Utter nonsense. Name me the church that has had the power to do this and hasn’t done it. Anglicans have done it, Lutherans have done it, Orthodox have done it. Conservative evangelicals do it these days insofar as they get the chance. Try being a Wiccan or an atheist in the Bible Belt, or even, in some areas, a Catholic.
Well, these are a few countries that are at least 85% Protestant. Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Tuvalu. I don’t really think there’s much there for any of them on grounds of abusing religious freedom. Of course, much of this rests on the phrase “insofar as they get the chance.” When there’s so many different types of Protestants, it has a tendency to exclude any one group from having unrestricted power to abuse in the first place.
And to a certain extent- now that the wars of religion are long over- we may have something of a calming influence on the Catholic Church as well.
Certainly, as in the first question (i.e., the ability of a church to provide moral clarity to a society), different churches do it differently. But just as all churches can do this to some degree, given the chance, so pretty much all churches historically have tried to establish some kind of religious monopoly, given the chance. The churches with the best record are the ones from whom this temptation has been withheld.
Then it would behoove us to withhold such temptation from one another rather than invest certain individuals with complete, unrestricted power, would it not? It’s not necessarily “less unity” and “more fragmented” just because we decide to be smart with checks and balances, limited powers, and so forth.
Again, nonsense. All churches produce romanticized, whitewashed versions of their own history. Free-church evangelicals are less invested in doing so for particular institutions because they are less invested in particular institutions, true. But they still want to believe that there have been “true Christians” who have somehow not done the nasty stuff that “professing Christians” have done.
This is true, everyone does it to some extent. I don’t think the Eastern Orthodox could do this as much as Catholics, though, at least not collectively. The Greek Orthodox, for example, have no interest in whitewashing the history of the Russian Orthodox or vice versa. While in union with each another, these are churches that will still call one another to the carpet for something that happened centuries ago and which Western Christians are only dimly aware of. When there is some diversity within a particular union, the diverse groups can act in such a way that they take some of the whitewash off each other.
It’s a little bit more of that calming influence.
Given the heavy investment Catholics have in the authority and continuity of the visible Church, it is striking how much honest historical scholarship has been done by Catholics. You won’t get a lot of that on this forum, true–folks tend to prefer apologetics masquerading as history. But Catholics can look at the dark side of their past plenty. You don’t actually seem to have much knowledge of Catholicism outside the rather narrow right-wing version prevalent on this forum.
I suppose you’re right. I probably do have a tendency to see the narrow, right-wing version as that which is strongly recommended by Catholic authority, and I may sometimes look at some of the better historical scholarship as if it were more marginal.
I agree that freedom of religion is, on the whole, better than the repression of heresy. But it’s not perfect, either, and it’s probably an intrinsically incoherent concept. You really can’t have complete freedom of religion–you have to draw lines somewhere, and the lines have to be drawn based on some conception of the good.
I’m not sure exactly what you mean by “complete freedom” or if that’s even happening somewhere, but the first line I would want to focus on drawing would be freedom from coercion. Countries are constantly being rated by various analysts according to their levels of religious freedom (which do tend to be specific and nuanced), and I’m not sure that any or all of them would quite know precisely what this intrinsically incoherent concept entails, nor would it be likely to significantly inform portions of their analysis.
My point is this. Predominantly Christian countries prior to the Reformation did not tend to do a very good job with religious freedom. And when you compare pre-Schism Europe to medieval Europe, they did some things even worse. I believe it is historically accurate to say that one of the hard, bitterly won fruits of the Reformation and the subsequent wars of religion was an overall improvement in the way that both church and state authority are exercised, along with an overall improvement in the protection of religious liberties. For pretty much all countries and all people that were somehow involved in the process. So I’m basically trying to look to some of the good in the Reformation rather than call it a deformation of Christianity that only ruined things for everyone.
Overestimated how by whom?
Overestimated by W. H. Drummond, D.D., and Dr. R. Willis. Drummond’s title reads “The Life of Michael Servetus, Who Was Entrapped, Imprisoned, and Burned by John Calvin.”
Calvin accused Servetus of heresy to the Genevan government, with the express purpose of having the government execute him. Calvin did not run the government, and did not run the court that condemned Servetus, but he did have a lot of influence over the government. He wanted Servetus beheaded, not burned, for what that’s worth. But his involvement was pretty heavy. Servetus would almost certainly not have died when and where he did if not for Calvin.
The order of events went in this way. Calvin and Servetus engaged in sharp doctrinal disputes, much of which was by letter. A man from Geneva named Willian Trie had a relative in Lyons- a Catholic- whose attention was brought to the writings of Servetus. This man, Arneys, believed Servetus was more appalling than any Protestant he’d ever seen and forwarded the letter from his relative to the Inquisition in Lyons, and on the authority of Cardinal Tournon, Servetus was arrested. He escaped after three days, but was tried in his absence. Largely on the basis of the letters he’d sent to Calvin- which he gladly submitted for the record- it was on June 17, 1552, that the Inquisition sentenced him to a very specific death: Burn slowly until he is a cinder.
A month later, Servetus showed up in Geneva. As I recall, he simply showed up at one of Calvin’s sermons and was arrested at the end of it. The Council at Geneva was opposed to Calvin at that particular time, and Calvin was unable to stop them from agreeing with the judgment that was passed a month earlier in Lyons wrt the type of execution. He was certainly in favor of capital punishment in lieu of recantation, and in this he was quite wrong. But it’s also wrong to characterize Calvin as the sole judge, jury, and executioner. The main reason for him being so intimately involved is that Servetus trusted him, or at least liked him enough to put special effort into getting him on his side.
Servetus was sentenced to death by the Geneva council on October 26. The final stage of deliberation lasted three days, involving a “greater council” and a “lesser council.” The lesser council was unanimous in concluding that Servetus should be burned alive slowly, and a majority of the greater council agreed.
It did take three hundred and fifty years, but in 1903, an “expiatory monument” was erected. It indicates support for Calvin on the whole, “yet condemning an error which was that of his age,” and goes on in support of the liberty of conscience.
A lot of people were willing to kill him for what he wrote. Calvin may have had the most direct link to the letters that Servetus wrote, but Servetus easily dies without the specific involvement of Calvin. And while he technically may have made some difference in the time and place of death, he’s not unique in this- the same could easily be said of Trie, Arneys, and Tournon. If the Catholics who initially captured him had held Servetus as they intended, Calvin’s name would be much less prominent in all of this- which would be a bit more fair in the overall assessment. It might have been unfair to someone else instead, but we don’t really know who that would be. Maybe Tournon. As is, we do know that if people are unfair, it will be to Calvin.
So can Catholics. You’re right that some Catholics would like to see religious persecution return, but (at least if we’re talking about the execution of heretics) they are a tiny minority–a loud but still relatively small minority on this forum, which is an extremely conservative one, and practically invisible in the larger Catholic population.
I’m not suggesting that Catholics in America today want to execute people or expel them from the country. I’m suggesting that some of them have demonized every aspect of the Reformation, and this can lead them to believe that superimposing Catholic ideals from the Reformation era and before is a favorable course of action to what is being done now when in reality, the way it’s done in America now is better than the way it was done in either Geneva or Lyons in the 16th century.