(The first two posts are from 'I8th Century Beliefs' thread). I'll reply in the third post.
event horizon wrote:The Jews were expelled from Spain - in which they were given a year to pack up their possessions and leave - if they did not convert to Christianity.
The forced conversions you are probably referring to were against Jews who had 'converted' to Christianity. There's a difference between the two, but again, someone who butchers history as often as you do tends not to care about the details.No where in your quote does it say that when Luther was trying to convert Jews he did NOT believe that the Jews were responsible for killing Jesus.
Please don't move the goal posts. Your last post asked for what I provided.Nope, I don't feel like consulting Google to verify your new revelation that Luther hated Jews because they refused to accept his message, and not because of what the Bible blames them for.
andI wasn't aware that Luther hated Jews and called for synagogues to be burnt etc because they refused to convert to Christianity - perhaps you have some references for this that I could look up to verify?
The point of contention wasn't over what Luther believed but why he began to dislike the Jews. Indeed, Luther surely believed that Jews - the leadership, for instance, were responsible for Jesus' death when he wrote treatises against the Jews just as he believed the same thing when he wrote in defense of the Jews.
Unless, of course, you have some new historical insight that Martin Luther had a theological change of heart when he was defending the Jewish people as when he condemned them. If you do, then surely post it. I await with baited breath.This is a stretch - and thus far no evidence has been produced of this novel view.
Well, I can only explain this belief based on your inability to read plain English, in which the article says Luther passionately defended Jews from Antisemitism only to change course when the Jews did not accept Protestantism, or your ignorance on Martin Luther.