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Description
The Amish today are peaceable folk, but five centuries ago their ancestors were seen as some of the most dangerous people in Europe. They were radicals - Protestants - who tore apart the Catholic C...hurch. In the fourth part of his History of Christianity Diarmaid MacCulloch makes sense of the Reformation, and of how a faith based on obedience and authority gave birth to one based on individual conscience. He shows how Luther wrote hymns to teach people the message of the Bible, and how a tasty sausage became the rallying cry for Ulrich Zwingli - a Swiss Reformer - to tear down statues of saints, allow married clergy and deny that communion bread and wine were the body and blood of Christ. "Jesus ascended into heaven" declared Zwingli, "he's sitting at the right hand of the Father, not on a table here in Zurich."
Metadata describing this Open University video programme
Series: A history of Christianity
First transmission date: 26-11-2009
Original broadcast channel: BBC4
Published: 2009
Rights Statement:
Restrictions on use:
Duration: 00:59:00
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Producer: Catherine McCarthy
Presenter: Diarmid MacCulloch
Contributors: Clara García Ayluardo; Peter Dettweiler; Isabelle Graessle; Sarah Herzer; Thomas Herzer; Andrew Lumsden; Diarmaid MacCulloch; Ruth Pfister; Kathi La Roche; Andreas Schweiser; Steven Scott; Jay Yvon
Publisher: BBC Open University
Link to related site: Website: http://www.open2.net/christianity/index.html
Subject terms: Christianity; Church history
Production number: NMGX004B
Videofinder number: 81293
Available to public: no