Which statements accurately describe the Catholic Church's response to the Reformation? Choose all answers that are correct. A.
The Church established guidelines for educating priests. B. Church leaders issued a statement encouraging Christians everywhere to interpret the Bible for themselves. C. The pope hired scholars to translate the Bible and Church rites into the various language of Europe. D. The pope encouraged the faithful to become monks and nuns and devote their lives to caring for the sick and helping the poor.
D. the pope encouraged the faithful to become monks and nuns and devote their lives to caring for the sick and helping the poor B. The pope hired scholars to translate the Bible and church rites into the various language of Europe.
The correct answers were A) The Church established guidelines for educating priests and D) The pope encouraged the faithful to become monks and nuns and devote their lives to caring for the sick and helping the poor.
The statements that accurately described the Catholic Church's response to the Reformation were the following: The Church established guidelines for educating priests and the pope encouraged the faithful to become monks and nuns and devote their lives to caring for the sick and helping the poor.
Catholic Church had to react to the Reformation movement and launched was is known as the "Counter-Reformation." It started in 1545 with the Council of Trent. Catholic Church wanted to maintain the presence and dominion it had before the Reformation. It expulsed Protestants and presented new documents for ecclesiastical reconfiguration, confiscated Protestant land, and started heresy trials.
The civil war was fought in the United States of America. It was fought between Northern side of the country and the southern side of the country. But in sides of the condition of Africa Americans and the people who belonged to the black community was the same
Answer: the United States government and the Native American tribes of the greater Puget Sound region in the recently formed Washington Territory, one of about thirteen treaties between the U.S. and Native Nations in what is now Washington.