Before you start casting stones about persecutions from Protestants, you better look around there was persecutions from the Catholics. For example:
ohann Esch and Henrich Voes, Martyrs
Appropos of my conversation with Richard Abanes, on July 1, 1523, Christians who confessed the Apostles Creed but denied trifles like salvation by grace, for Christ’s sake, through faith burned Johann Esch and Henrich Voes at the stake at Brussels, Belgium, because these two young Augustinian monks didn’t think that the central doctrine of the Christian faith was a trifle after all.
Esch and Voes were the very first martyrs of the Reformation. When Martin Luther heard of their deaths, he responded by writing his very first hymn, Ein neues Lied wir heben an (Now Shall a New Song Be Begun, aka With Help of God I Fain Would Tell), which appears in The Lutheran Hymnal as Flung To the Heedless Winds.
Many other Lutherans would follow. As it happens, the month of July ends with the anniversary of the burning of another Lutheran martyr, Robert Barnes, by Henry VIII (on July 31, 1540. Henry’s own Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, would be burned by Henry’s daughter, Bloody Mary). Barnes first recanted and then reasserted his confession of Christianity’s central doctrine. Historian Carolly Erickson writes that he died with such courage that dozens were converted to the Evangelical (in the original sense) faith on the spot. When Luther heard the news, it was a personal blow; “this blessed martyr, St. Robertus,” as Luther called him, had been a guest at the Reformer’s table many times
There is enough blame on both sided.
