The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II..

The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 420 pages of information about The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II..

CENTURY XIII.

In the far west of Europe paganism still struggled against Christianity, and from A.D. 1230 to 1280 a long, fierce war was waged against the Prussians, to confirm them in the Christian faith; the Teutonic knights of St. Mary succeeded finally in their apostolic efforts, and at last “established Christianity and fixed their own dominion in Prussia” (p. 309), whence they made forays into the neighbouring countries, and “pillaged, burned, massacred, and ruined all before them.”  In Spain, Christianity had a yet sadder triumph, for there the civilized Moors were falling under the brutal Christians, and the “garden of the world” was being invaded by the hordes of the Roman Church.  The end, however, had not yet come.  In France, we see the erection of THE INQUISITION, the most hateful and fiendish tribunal ever set up by religion.  The heretical sects were spreading rapidly in southern provinces of France, and Innocent III., about the commencement of this century, sent legates extraordinary into the southern provinces of France to do what the bishops had left undone, and to extirpate heresy, in all its various forms and modifications, without being at all scrupulous in using such methods as might be necessary to effect this salutary purpose.  The persons charged with this ghostly commission were Rainier, a Cistercian monk, Pierre de Castelnau, archdeacon of Maguelonne, who became also afterwards a Cistercian friar.  These eminent missionaries were followed by several others, among whom was the famous Spaniard, Dominic, founder of the order of preachers, who, returning from Rome in the year 1206, fell in with these delegates, embarked in their cause, and laboured both by his exhortations and actions in the extirpation of heresy.  These spiritual champions, who engaged in this expedition upon the sole authority of the pope, without either asking the advice, or demanding the succours of the bishops, and who inflicted capital punishment upon such of the heretics as they could not convert by reason and argument, were distinguished in common discourse by the title of inquisitors, and from them the formidable and odious tribunal called the Inquisition derived its origin (pp. 343, 344).  In A.D. 1229, a council of Toulouse “erected in every city a council of inquisitors consisting of one priest and two laymen” (Ibid).  In A.D. 1233, Gregory IX. superseded this tribunal by appointing the Dominican monks as inquisitors, and the pope’s legate in France thereupon went from city to city, wherever these monks had a monastery, and there appointed some of their number “inquisitors of heretical pravity.”  The princes of Europe were then persuaded to lend the aid of the State to the work of blood, and to commit to the flames those who were handed over as heretics to the civil power by the inquisitors.  The plan of working was most methodical.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Freethinker's Text Book, Part II. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.