Vitrinentext
Johannes Herman, Pfarrer und Seelsorger von Oster, tritt in dem Flugblatt als Zeuge und Berichterstatter auf: Er schreibt vom einem „bösen Weib“, das in einem Wirtshaus unablässig geflucht und sich so mit Leib und Seele dem Teufel übereignet habe. Der Teufel habe die Frau zu sich genommen, sie in die Höhe getragen und in vier Teile zerrissen. Ihre Eingeweide habe er dann auf einen Tisch in dem Wirtshaus gelegt. Die anwesenden Gäste hätten dies als Mahnung Gottes zu Buße und Umkehr gedeutet.
Johannes Herman, parish priest and pastor of Oster, appears in the leaflet as witness and reporter: He writes about an “evil woman” swearing unceasingly in an inn and thus making herself over to the devil heart and soul. The devil, he says, has taken the woman, carried her up and torn her into four parts. Then he has put her entrails on a table in the inn. The guests present have allegedly interpreted that as an exhortation by God to do penance and to convert.
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Johannes Herman, parish priest and pastor of Oster, appears in the leaflet as witness and reporter: He writes about an “evil woman” swearing unceasingly in an inn and thus making herself over to the devil heart and soul. The devil, he says, has taken the woman, carried her up and torn her into four parts. Then he has put her entrails on a table in the inn. The guests present have allegedly interpreted that as an exhortation by God to do penance and to convert.
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