LUTHER AND POPE LEO X
Luther’s work began to gain traction and spread rapidly across Europe, creating a situation that called for the Roman church to act swiftly and decisively but on the contrary, its response was slow and bungling. The reason for this was the skepticism of Pope Leo X, who being head of the most powerful ecclesiastical authority on the Earth, didn’t really believe in Christianity. But where Leo failed the Emperor Maximilian sat up and took notice, identifying the inherent dangers of the movement gaining momentum at Wittenberg, he immediately wrote letters to the Pope and to Diet of the Empire at Augsburg, bringing to their attention the crisis facing the authority and influence of the church and calling them to take immediate action.
His efforts paid off and both Pope Leo and the diet moved to stifle the new movement in its infancy, calling for Luther to appear in Rome to answer to the charge of heresy within 60 days of receiving notice. Luther knew that to go to Rome was the equivalent of attending his own funeral but to refuse to go was no better. Pope Leo, not only had the power to excommunicate him but to crush him as previous popes had crushed out the likes of the Hussite movement.