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To: A.A. Cunningham
"One of Wycliffe’s followers, John Hus, actively promoted Wycliffe’s ideas: that people should be permitted to read the Bible in their own language, and they should oppose the tyranny of the Roman church that threatened anyone possessing a non-Latin Bible with execution.

Hus was burned at the stake in 1415, with Wycliffe’s manuscript Bibles used as kindling for the fire. The last words of John Hus were that, “in 100 years, God will raise up a man whose calls for reform cannot be suppressed.” Almost exactly 100 years later, in 1517, Martin Luther nailed his famous 95 Theses of Contention (a list of 95 issues of heretical theology and crimes of the Roman Catholic Church) into the church door at Wittenberg.

The prophecy of Hus had come true! Martin Luther went on to be the first man to print the Bible in the German language. Foxe’s Book of Martyrs records that in that same year, 1517, seven people were burned at the stake by the Roman Catholic Church for the crime of teaching their children to say the Lord’s Prayer in English rather than Latin."

Those urban myths are a bear aren't they.

54 posted on 09/27/2005 9:59:14 PM PDT by MissAmericanPie
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To: MissAmericanPie
95 issues of heretical theology and crimes of the Roman Catholic Church

I find it ironic that Martin Luther would attempt to "rectify" these "heresies" with theology of his own that had not been believed by the Christian Church for the first 1500 years of its life.

Martin Luther wasn't "reforming" he was creating a entirely new Church inconsistent with the history and theology of the Church before him.
55 posted on 09/28/2005 3:22:56 AM PDT by mike182d ("Let fly the white flag of war." - Zapp Brannigan)
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