Yeah, everybody knows 31 October is the day Martin Luther nailed the  95     Theses to the church door and started the Reformation. Everybody  knows    it's Halloween too. What does this mean?
What does "Halloween" mean?
Let's     start with Halloween. The word is a contraction actually, the "een"     being short for "even" which is in turn short for "evening".  Evening  of what?    Evening before All Hallows, that's what. So what or who in  the hell are    the hallows? "Hallow" is the modern English  form of a  Germanic root   word  meaning "holy", which also survives in  modern  German as "heilige".   The  Hallows are the holy ones, meaning  the  saints.
1 November   has for  centuries been  celebrated in the  West as the Feast of All   Hallows,  cognate with the German word for  it, Allerheiligen, which is   now usually  expressed  in English as the  Feast of All Saints. The term   Hallowmas was  once  common for it, the  mass of all hallows. Halloween   then is a   contraction for the Eve of  the Feast of All Hallows, the   night on 31  October before the feast on  1 November.
About the    only other  times you hear "hallow" in  some form or other in modern    English is its  retained use in the  traditional wording of the Our    Father, "hallowed be  thy name", or in  the   phrase "hallowed halls"   in reference to a university or some  esteemed   institution.  "Hallowed be thy name" literally means held  holy be thy name, "thy" being the  second person   familiar form of   address modern English doesn't use.
The Origin of All Saints' Day.  Lemuralia.
So     when did we start having a Feast of All Hallows on 1 November?  Well,    we  started having a Feast of All Hallows, or Saints, before it was  on 1    November! In the Eastern Church, all the saints are  collectively     remembered on the first Sunday after Pentecost. It  really got  rolling    when the emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire Leo  VI (886-911)  built a    church in honour of his wife when she died, but as she was  not a    recognised saint he dedicated the church to all  the saints, so  that she    would be included in a commemoration of all  saints whether  recognised as such   or  not.
In the  Western Church, the whole  thing got rolling when    Pope Boniface IV  got permission in 609 AD from  the Roman emperor  Phocas   -- again this would be the Eastern Roman  Emperor, as the Western  Roman  Empire  was long gone by this time -- to  rededicate the Roman  Pantheon to  Mary  and  all martyrs. What's the  Pantheon? A big temple  built by  Agrippa, Caesar  Augustus' best  general officer, to Jupiter,  Venus and  Mars  in 27 BC. It  was  destroyed in a major fire in Rome in  80 AD. The   emperor Domitian   rebuilt it, but it burned again in 110 AD.  The  emperor  Trajan began   reconstruction and it was completed by the   emperor  Hadrian in 126 AD.   That's the building that's there now.
Boniface   rededicated the   Pantheon to Mary and all martyrs on 13 May 609  (might   have been 610)  AD.  Why 13 May? Because it was on that day  that the old   Roman  Lemuralia  concluded. What's a Lemuralia? The  Roman poet Ovid  says  it  originated  when Romulus, one of the  co-founders of Rome and from  whom   the city is  named, tried to calm  the spirit of his brother Remus,  the   other  co-founder. Why would  Remus' spirit need calming? Because   Romulus  killed  him with a shovel to make sure he didn't name and rule   the  city, that's  why.
At any rate, over time it became the  day,  or  rather days,  there were  three of them, 9, 11, and 13 May,  when the  head  of the  household  (the paterfamilias, father of the  family)  chased off  the  lemures  (one lemur, two or more lemures) who  were  vengeful spirits  of  the  dead ticked off at the living, for  either not  having been buried    properly or treated well in life, or  remembered well  in death, and out  to  harm or at least scare the crap  out of the  living.
Because  they  appeared so scary, they were  also called  larvae (one larva,  two or  more  larvae) meaning "masks",  which is also  how the "mask" of early  stage  life, which in some animals  is nothing like the  adult stage, such as the   caterpillar to the  butterfly, came to be  called larva.  Anyway,   paterfamilias went out at  midnight looking to  one side and  tossing black   beans behind him  saying "haec ego mitto his  redimo  meque meosque   fabis", or "I send  these (beans), with these I  redeem  me and mine" nine   times. Then, he  banged bronze pots to-gether   saying "manes exite   paterni" or "Souls  of my ancestors, exit" nine   times.
Western All Saints' Day Gets Moved By The Pope.  Way More To It Than That Though.  
In     putting the Feast of All Saints on 13 May, Boniface meant to both     replace the old Lemuralia and transform it into a Christian  observance     for all the Christian dead. The replacement anyway  worked, and over   time   the Lemuralia were largely forgotten. So why  isn't All Saints'   Day   still 13 May? Because Pope Gregory III  (731-741) built a place in St Peter's in Rome for veneration of relics of all   saints,   and moved the date to 1  November.  Now, this isn't the St Peter's that's there now, it's the old one begun by Constantine  --  remember that because it's gonna be a big deal on this subject later in this post.  It stuck, and in 835 Louis   the Pious,   son and successor to Charlemagne (aka Karl der Grosse),   with a big  nudge  from Pope  Gregory IV, made it officially stuck, and   there it is to  this  day.
Btw, Gregory III was a Syrian and the last pope who was not a European until the current pope, Francis.  Sort of:  Gregory was Syrian descended too, whereas Francis was born of Italian immigrants to Argentina, so, Gregory III is still the last pope not European or European descended.  
Gregory III is also the last pope to have held off assuming office until approval by the Exarchatus Ravennatis.  Holy crap, what's that and how did it hold up papal installations?  In Gregory's time the Western Roman Empire was long gone, and the surviving Eastern Roman Empire was trying to hold Rome, and Italy generally, to-gether against the onslaught of Germanic types, mainly Lombards, by means of exarchs, direct representatives of the Eastern, and now only, Roman Emperor, in Constantinople.  The Emperor Maurice (Flavius Mauricius Tiberius Augustus, actually) established two exarchs, one in 584 in Ravenna, the last capital of the Western Empire before its collapse, and one in Carthage in 590 to administer northern Africa and Spain.  
This preserved something of the old full Roman Empire, and re popes, this preserved the approval of the "bishop" of Rome by the emperor of Rome.  The Exarchate of Africa lasted until 698 when it was defeated by forces of the Umayyad Caliphate (capital, Damascus).  The Exarchate of Ravenna lasted from 584 until 751, when the last exarch (guy named Eutychius) was killed by the Lombards, whereupon the Franks under their king, Pippin, Charlemagne's dad, took over and gave the exarchate's lands to the pope in 756, which began the Patrimonium Sancti Petri, the Patrimony of Saint Peter.  These papal states continued in one form or another until 1929, when the Lateran Treaty between the pope (Pius XI) via his secretary of state and the king of Italy (Victor Emmanuel III, the last one, he and all male members of the House of Savoy were ordered permanently out of Italy by the referendum in 1946 to establish a republic) via his prime minister, Benito Mussolini, abolished them and established as the only papal state the Vatican City State which exists to-day.
The end of the Exarchate of Ravenna in 751 didn't end the ratification of "bishops" by the "Roman" emperor btw.  The empire of the Frank general Charles Martel would evolve into The Holy Roman Empire, Imperium Romanum Sacrum, and see itself as the continuation, the transfer of rule,  translatio imperii, of the full Roman Empire --  meaning, not just from the end of the Western Roman Empire with the deposing of Romulus Augustus by Odoacer in 476, as is often noted, but the whole pie, from Caesar Augustus through Constantine VI of the Eastern Roman Empire.  
Huh?  Whozat?  OK, first Charles Martel.  He lived from 23 August 686 to 22 October 741. His name means "Charles the Hammer", from the Latin Carolus Martellus, Karl Martell in German.  Boniface said he couldn't have evangelised the Germans without him (and his army).  He was one of the greatest generals anywhere anytime.  He held off the Islamic invasion of Western Europe in October 732 (you didn't think this Islamicist thing was anything new, did you?) at Tours, defeating vastly superior forces, which is how he got the name "the Hammer".  But, he was not all hung up on being king of anything.  
His son Pippin was, and, the Eastern Empire had failed, exarchates and anything else, to protect the West against the Lombards or the Islamic Caliphate.  Plus, Emperor Constantine VI, who had become Emperor at age 9 and presided over the Second Council of Nicaea at age 16 (hey, when you're emperor with a state church you get to do stuff like that), kept losing battles, which led to a revolt he crushed severely.  Then he divorced his wife for not producing a son (happens a lot, too bad they didn't know anything about genetics) and married his mistress, which lost him what little support he had left.  
His mom Irene hadn't relinquished regent powers over him and kept the title Empress, so her supporters blinded and deposed him on 19 April 797.  So now, on top of the inability of the remainder of the Roman Empire to hold things to-gether in the West, it's gonna be led by a woman, and everybody knows that can't be!  I mean, a woman can be Empress by being the wife of the Emperor (Empress Consort), or by being the widow of an Emperor (Empress Dowager) and if she's also the mother of the current Emperor (Empress Mother), but rule in her own right (Empress Regnant), no.  So, the next big Western step was, against all this, the crowning of Charles Martel's grandson Charlemagne as Emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III on Christmas Day 800 in St Peter's (the old one, remember?), Which kinda worked both ways, as Charlemagne had just bailed old Leo out from being blinded by the Romans themselves!  
Yes this was the first Roman Emperor in the West in about 300 years, but the coronation was explicit; this wasn't just a restoration of the Western Roman Empire that ceased in 476, Charlemagne was the rightful successor to the Eastern Roman Emperor Constantine VI, so he and not Irene was straight up Roman Emperor, period.  For a while Irene thought marrying Charlemagne might fix this, but that idea never made it to first date, although Charlemagne's fourth and last wife, Luitgard, had died 4 June 800, so he was eligible.
So now there were two "Roman" emperors, but not West and East, but each claiming rightful rule over the whole thing in continuous succession.  Neither one of them actually Roman, but hey.  Now it's kinda hard to preserve an empire when you gotta split it up among your kids, so things bobbled for a century or so, until 2 February 962, when the German king Otto became der Große, the Great.  Having overcome all opposition from anybody, he was crowned King of Germany in Aachen, Charlemagne's old capital, on 7 August 936, and on 2 February 962 was crowned Romanorum Imperator, Emperor of the Romans, in Rome at St Peter's (still the old one) by Pope John XII -- whose control over the Papal States (remember that, I told you this stuff all hangs to-gether eventually!) he had just secured.  John though soon sent emissaries to the Eastern Empire, Otto got wind of it, went back to Rome and had a pope more suitable to him selected (that's Leo VIII).  Poor old John went off with one of his mistresses and died of a heart attack during sex, though other accounts say her jealous husband killed him.  Apostolic succession, indeed.  BTW, "Pope Joan" legends come from one of his mistresses who had a real influence on him.
This whole deal was so about being the Roman Empire that the "holy" thing didn't get added until a couple hundred years after Otto, with Frederick the Red Beard (ok Barbarossa), crowned, as it's done, King of the Germans (ie Romans) in Aachen on 9 March 1152 then Emperor in Rome (where else?) by the pope (who else?, this time Eugene III) on 18 June 1155.  Fred btw asked for and got an annulment of his marriage to his wife, Adelheid, in 1153, on the grounds that they were too closely related (that's called consanguinity) to be married; they were only fourth cousins but the consanguinity became suddenly an issue after she kept not having kids, imagine that, then he tried to get a wife from somebody at the Eastern Empire court in Constantinople to further express the whole one Rome thing, but that didn't work out, so on 9 June 1156 he married a nice French girl, well countess actually, when became Empress Consort (remember what that is) and they had 12 kids, one of whom became the next "Roman" Emperor (Henry VI).
Btw, ever wonder why it's called the Vatican?  Because it's on the Vaticanus Mons, that's why.  OK but what is that?  The hill (mons) where the Vates (that's VAH-tays) hang out, that's what.  OK but who are they?  They were prophets and oracles of pre-Christian Rome.  The name originally applied to the Janiculum, a hill across the Tiber from Rome itself and its "seven hills" founded by the god Janus, according to Roman religion.  Eventually it came to include the plain in front of it, where Nero built a circus, that became the supposed site of the martyrdom of St Peter, over which supposed site Constantine began construction of a big church, St Peter's.  Remember that?  All this stuff does tie to-gether!
Samhain.  
Thing is, there already was another   non Christian   celebration about this  time. The Celts had something   called Samhain,   which means "Summer's  end" and is still the word for   November in Irish,   as two other of  their big celebrations, Bealtaine   and Lunasa, are the   Irish words  for May and August. It was a harvest   festival, but also   included the realisation that Winter is coming and   thus grain and meat   for the  season for people and livestock alike is   prepared, the bones of   the  slaughtered animals thrown into bone  fires,  which is now contracted    to bonfires, from which the whole  community  lighted its individual   home  fires. Also it was thought the  world of  the living and the dead   intersected on this date, and the  dead could  cause damage to the  living,   so the living wore costumes to  look like  the dead or appease them or   confuse them and minimise the  potential  damage. Your  original trick or   treat.
So a feast  that started   out to replace or transform one   pagan observance  involving the dead   ends up on another, first Roman then   Celtic. So  whadda we got? A   supposedly Christian celebration that's   just a  non-Christian one with a  Christian veneer over it? Well, to some    extent, yes. The mistake  would be to see this as the whole story. Judas    Priest, we ain't even  got to the Reformation yet, howzat figure into   all  this? And how  come  Luther's out there nailing stuff to the  church door  on   Halloween? Was  he trick or treating or something?
As   to the   general idea,  guess what, people die, Christian or non   Christian, and   the people  they leave behind feel the loss and want to  remember them.   Hardly  surprising that Christians would want to do   that, hell, everybody    does, and that's why there's remembrances of   various kinds in cultures    all over the world. Given the Christian   knowledge of salvation from   sin  and death by the merit of the death   and resurrection of Jesus, a    commemoration of those who have passed   from this life to the joy of that    salvation in God's presence would   even more suggest itself, and show    the fulfillment of a universal   human inkling with all its folklore in    the revelation of the Gospel.  IOW, if anyone ought to commemorate  their   dead, it's Christians who  know God's revealed truth as to what  death,   and life both here and   beyond, is all about.
But, as  we've seen,   it's easy  to get  confused again, get drawn back into the  folklore,  begin  to  evolve a  sort of hybrid of truth and the guesswork  expressed  in the   folklore,  and confuse that for Christianity itself.  As an  example,   remember old  Gregory III setting up a place to venerate  relics  in St  Peter's? Why  would one venerate something from the body  of a  dead   Christian? Is  there even the slightest suggestion of such a   practice, or  it having  any merit, in the Bible? No. Luther mentioned   there  are many  things  which even if they began with a good intent    originally become so   clouded with the sort of thing we manufacture for   ourselves in  folklore  that the intent is long since lost.
What Is An Indulgence?
What     is an indulgence anyway? It has nothing to do with forgiveness of   sin,   and we'll see in a minute doesn't have bupkis to do with    Purgatory   either. In Roman Catholic thinking, a sin may indeed be    forgiven, but,   consequences remain for punishment. Some sins are so    serious that, if   one does them knowing they are serious yet freely    deciding to do it anyway, the   rejection of God is so complete that it is mortal to   the life of the   soul, for which reason they are called mortal sins,   and the punishment   and consequence is eternal if there is no   repentance.
But, even if one  repents and is   forgiven for a  mortal sin, it's still like most sins  which aren't so    serious, called  venial sins, where the punishment is  not eternal loss  of   life but  temporal, the sin reflects an attachment  to some part of  God's   creation over God himself, and one must  undertake the removal of  that   attachment to creatures rather than the  Creator through  works of   mercy,  charity, penance, prayer and the like;  one must  undertake the    sanctification, the making holy, of himself,  and the  problem is, while    this may be done over time, you may die  before you have enough time    here. Hence Purgatory, where the process  begun  here is completed if  you   die before completing it here and "walk   right in" as they used to  say.
But   good news! Not  good news as  is the Gospel; if that  were understood we   wouldn't even be into this  nonsense, but guess  what, you don't actually   have to  do all this  cleansing and  sanctifying yourself. There's a whole    treasury of merit  from Jesus  and the saints, and just as one's sins    affect others, so  since we're  all members of the body of Christ the    church, the merit of  Christ and  the saints can affect others too, and   the church, given  the power to  bind and loose on Earth and it will  be   bound or loosed in  Heaven,  can apply that merit to other members, not to   forgive the sin  but  reduce the temporal consequences needing   sanctification, and that   application is tied to various pious  things you   do, like say   venerating a relic.
Holy  crap that's a lot of   thinking! I guess   the message that by HIS  stripes, meaning the marks of   his suffering,   we are healed, that he  redeemed us like a coupon, paying   the price,   taking the punishment  we are due for us, is just too good  to  really  be  true, so we tack  all these human thinkings-through onto  it  to make   it more palatable  to our understanding.
St Peter's, Luther, and Tetzel.   
Well     back to this church that's been standing in Rome for over 1000  years     through lots of stuff good and bad and is in pretty bad shape, but   given   as Constantine started it you kind of don't demolish  stuff like   that,   so whaddya do? Pope Nicholas V (1447-1455) was the  first guy to   think   yeah maybe you do either completely rebuild it or tear it down   and build   a new one. He had some plans drawn up but  died before much   was  actually  done. Finally Pope Julius II  (1503-1513), the one just   before  Leo X to  whom Luther addressed "The Freedom of the Christian",   laid the   cornerstone for the new St  Peter's in 1506.
Costs a   lot of  money,  and Julius  liked building stuff. The project was begun   18 April  1506  and  wouldn't be completed until 18 November 1626 when   Pope Urban  VIII   dedicated the church. Funding was to be provided in   part by  selling   indulgences. Facilitating this was Albrecht, or   Albert. von    Hohenzollern, who became archbishop of Magdeburg at age 23   in 1513 and   bought himself election to the powerful post of   archbishop of Mainz in   1514. To pay for it he got a HUGE loan from   Jakob Fugger.  Don't laugh at the name,   he was a serious, serious  dude, banker to   everyone who mattered.  He loaned  Charles V, he to  whom the Augsburg   Confession was presented,  most of  the money to buy  being elected Holy  Roman Emperor, for example.
Albrecht   then  got  permission from  Pope Leo X to sell indulgences to pay the  loan   off  as long as half was  sent to Rome to pay for St Peter's. A  Fugger    agent tended the money,  and Albrecht got his top salesman in a  damn    Domincan (friars are  always suspect; if they were up to any good    they'd  have been proper  monks like the Benedictines, everybody knows   that)  named Johann  Tetzel.
When the gold in the coffer rings,
the soul from Purgatory springs.
Sobald das Geld im Kasten klingt,
Die Seele aus dem Fegefeuer springt!
Not     even RCC theology, as Cardinal Cajetan later said. Now, it would be     overly simplistic to the point of just plain false to ascribe   Luther's    posting of the 95 Theses to Tetzel and that famous jingle.   The  sources,   the depth, the background of what led to the Reformation  go  much deeper   than that -- which is why I spent all that time on   all  that ancient   stuff. This had been coming for a long, long, time,   centuries of it.   Tetzel died a broken man, shunned by all sides, and   while Luther fought   him strenuously, as he lay dying Luther wrote  him  a  personal letter   saying the troubles were not of his making,  that  that  child had a   different father, as Luther put it.
For  us   Lutherans to-day to  not understand what that different father  was    would be false to our  Lutheran Reformation and to Luther  himself. What    do we really have  here? A misunderstanding (Luther) in reaction to a    misunderstanding  (Tetzel and indulgences and the late mediaeval  papacy)   which once the  misunderstandings are cleared up,  maybe issue a  joint   declaration on  the doctrine of justification or  something, the  whole   thing is resolved  and we're one big happy  family again? No,  and in the   words of the  great theologian Chris  Rock, hell no.
Reformation. 
Theologians     like to call the problem one of justification versus  sanctification.     What does this mean? Sanctify, to make sanctus,  which is the Latin   word   for holy, right back where we started.  Justify, to make justus,   which  is  the Latin word for just. How can a person be just before God   if he  is  not holy? Well, he can't. It  gets worse. Not only can he not   be just   before God if he is not  holy, there is no amount of time and   works  that  will make him holy  enough to be just before God. It gets   worse  yet.  That's even when  God calls out a people and gives them his   Law to  show  them exactly  what he wants, and sends prophet after   prophet to get  them  back on  course.
But having shown us that   with the Law, it   gets  better with the Gospel, which is just a   contraction of old  English  words  for good news. And the good news is   this, that he has  himself  done for  us what we could not do for   ourselves, which is,  fulfill the  Law on our  behalf, taking the   punishment we deserve on  himself and  paying our debt,  thus literally   redeeming us. Turns out  those human  inklings were on to  something but   couldn't grasp what.  Salvation is by  works, but the works  of Jesus,   not us; our salvation is by faith in the  merit of Jesus, that  as he   took our sin and it  was credited to him  though sinless, we take on  his   holiness and it  is credited to us though  we are unholy.
It's    so  utterly simple. What then, we are to do  no works at all? Not in the     least. We are to do good works; we are not  to trust in them for our     salvation in any part but to trust wholly in  his. This too is utterly    simple. It's our sinfulness that wants to make  it complicated,   figure   our works have just got to have something to do  with it, and   mix that  in  with the good news of salvation through faith  in the   works of  Jesus,  his death and resurrection, and come up with a    sort-of good  news where  it's all him, except that it's you in there   too  with some  punishment to  work off and holiness to attain.
Thus   do  indulgences become a  corruption of the Gospel and obscure it,    whether  they are sold or not.  Thus does so much else become a    corruption of  the Gospel and obscure it  -- the office of holy ministry   becomes a  priesthood, celebration of  those who have gone before us  in  faith  become another spirit/ancestor  thing, the church itself   becomes a  part  of the state, doing good works  because we are saved   becomes doing   good works in order to be saved, on  and on.
And  worst of all in   that the mass, or Divine Service as  we often call  it,  becomes no   longer first his gift of his word to us  through the   transformed   synagogue service of prayer, Scripture reading  and   preaching and then   his gift of the same body and blood given for us    now given to us as the   pledge of our salvation and his testament to us   his heirs, but a work   to be done and effective not through the  power  of  his word to do what   it says by simply by having worked the  work.
 Reformation Day.  Reformationstag.
And     so on 31 October 1517 Father Martin Luther posted his document on   the    door of a church in Wittenberg. The title was Disputatio pro      declaratione virtutis indulgentiarum, If that sounds like Latin it's      because it is. It was an invitation to a formal moderated academic event     called a Disputation, in which a statement or statements are argued   to   be true or false by reference to an established written  authority,    such  as, in religion, the Bible.
The  church was All Saints    Church in  Wittenberg -- hey, the all saints  thing again! -- which was    and is  commonly called the Schlosskirche,  or castle church, as  distinct   from  the Stadtkirche, or town church,  of St Mary. It was  built by   Frederick  III, called The Wise, who was  the Elector of  Saxony, one of   the seven  who elected Holy Roman  Emperors. He also  founded the   University of  Wittenberg in 1502, in  which Luther was a  professor of   theology, and  attached the castle  church to it as the  university's   chapel. 
Luther   was   awarded the Doctor of Theology degree by the university on 19   October   1512 and two days later became a member of the theological    faculty   there with the position Doctor In Bible. The "95 Theses" as   they  are   commonly called were written therefore in the academic   language,  Latin,   rather than the language of the land, German,   because it was an    academic document calling for the academic event   called a disputatio, or    Disputation.
So he wasn't  out trick or  treating, All Saints    Church had a huge collection of  relics of the  saints, thousands of them,    collected by Frederick, and veneration of  them was one way to earn an    indulgence, for which  purpose they were  put on display once a year.  You   get 100 days  indulgence per relic. By  1520 Frederick had over  19,000  of  them, and taking that as a round  number, (19K x 100)/365 is  5,205  years  and  some change. Now, the  "days" are not, as is often  thought,  time off   from Purgatory; it is  time off from what would  otherwise have  to be   punishment here on  Earth, therefore shortening  one's stay in   Purgatory,  where there are  no earthly days, to complete  what was not  completed here  in earth.
Holy  crap that's a lot of   thinking! Oh  yeah, we've  been there before. Now  we see how out of   hand it was, and  also see that  the out of hand  thing isn't the worst  part, you can curb  the out of hand  stuff, and  it is now largely  curbed  even in the RCC,  but the worst part  remains,  the near total  eclipse  made of the good  news of salvation in  the  Gospel, getting   justification and  sanctification all mixed up.
So,    the power  and efficacy of  indulgences was the surface of a much   deeper  problem,  the obscuring of  the Gospel and the perversion of the  church's  mission  to spread it and  minister its sacraments, those   gifts of grace,  grace  coming from the  Latin for "free", gratis, from  Christ himself, in   Baptism and the  Eucharist.
A Quick Look East.
BTW,     the Eastern Church isn't off the hook here; while this indulgence    thing  was a Western thing and there is no equivalent to the remission    of  temporal punishment for sin in the Eastern Church, there was the     practice of absolution certificates, which in some places did lift     punishments but primarily were issued by the Greek Orthodox  Patriarch of     Jerusalem to pilgrims there and were distributed  abroad, which    absolved  the sins of whoever bought them -- as  distinct from an    indulgence which  does not absolve sin but remits  punishment due to    forgiven sins, which  if they're forgiven then why  is there still    punishment, holy crap brace  yourself for a lot of  thinking -- and the    proceeds paid for the heavy  costs, including  taxes, of maintaining the    shrines in the Holy Land.  Even worse than  indulgences, or at least   just  as bad, technical  differences  regardless.
Conclusion.
You     know what? The Disputation the 95 Theses called for was never held.     Something much better happened. It's called the Lutheran  Reformation,   in   which no new church was started, but the one church, the church   that   has been there all along, the church that will be  there all   along, the   only church there will ever be, was reformed  where the   Gospel is rightly   preached and the sacraments rightly  administered   after the institution   of Christ rather than that plus a hell of a lot   of thinking that added   all sorts of emendations by  Man.
This   reformation was at the  risk  of life in  the beginning from the powers   that be. Thankfully those   times are  over, but as with the indulgences   themselves, it is not that   itself  which is the main thing, but the   Gospel for which it was done.  We   celebrate this great working of the   Holy Spirit, in reforming the    church against both pressures to   maintain the old errors and pressures   to take the Reformation into   further errors, on 31 October,  Reformation   Day.
Reformation   Day, whether it's  Sunday or not, until  recently.  As if something for   which our  Lutheran fathers risked  literally  everything needs to be   moved for  the convenience of us who  benefit from  it to the nearest   Sunday to  make it easier and therefore  get more  numbers. Any of us   need police protection to safely move about  as  Lutherans that moving   it to  Sunday will change?
Thanks be to God for the reformation of his church!
And Happy Halloween while you're at it.  Happy All Saints Day (Allerheiligen) too!
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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