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To: piasa

Well, Martin Luther called for death to heretics.

In 1530 Luther advanced the view that two offences should be penalized even with death, namely sedition and blasphemy. The emphasis was thus shifted from incorrect belief to its public manifestation by word and deed. This was, however, no great gain for liberty, because Luther construed mere abstention from public office and military service as sedition and a rejection of an article of the Apostles’ Creed as blasphemy.

In a memorandum of 1531, composed by Melanchthon and signed by Luther, a rejection of the ministerial office was described as insufferable blasphemy, and the disintegration of the Church as sedition against the ecclesiastical order. In a memorandum of 1536, again composed by Melanchthon and signed by Luther, the distinction between the peaceful and the revolutionary Anabaptists was obliterated . . .

Luther may not have been too happy about signing these memoranda. At any rate, he appended postscripts to each. To the first he said,

I assent. Although it seems cruel to punish them with the sword, it is crueler that they condemn the ministry of the Word and have no well-grounded doctrine and suppress the true and in this way seek to subvert the civil order.

In any case the killing of those two monks was horrendous and un Christian and should not have happened


9 posted on 03/17/2023 1:05:47 AM PDT by Cronos
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To: Cronos

The Huron Indians seem to have disappeared—early...


10 posted on 03/17/2023 3:31:44 AM PDT by Does so ("Who is Ray Epps?"..................should be overstamped on every piece of currency...)
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