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THE POPES "APOLOGY" ABOUT ST. BARTHOLOMEWS DAY MASSACRE
September 4, 1997 (David W. Cloud, Fundamental Baptist Information Service, P.O. Box 610368, Port Huron, MI 48061-0368, fbns@wayoflife.org) - At the end of his recent trip to Paris to celebrate World Youth Day, Pope John Paul II conducted a mass attended by an estimated one million people from throughout the world. The date of this event was August 24, the anniversary of the infamous St. Bartholomew Day Massacre in 1572, in which tens of thousands of Protestant Christians were butchered by Roman Catholics at the instigation of Catholic authorities. To diffuse the controversy which was swirling around the occasion, the Pope issued an apology of sorts on August 23 at a late-night vigil with the hundreds of thousands of young people who were in Paris for the celebrations. He made the following comments as reported by Reuter and the Associated Press
Pope John Paul II states that the cause of the St. Bartholomews Day Massacre is obscure. This is a half truth. There were many obscure factors involved in the behind-the-scenes intrigue which led up to the massacre, but one very evident cause of the massacre was the repeated call by various popes for the extermination of the Protestants in France. The cause, simply put, was the incessant hatred exhibited by the Roman Catholic hierarchy toward anyone who would dare to attempt to follow Christ apart from Romanism. This is a matter of public record. Eventually a plan was devised by Catholic authorities in France to destroy the Huguenot Protestants by inviting them to a wedding. The Huguenots had been bitterly tormented and had fought in self-defense in an attempt to preserve themselves a place in the land. A peace treaty had been signed with them a short while before the St. Bartholomew Massacre, and they wanted nothing more than to dwell in peace and to worship God according to the dictates of their conscience and their understanding of the Word of God. When the Huguenots were settled in various dwellings in Paris for the wedding and were completely unsuspecting of foul play, at a preset signal they were set upon by mobs who "neither spared the aged, nor women great with child, nor even infants" (Mezerai, History of France, II, p. 1098). In three terrible days "six hundred houses were repeatedly pillaged, and 4,000 persons massacred, with all the confusion and barbarity that can be imagined" (Ibid.). Thousands of others were murdered outside of Paris. "All over France the massacre was carried out. The fearful scenes of Paris were repeated in almost all the kingdom. ... The massacre dragged out in the provinces for two long weary months until the persecutors, wearied of blood shedding, dropped their blunted swords" (Ian Paisley, The Massacre of St. Bartholomew, pp. 110,111). Pope John Paul II failed to mention the role of the popes in instigating the St. Bartholomews Day Massacre.
Pope John Paul II did not mention these historical facts in his "apology." Do not be deceived, friends. The pope has not apologized for the bloody and horrible 600-year Inquisition against humble Bible-believing saints, which was instigated formally by Pope Innocent III (1198-1216) (though it existed more informally prior to that) and was conducted mercilessly by the popes who succeeded him, century after century, until finally Rome was no longer politically capable of sustaining it in the late 1700s. THE INQUISITION WAS NOT A "MISTAKE" OR AN ISOLATED ERROR OR THE PROBLEM OF A MERE HANDFUL OF "BAD POPES." IT WAS THE FORMAL AND OFFICIAL POLICY OF THE HIGHEST LEVELS OF ROMAN CATHOLIC AUTHORITY FOR CENTURIES ON END. The pope has not admitted this; he has not condemned the Inquisition; he has not labeled his fellow popes the murderers they were. He has not cast aside his blasphemous titles (holy father, his holiness, holy pontiff, vicar of Christ). He has not cast aside his blasphemous doctrines, such as Mary the Queen of Heaven, mother of all Christians, immaculately conceived, etc. He has not rejected his false sacramental gospel which refuses to accept faith alone and Christ alone for salvation, adding, instead, Romes sacraments as a necessity for salvation. (Vatican Council II and the New Catholic Catechism plainly state that baptism and the sacraments are necessary for salvation.) He has not admitted that his "church" is no such thing, but is a man-made institution with no foundation or pattern in the Apostolic New Testament faith. Our book Rome and the Bible: Tracing the History of the Roman Catholic Church and Its Persecution of the Bible and of Bible Believers contains careful documentation of the Inquisition. It looks at each pope, from Benedict VIII (1012-1024) to Pius X (1903-1914), and exposes his role in the persecution against Gods people and Gods Book. $19.95 + $4 S/H. Way of Life Literature, P.O. Box 610368, Port Huron, MI 48061-0368, fbns@wayoflife.org. See also -- |
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