Roman Catholic AnswerNo, Johann Gutenberg died a child of the Church and was buried from the Church. Martin Luther was excommunicated for his intransigent heresy and for breaking his solemn vows as a priest and religious; not to mention leading others away from the Church established by Our Blessed Lord for their salvation.
Roman Catholic AnswerNo, Johann Gutenberg died a child of the Church and was buried from the Church. Martin Luther was excommunicated for his intransigent heresy and for breaking his solemn vows as a priest and religious; not to mention leading others away from the Church established by Our Blessed Lord for their salvation.
.Catholic AnswerThe Catholic Church was never "threatened" by Martin Luther.
.Catholic AnswerThe Church was, and is, the Catholic Church.
Luther was a Catholic monk .
The individual who had the greatest impact on the spread of Martin Luther's ideas was Johann Gutenberg, with his invention of the printing press. Gutenberg's press enabled the rapid reproduction and distribution of Luther's writings, particularly the Ninety-Five Theses, which criticized the Catholic Church's practices. This technological advancement allowed Luther's ideas to reach a wide audience across Europe, sparking the Protestant Reformation and facilitating the spread of Reformed thought far beyond what would have been possible through handwritten manuscripts.
The Catholic Church has never issued rewards for anybody. The only thing that the Catholic Church did to Martin Luther was to formalize his excommunication, see it at the link below:
No, Martin Luther King was a Baptist, a church which split off from the Church of England. It, as well as the Church of England, is considered as a Protestant denomination and not a part of the Catholic Church.
Martin Luther was a Catholic monk who sought to reform the Catholic Church.
The Catholic Church never abducted little girls and, no, this was not a complaint of Martin Luther.
I hardly think the Catholic Church would proclaim him as a saint since the Church considers him to be a heretic.
.Catholic AnswerThere was never a "war" with Martin Luther and the Church, the question is not valid.