriously contradicted the teachings and the In 1518, Italian artist Raphael painted this portrait titled Leo X and the Cardinals. 9

Signature Lives Pope Leo X Frederick III, also called Frederick the Wise (1463 1525), was elector (ruler) of Saxony in what is now Germany. He protected Martin Luther, giving Luther s ideas a chance to spread throughout Europe. Frederick helped because he opposed the power of the pope and the emperor. He also didn t want Luther condemned to death as a heretic if his teachings were actually the truth. laws of the Catholic Church. In August, Leo ordered Luther to appear before him, but Luther refused. If the pope declared him a heretic, he might be permanently excommunicated from the Catholic Church or, worse, sentenced to death. Luther decided to stay in Saxony, where Prince Frederick III promised him safety. Pope Leo was not pleased and demanded that Frederick turn Luther over to him. But Frederick refused. For two years, Leo generally ignored this priest who was largely responsible for the growing protest against the Catholic Church. On June 15, 1520, Leo could no longer disregard Luther. He had to attempt to silence him and put a stop to the rising opposition to the church. Leo took his pen and officially condemned Luther and his radical opinions in writing. The papal bull, as the document was called, was the most official proclamation the pope could make. This one was called Exsurge Domine (Arise, O Lord), titled after the first two Latin words of the official proclamation. The bull began with these words: Arise, O Lord, and judge your own cause. Remember your reproaches to those who are filled with foolishness all through the day. Leo identified those filled with foolishness as Pope Leo X s papal bull, Exsurge Domine, officially condemned Martin Luther and ordered his books and writings to be burned. 10 11

Signature Lives Pope Leo X Martin Luther and the followers who agreed with him. He called them lying teachers and accused them of heresy. Luther s ideas were a deadly poison, claimed the pope. After listing 41 errors in Luther s writings, he declared: [B]ecause the preceding errors and many others are contained in the books or writings of Martin Luther, we likewise condemn, reprobate, and reject completely the books and all the writings and sermons of the said Martin. Then the pope demanded that Luther recant, or take back, his accusations against the church. He went even further and ordered Luther s writings to be burned in public. Anyone who followed Luther would be thrown out of the church, the pope declared. In December, Luther openly defied the pope. Outside the walls of the city of Wittenberg, Germany, he built a fire under a large oak tree. As onlookers watched, he burned Leo s Exsurge Domine along with the laws of the church and other papal documents. The following month, on January 3, 1521, Pope Leo X issued yet another bull the Decet Romanum Pontificem officially excommunicating Luther from the church. Would that be enough to stop this outspoken priest and his followers? Perhaps Leo had taken this priest too lightly. Maybe he thought his ideas would eventually go away. How could one document, Luther s Ninety- Five Theses, have started such a huge spiritual revolution? Would things have been different if Leo had silenced Luther sooner? By ignoring Luther until it was too late, Leo left the Catholic Church on the brink of division. It was a split that would never be repaired. Leo X would be remembered as the pope who witnessed the start of what came to be called the Protestant Reformation, a movement that permanently divided the Roman Catholic Church. Martin Luther openly defied the Catholic Church when he burned the pope s official document, the Exsurge Domine. 12 13