CHHI 525 Test 1, 2
CHHI 525 Test 1 and Test 2
Test 1
- By some estimates, Europe’s population fell by two-thirds between 1300 and 1450.
 - The Conciliar Movement sought to end conflicts between European monarchs by calling for political assemblies.
 - Catherine of Siena played an important role in ending the “Babylonian Captivity of the Church.”
 - Which of the following was a result of the political, social, and religious changes of the late Middle Ages?
 - The term “Renaissance” was used to describe a historical period for the first time in
 - “Christian Hebraism” took an interest in Hebrew language and Jewish history
 - Girolamo Savonarola was an ardent supporter of the Renaissance in Florence
 - Historical evidence proves that Renaissance humanism was a rejection of Christian faith and morals.
 - Elector Frederick the Wise of Saxony is credited with saving Luther’s life.
 - The Reformation shifted criteria for a good marriage toward mutual affection.
 - Which of the following groups claimed to carry on Luther’s theological legacy?
 - Support for the Reformation was sometimes a matter of political strategy.
 - Heinrich Bullinger
 - Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religionexhibits the theological influence of
 - The city of Geneva was a member of the Swiss Confederation.
 - His friendship with Martin Bucer had a deep influence on Calvin’s theology.
 - Michael Sattler
 - Which of the following was a branch of sixteenth-century Anabaptism?
 - Ignatius of Loyola taught his followers absolute obedience to the pope.
 - The Peace of Westphalia (1648)
 - Which of the following strategies was employed by Elizabeth I’s Catholic enemies?
 - Catholics became the objects of bloody persecution under Queen Mary I.
 - Henry VIII never wholeheartedly embraced Luther’s ideas.
 - Which of the following was known as an ardent Catholic?
 - The Elizabethan Settlement was essentially a return to Protestantism.
 - Discuss the ways in which Archbishop Cranmer furthered the Reformation in England.
 - Compare and contrast three different Anabaptist groups. What made each one unique? In what sense can we refer to them all as “Anabaptists”?
 
Test 2
- Jacobus Arminius denied the doctrine of original sin.
 - During the English Civil War, Oliver Cromwell’s New Model Army took up arms against
 - Basic Puritan theology in both England and New England was set forth in the teachings of
 - “Hypothetical Universalism” or “Four-Point Calvinism” is a teaching associated with
 - Which of the following was NOT a Holy Roman Emperor?
 - Some seventeenth-century Christians sought relief from the political upheaval and the devastation of war, famine, and disease in
 - The Magdeburg Centurieswas written to defend Roman Catholicism.
 - Art of what period emphasized the emotional, the turbulent, and the grandiose?
 - Most seventeenth-century “moderns” denied the authority of Scripture.
 - Both Catholics and Protestants in the seventeenth century believed that Scripture’s authority stems from the authority of its divine author.
 - Absolute monarchy was difficult to implement in actual practice.
 - Who were Russian rulers who claimed absolute power in the 17th century?
 - Most seventeenth-century European monarchs believed that their authority derived from the consent of the people.
 - Isaac Newton believed that natural philosophy (science) and biblical revelation did not contradict each other.
 - The philosopheswere masters of propaganda and self-promotion.
 - Atheism was associated with social anarchy by some philosophes.
 - Which of the following is known as the “father of biblical criticism”?
 - The pejorative name “Dr. Squintum” was used by his detractors to describe
 - The 1689 Act of Toleration granted Dissenters the same rights as Anglicans.
 - Latitudinarianism sought to make Christianity more acceptable to intellectuals.
 - Which of the following individuals is best known for his arguments against deism?
 - Antoine Court
 - Unigenituswas a papal bull that defended the doctrines of Jansenism.
 - Jesuits supported the absolute authority of the pope.
 - Critics of Jansenism accused its followers of being crypto-Protestants.
 - Compare and contrast the experiences of Jansenism, Protestantism, and Gallican Catholicism in France during the Age of Lights.
 - Discuss the emergence, characteristics, and legacy of German Pietism.