Contarini wouldn’t you say that for the most part the reformation in the countries where it took place was more about power struggling and less about doctrinal issues
No. Why would I say that?
(those that backed the reformers were more interested in money, power, glory . . .etc.)?
But that’s quite different. Political leaders are, generally, interested in political priorities. Even there it isn’t just about money, power, and glory. If you read Thomas Brady’s work on the Strasbourg political leader Jacob Sturm, for instance, you see someone who actually cared about theology and certainly cared about Christian unity and the welfare of the Christian city of Strasbourg. Peace, order, brotherhood–these were high priorities for many political leaders of the sixteenth century. Sure, many of them may have mouthed these ideals cynically. But not all–and it’s hard to read the heart, so I’d be cautious about a purely cynical interpretation even of someone like Henry VIII, tempting as it is. Sturm is someone I can hold up as clearly motivated by genuine Christian conviction, and I’d say the same about Emperor Charles V. Not always a nice person–not by any means a candidate for sainthood–but someone who took his responsibilities as a Christian ruler very seriously.
Where I agree with you, of course, is that even sincerely Christian political leaders viewed things more pragmatically than the theologians did. Brady talks a lot about Sturm’s disagreements with the Strasbourg Protestant theologian Martin Bucer (I wrote my dissertation on Bucer, so this is the aspect of Brady’s work I know best). When the Protestants were defeated by Charles V, Bucer blamed Protestant sin and urged the people of Strasbourg to repent, call on God for help, and defy the emperor (in imitation of Hezekiah’s actions when attacked by Assyria). Sturm took a different approach. He wasn’t willing to destroy his beloved city in the name of Bucer’s uncompromising religious agenda. So he helped negotiate a treaty with the emperor which involved among other things giving some of the churches inside Strasbourg back to the Catholics (something Bucer and other Protestant Reformers regarded as a surrender to Antichrist). Bucer had to leave Strasbourg as a result of this treaty.
I give this example because I am trying to flesh out for you how the interaction between political and theological priorities actually worked in the sixteenth century. Admittedly, Sturm was an unusually intelligent, pious, and honorable politician for that or any era (at least that’s how he comes across in Brady’s work). But he wasn’t unique.
Another false assumption in your question, I think, is that “those who backed the Reformers” (i.e., the political leaders) were the ones whose actions really counted. But often the political leaders found their hands tied because preachers and religious writers had stirred up public opinion to the point that defying it would have led to violence and chaos (apart from the fact that the political leaders were often sincerely influenced by religious ideas themselves).
The idea that the Reformation was all about power and money and not about religion is a kind of pop Marxism. It’s a weird approach for Catholics to take–and of course you take it selectively, applying it only to those religious movements of which you disapprove. But to be consistent, you’d have to apply it to the actions of Catholic rulers in the sixteenth century as well–and beyond that, to the actions of medieval Catholic rulers (including those who embraced Christianity in the first place) and perhaps most obviously to Constantine and the other emperors who made Christianity the religion of the late Roman Empire. And as you know, people often do this, dismissing all of Trinitarian Christianity (or more narrowly and inconsistently, just Catholicism, or whatever other parts of the Christian tradition a given polemicists wants to debunk) as nothing but a facade for Constantine’s political ambitions.
This approach is unwarranted across the board. It’s a bad way to look at history, period. Why can’t we instead take *all *kinds of motivations seriously?
Edwin