Sebastian Castellio (1515–1563) – Dissidenz und Toleranz
Beiträge zu einer internationalen Tagung auf dem Monte Verità in Ascona 2015
Oliver Bach, Mariano Delgado, Michael Egger, Max Engammare, Günter Frank, Bruce Gordon, Ralph Häfner, Hans-Martin Kirn, Sonja Klimek, Daniela Kohler, Wilhelm Kühlmann, Barbara Mahlmann-Bauer, Michael Multhammer, Uwe Plath, Tarald Rasmussen, Stefania Salvadori, Kilian Schindler, Wilhelm Schmidt-Biggemann, Herman J Selderhuis, Violet Soen, Peter Stotz, Zsombor Tóth, Mirjam van Veen, Gary K. Waite, Günther Wassilowsky, Siegrid Westphal, Cornel Zwierlein
Castellio’s plea for religious tolerance and his refusal of prosecution of dissenters are as relevant today as they had been in 1554 when Michel Servet’s burning at the stake occasioned Castellio’s protest. The articles analyze Castellio’s anonymous treaty De haereticis an sint persequendi (in Roland H. Bainton’s translation: Concerning heretics) in the original context and the world of religious dissent around Basel. Castellio instigated debates about tolerance which proved to be crucial for the self-fashioning of protestantism and the claim for a reformatio continua. Castellio’s lesser known writings also argue for religious ideas and basic moral norms about which agreement can reached beyond confessional controversies. His vision of various religious communities which peacefully interact under the roof of a neutral government still inspires interreligious discourse today. When Spinoza is praised for the idea of a society where liberty of conscience is granted as a prerequisite for prosperity and peace, Castellio and his allies provided him the tools for such a modern vision of how a neutral state may enhance individual enterprise and pursuit of happiness.