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What Happened on Halloween 500 Years Ago That Challenged Religion and Compels Repetition?

I’m a lover of history, celebrate it unashamedly, and try to infect others with my passion. I believe what civil rights activist Marcus Garvey said, “People without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.”

Vladimir Lenin, Communist leader who launched the Russian Revolution exactly 100 years ago this month, taught: “If you can separate people from their history, they are easily persuaded.”

Recently my wife and I took our vacation and drove to Montgomery, Alabama. We spent almost a week in this city because it is brimming with historical events that shaped social justice in our nation. What a week, and apart from our inexpensive motel, almost everything was free!

God is a lover of history, as evidenced by His meticulous attention to genealogies in Scripture. Consider also His directives to commemorate significant events from the past so as not to forget what happened.

Unfortunately, scores in America are shamefully ignorant of history, as are children who are not taught it, or taught it inaccurately in school. Man-on-the-street interviews regarding this reality may be humorous, but they’re often embarrassingly painful for me to watch.

Philosopher George Santayana told us, “Those who fail to learn the lessons of history are condemned to repeat them.”

Apart from the birth of Jesus Christ, what happened on Oct. 31,1517 was arguably one of the most monumental, revolutionary moments in human history. It was a defining, watershed event that left a brontosaurus-like imprint. Do you know what it is?

If you have children and grandchildren, take time to impart this valuable history lesson to them. Challenge them with the wisdom of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who told us, “We are not makers of history. We are made by history.”

Oct. 31, 1517

It’s hard to believe that in a matter of days we will commemorate the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. A religious zealot and provocateur ignited a firestorm that changed the entire world!

Martin Luther was a 21-year-old German Catholic studying to be a lawyer when he faced a violent thunderstorm threatening his life. “I was besieged by the terror and agony of sudden death!” he later wrote. He made a vow on the spot to join a religious order if he was spared, which he was.

Martin joined an Augustinian monastery and was obsessive in observing what he thought was Christian duty necessary to find and maintain a right standing with God. Becoming a monk, he taught at the newly founded University of Wittenberg and later made a pilgrimage to Rome.

Climbing the steps of the Basilica on his knees, he pondered the corruption he saw in the Roman Catholic Church surrounding him. Due to Renaissance influence, reconstruction of Saint Peter’s Basilica and other edifices required money, so unscrupulous spiritual leaders used Masses and indulgences (believed to reduce sin’s punishment and release people from afterlife suffering), as manipulative fundraising tactics.

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