Luther magnifies the inherent potency of his …

Years: 1396 - 1539

Luther magnifies the inherent potency of his ideas by articulating them in a language that is without rival in clarity and force.

He strives to make the Scriptures accessible to ordinary worshipers by translating them into vernacular German.

This he does with such genius that the German dialect he used will become the written language of all of Germany.

Without Luther's translation of the Bible, Germany might have come to use a number of mutually incomprehensible languages, as is the case in the northwestern part of the Holy Roman Empire, where local dialects evolve into what is now modern Dutch.

Luther also writes hymns that are still sung in Christian religious services all over the world.

A less exalted reason for the wide distribution of Luther's doctrines is the development of printing with movable type.

The Reformation creates a demand for all kinds of religious writings.

The readership is so great that the number of books printed in Germany increases from about one hundred and fifty in 1518 to nearly a thousand six years later.

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