Originally Posted by
curlyqlink
History does not bear this out; quite the opposite in fact. Heresy was long a punishable offense, the trials carried out by ecclesiastical courts. There's a long, undeniable record of Bible-literate believers not merely brow-beating doubters and dissenters, but literally beating, torturing them into repentance and sending them off this mortal coil. Since these inquisitors believed in an all-powerful, perfect, good Creator, their logic was faultless. God-deniers were the opposite of good, and if their message spread, it would jeopardize souls. In fact, if a few passes with a red hot iron would convince an apostate to repent, they were really doing said apostate a favor. The method is cruel, but the logic is undeniable... if the premise is accepted, that is, the premise of a wise, just, one true God.
We now have mostly a kinder, gentler sort of religious belief. Greater tolerance is wonderful, I'm all for it. But the impetus for tolerance didn't come from a sudden theological reinterpretation of the Bible-- it came from considerations of practicality, secular, and mostly material, considerations