Although the term "reform" means an ideal or perfect form, Protestant reform attempts to purify the form of Christianity in the mid-16th century, but it deviates from the ideals of the past. Due to this decline in the past, the church expanded its scope of influence and became a business, not a virtue, belief, and objective sanctuary, from the eye of Gd. The new power of the church also has the effect of suppressing farmers. By prescribing a unified elite culture that right Christians and good Christians should try to achieve, farmer culture is increasingly left behind and considered to be inferior to dominant nobility.
475 years ago, in the spring of 1525, Martin Luther condemned the uprising of German farmers, a malicious booklet on farmer looting and killing reaffirmed politics with a letter to the Romans unconditionally. Doctrine. Luther 's Biblical doctrine insists that all sacred government, and hence the right to unconditional loyalty, will remain a German Protestantism self - sustaining political belief until the twentieth century. It dominated and even killed unresolved arguments about this issue in Germany. Until the revolutionary event of 1989, the Protestant church of (East) Germans, as an institution, opposed the people's uprising and publicly endorsed those who protested against protesting the government's unbearable situation (2 ).
Martin Luther and John Calvin have similar views on political authority as social order. Luther acknowledged that secular power was effective and called Christians to obey their rulers. Lutter opposed the German farmer uprising and called it a "non-Christian." Luther, the authority, was unaware that power is a pope. Catholics believe that the pope is a small god who gives sacred power to the people of the church. Luther considers this to be a god, believes that only God has real power. Contrary to the Catholic church, the Protestant church has much less political style and a series of powers from the Pope.