Inquisition
The special court set up to find and kill heretics is called an inquisition. It was established by the Roman Catholic Church in the Middle Ages to combat religious dissent and ensure doctrinal conformity. The Spanish Inquisition is one of the most well-known examples of this type of court.
A church court which investigated, tried and convicted heretics was the Inquisition.Roman Catholic AnswerThe Inquisition.
Catholic viewed them as not belong to the group.They sin a sacrilege and they deny the teaching of the church as an infallible teaching.
.Roman Catholic AnswerMost of the people who protested against the Church in the sixteenth century were heretics and apostates. Today they are, more politically correct, known as "protestant reformers" by those who followed them.
The Albigensians, the Cathars, and John Calvin were all Catholic heretics who left the Church.
According to the Catholic Church, members of the orthodox Churches are technically schismatics, because they do not recognize the pope but have the same basic beliefs. Protestants are technically heretics because they do not believe certain doctrines of the Catholic Church.
The answer is not Fayetteville. In 1796, Georgia's first Roman Catholic Church was Established in Wilkes County. Next, a second Roman Catholic Church was established in Savannah in 1801
They would be known as apostates or even heretics.
Henry VIII broke away from the Roman Catholic Church in 1534, and established the Church of England.
Catherine de Medicis most definitely supported the Catholic Church against the heretics.
John Calvin's theories did not affect the Chuch - just as many heretics who preceded him did not affect the Church.
There were never any slips of paper sold by the Catholic Church to ensure salvation. You are thinking of a lie which has been perpetuated by the heretics who revolted agains the Catholic Church in the sixteenth century and started the protestant movement.