Asked by Makayla
Why did some of Ulrich Zwingli’s supporters separate from him and move in a more “radical” direction? (select all that apply)
They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too slow.
They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too radical.
They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too expensive.
They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too much like Luther’s reforms.
They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too little.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
- They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too slow.
- They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too much like Luther’s reforms.
- They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too little.
Brief explanation: Radical followers (notably the Anabaptists) felt Zwingli compromised too much with civic authorities and kept too many traditional practices (including infant baptism), so they wanted faster, more thorough changes and a sharper break from both Zwingli and Luther.
- They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too much like Luther’s reforms.
- They claimed Zwingli’s reforms were too little.
Brief explanation: Radical followers (notably the Anabaptists) felt Zwingli compromised too much with civic authorities and kept too many traditional practices (including infant baptism), so they wanted faster, more thorough changes and a sharper break from both Zwingli and Luther.
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