J
jmcrae
Guest
**I understand your desire to show the Church in the best light, but when the Church ruled that a Christian was guilty of heresy, such as the belief that a person should be re-baptized after becoming a believer (thereby teaching that the first baptism was of no effect scripturally, contrary to the teaching of the RCC), it was hardly something that would “foment revolution” in terms of overthrowing any secular, civil authority. **
Keep in mind, they didn’t live in a multi-cultural society back in those days. The very concept of living next door to someone who practiced a different religion or even attended a different parish church was completely unknown to them. (Jews were required to live in ghettos for precisely this reason - because it was unthinkable to live next door to someone of a different religion.)
Governments were sincerely convinced that to permit a new religion to be invented, and to have followers of this new religion living in the same area as their people, would be a source of civil unrest. (They were right, as it turned out. The wars between Protestant and Catholic, and between the various different forms of Protestantism, went on for nearly 200 years in Europe.)
But it was not only the governments who were thinking that way. I have a little news pamphlet that was written in the mid 1600s (it’s not dated, so I don’t know when exactly it was written) about a king (not named in the report; he is simply referred to as “The King”) just about got his head chopped off for suggesting that neighborhoods could be set aside for Catholics to live in, outside of London. Seven Anglican Bishops went to the palace with axes in their hands, ready to chop off his head, and when they arrived, he told them that he had changed his mind about allowing Catholics to live in England - it would continue to be illegal.
He was permitted to keep his head, for that.