How Does Martin Luther and the 95 Theses Work?

Martin Luther was like a kid who stood up in class and said, “Wait, I think the teacher got this wrong!”

Back in 1517, Martin Luther was a monk who noticed some rules about how people could get closer to God were being changed, mostly because of money. It felt unfair, so he nailed a list of 95 Theses, like a fun debate starter, to a church door.

What Are the 95 Theses?

Think of the 95 Theses as a list of questions or complaints about how people became close to God. They were like “Why are we paying for this?” and “Is this really needed?” It was like when you get tired of your friend always taking the last cookie, you just ask, “Hey, why is that happening?”

Why Was This Big?

Before Martin Luther, people thought they had to pay a lot of money or do special things to go to heaven. But Martin Luther said maybe it didn’t have to be so hard, like how sometimes your favorite game can be played with fewer rules!

His 95 Theses started an idea that changed the world, one question at a time. Martin Luther was like a kid who stood up in class and said, “Wait, I think the teacher got this wrong!”

Back in 1517, Martin Luther was a monk who noticed some rules about how people could get closer to God were being changed, mostly because of money. It felt unfair, so he nailed a list of 95 Theses, like a fun debate starter, to a church door.

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Examples

  1. A monk named Martin Luther nailed a list of complaints to a church door, starting a big religious change.
  2. The 95 Theses were like a list of questions about the church's practices.
  3. This led to people questioning what the church taught.

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