I don’t agree that “It reasonably appeared to people”…
I find no official teachings of the Church demanding, authorizing or even suggesting the burning of heretics.
If it was reasonably accepted by people at that time because they ASSUMED it to be a teaching of the Church…again… I find no official Church documents condemning anyone other than Luther for dissenting against the assumed teaching…
So you just ignore the one very clear document that we do have?
Why does it not count because it’s Luther? This makes no sense.
That document, together with the well-documented practice of handing heretics over for execution, the explicit defense of the practice by theologians, and the clear assumptions by everybody living at the time that the Church believed heretics should be killed, is more than enough evidence for any reasonable person.
People on this forum simply refuse to believe the historical evidence because it messes with their ideology.
I urge you to consult any reputable secondary source on the subject, starting with Brad Gregory’s chapter on “The Willingness to Kill” in his excellent book
Salvation at Stake.
Or, on a somewhat more popular level, here’s
Taylor Marshall, who says (rightly) that St. Thomas Aquinas was quite confident that his position was Church teaching. Now I recognize that this doesn’t make it so. But Aquinas was no dummy–his impression of the “ordinary Magisterium” would not have been a naive or poorly informed one.
Again, please, note how I’m putting it–I’m saying that most people between about 1200 and 1700, including extremely learned and thoughtful people like Aquinas, assumed that Catholic teaching supported the death penalty for heretics. I am not saying that they were right. I am saying that they clearly thought this, and that they did not think it lightly or carelessly or without any reason.
Hence, I argue that discerning just what is the authentic teaching of the Church is not necessarily always as easy as “conservative” or “orthodox” Catholics claim today.
Edwin