The uncomfortable question is not whether such events happened. It is how they were made morally possible by institutions that claimed exclusive access to divine truth.
By Religion: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
WHEN BELIEF BECOMES PROCEDURE
The European witch trials were not random outbreaks of hysteria alone. They were sustained through legal manuals, theological justification, and civic cooperation. Works like the Malleus Maleficarum (1487) explicitly framed witch-hunting as a duty of Christian governance, merging superstition with judicial procedure (Kors & Peters, 1972).
Here is the structural issue: when belief becomes law, disagreement becomes crime. Once disagreement becomes crime, punishment becomes virtue.
A system does not need evil people to produce atrocities. It only needs permission structures that redefine cruelty as obedience.
THE MORAL AUTHORITY PROBLEM
Religious institutions in Europe often positioned themselves as arbiters of salvation while simultaneously authorizing coercion against perceived spiritual threats. The contradiction is not subtle. It is institutionalized.
When a priest blesses a sentence of death while holding a symbol of forgiveness, the cognitive dissonance is not in the victim. It is in the framework that allows moral purity and violence to occupy the same moral vocabulary without collapse.
Michel Foucault’s analyses of power suggest that institutions do not merely enforce rules; they produce “truth regimes” that define what counts as real, normal, or heretical (Foucault, 1977). Under such regimes, burning someone alive can be reinterpreted not as brutality but as purification.
The question writes itself:
If salvation requires participation in violence, what exactly is being saved?
HYSTERIA, GENDER, AND CONTROL
Historical records show that accusations of witchcraft disproportionately targeted women, especially those outside traditional power structures: widows, healers, the poor, and the socially isolated (Levack, 2013).
This is not accidental. Control systems often seek predictable targets. Marginalized individuals are easier to frame as threats when explanatory frameworks already define them as spiritually vulnerable or morally suspect.
The “witch” was less a person than a category—an administrative label for fear, misfortune, and social tension.
So another question emerges:
When a society labels vulnerability as evil, what kind of society is it building?
CROWD MORALITY AND THE COMFORT OF PARTICIPATION
The surrounding crowd in such scenes is often treated as background. That is a mistake. Collective participation—whether active or passive—matters as much as the authority that authorizes it.
Social psychology has long shown how group settings can normalize extreme behavior through conformity pressures and diffusion of responsibility (Milgram, 1963). The presence of a shared moral narrative reduces individual resistance.
People do not always ask, “Is this right?” They ask, “Is this permitted?”
And permission, once granted by authority, is often experienced as moral relief.
The most striking irony embedded in the described scene is linguistic: salvation is invoked in proximity to execution.
Salvation, in theological terms, implies rescue from ultimate harm. Yet here, harm is administered in its name. This produces a moral inversion where destruction is reframed as protection, and suffering is justified as necessity.
If salvation requires burning dissent, is it salvation—or control wearing sacred language?
MODERN ECHOES WITHOUT THE TORCHES
It would be convenient to treat these events as sealed history. That comfort is fragile. Modern societies rarely burn people at stakes for heresy, but mechanisms of moral exclusion persist in different forms: institutional punishment, ideological purity tests, and the social destruction of dissenters.
The tools change. The logic often remains.
If a belief system requires unquestionable authority to define who deserves compassion and who deserves punishment, does it reduce harm—or simply standardize it?
Foucault, M. (1977). Discipline and punish: The birth of the prison. Pantheon Books.
Kors, A. C., & Peters, E. (1972). Witchcraft in Europe, 400–1700: A documentary history. University of Pennsylvania Press.
Levack, B. P. (2013). The witch-hunt in early modern Europe (4th ed.). Routledge.
Milgram, S. (1963). Behavioral study of obedience. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67(4), 371–378.