Answer: Obviously, Luther was considered to be heretic and was summoned to defend his theses.
Explanation: Luther, "the little monk" from Germany threatened the profitable system of indulgences and the Roman Catholic Church had to respond.
Luther was subsequently called to debate high-ranking Catholic theologians, such as Cardinal Cajetan in Augsburg (1518) and Johann Eck in Leipzig (1519) and surprised everyone with his refusal to change his views.
On the contrary, Luther even expanded his critique of the church in Rome with three major pieces in 1520. In these important documents, Luther publicly questioned the infallibility and authority of the Pope, critiqued central Roman Catholic doctrines, and he defended the priesthood of all believers. Of course, the Pope was not amused. In his papal bull, Exsurge Domine, he declared that Luther was a “wild boar that had invaded the Lord’s vineyard,” and called Luther to recant his views. Not intimidated at the slightest, Luther burned the bull and was subsequently excommunicated.
What is the answer im on the same one
Answer:
In certain times, the actual goal of the United States is countering a certain issue and want to get as much support in this “fight”, even if said support may not stand for the same “ideals” the United States supposedly stands for.
Explanation:
When the country wants to tackle a certain issue (for example, communism), they usually look for support in leaders that want to tackle this issue as well, hoping to get more fuel for this fight, yet they tend to make blind eyes to the other crimes that support may be doing.