The document discusses the evolution of the late medieval Church in England from the period of conversion to the Reformation. It argues that the Church responded to the needs of the people by undergoing a process of "democratization". This involved increasing lay involvement and questioning of officials. Tensions arose as religious practices proliferated without authority and individuals constructed their own religious beliefs. The Church's monopoly on learning and ability to maintain orthodoxy weakened. Ultimately, the Church was overcome by the very forces it once opposed as it shifted priority from avoiding worldly contamination to caring for souls.