Friday, March 07, 2008

Martin Luther may be rehabilitated by church

Pope Benedict XVI may rehabilitate Martin Luther, the German theologian excommunicated by the Catholic Church in the 16th century, Italy's La Stampa reported on Thursday.

At a meeting with theologians scheduled for September, the pope is to argue that Luther, who was condemned of rebelling against church authority, did not intend to split Christianity but wanted to rid the church of corruption.

The meeting is to take place behind the closed doors at the papal summer residence, Castelgandolfo.

Luther (1483-1546) translated the Bible into vernacular German, making it more accessible to ordinary people.

As a result of his revolutionary theological views, which stressed the differences between the Bible and church practices of the day, Luther was formally excommunicated in 1521 by Pope Leo X.

"The idea of the Pope and his researchers is that Luther had more Catholic views than history has judged," the newspaper said.

This week the Vatican is also planning to complete the rehabilitation of Galileo, the scientist who was put on trial for heresy for putting forward the theory that the Earth moves around the Sun.

The Catholic Church plans to erect a statue of him to mark the 400th anniversary of his development of the telescope in 2009.
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