Conflict between the church of Rome and the reformers reached its
most violent peak in the five years before the Council of Trent in
1545, a council the pope had been delaying for years. Luther had
not only given up hope for a "free, Christian council," but had
also come to the conclusion that the authority of such a council
was limited to reaffirming the ancient faith of the apostles. This
radical departure from Rome's interpretation of its own authority
forms the basis of Luther's new doctrine of the church -- and also
of his advice to Protestant princes on the problems of
ecclesiastical property. It is this doctrine of the church which is
the theme of the three treatises written during this period and
included in this volume.
General
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