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Heresy and Heretics

lori4dogs

New Member
"Inquisitors are not secular authorities. You have been brain washed good.
The most brutal and ugly punishment and death was handed out by the RCC itself."

Fundamental Baptist revision

An inquisition as a formal Church process was not codified until the thirteenth century. This formal institution was primarily to reserve to the Church the right to address heresy, as opposed to mob rule and the oft-incoherent secular courts that had frequently handled heresy over the previous two hundred years.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
"Inquisitors are not secular authorities. You have been brain washed good.
The most brutal and ugly punishment and death was handed out by the RCC itself."

Fundamental Baptist revision

An inquisition as a formal Church process was not codified until the thirteenth century. This formal institution was primarily to reserve to the Church the right to address heresy, as opposed to mob rule and the oft-incoherent secular courts that had frequently handled heresy over the previous two hundred years.
So if the Baptists determine that the Catholics hold to atrocious unbiblical heresy we should convene a council and make a decree to exterminate all Catholics. This is the Christian, the Christ-like attitude to take towards people? No, of course not. But it was the RCC way. Just look to history.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
The Albigensian movement in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries was a heresy that grew in southern France. Albigensians rejected the sacraments and believed that the "evil god" of the Old Testament had created the physical world. In 1208, they killed a papal representative.

Real pacifists DHK.
I see. So even if you can prove that one Albigense killed one Catholic, that justly gives the entire RCC reason to massacre thousands upon thousands of Albigenses, no matter what you think they believe. Their beliefs have nothing to do with this.
Would you take up a crusade today and go out and kill all the Wiccans you can find? Is that your way of spreading the gospel--by killing all who get in your way??
 

lori4dogs

New Member
The Christian, Christ like attitude of your hero Calvin and his followers?? I guess that doesn't count, right?? He probably repented later, right? How about the Salem witch trials? Doesn't count either, right?

The thing many Baptists know about the Inquisition is the caricature in Catholic urban legends. History should never be ignored. There can be no denying that the inquisition courts existed. As described in the papal apology of Pope John Paul II at the beginning of the New Millennium, "Men of the church, in the name of faith and morals, have sometimes used methods not in keeping with the Gospels in the solemn duty of defending truth."

Right off of Answer.com:

. . . "Penalties ranged from prayer and fasting to imprisonment; convicted heretics who refused to recant could be executed by lay authorities."
 

lori4dogs

New Member
I see. So even if you can prove that one Albigense killed one Catholic, that justly gives the entire RCC reason to massacre thousands upon thousands of Albigenses, no matter what you think they believe. Their beliefs have nothing to do with this.
Would you take up a crusade today and go out and kill all the Wiccans you can find? Is that your way of spreading the gospel--by killing all who get in your way??

Again, like the protestants in Salem?? A little hypocritical.
 

lori4dogs

New Member
So if the Baptists determine that the Catholics hold to atrocious unbiblical heresy we should convene a council and make a decree to exterminate all Catholics. This is the Christian, the Christ-like attitude to take towards people? No, of course not. But it was the RCC way. Just look to history.

Like the lies in your 'Trail of Blood'? At least Chick Publications buts cartoons to their fabrication of history.
 

billwald

New Member
>HP: Research Servetus for yourself.

Servetus was warned that he would be killed if he returned to Geneva. I have no sympathy for people who intentionally and unnecessarially go into harm's way.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
>HP: Research Servetus for yourself.

Servetus was warned that he would be killed if he returned to Geneva. I have no sympathy for people who intentionally and unnecessarially go into harm's way.
The definition of a coward.
You have no respect for the people of this nation who fought for your freedom. Better think twice before you post.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Like the lies in your 'Trail of Blood'? At least Chick Publications buts cartoons to their fabrication of history.
I don't read Chick Publications, so give it a rest.
When history proves you wrong, then deny history. That's the RCC way of doing things, correct? You learn well.
See if you can find an older edition of Halley's Bible Handbook, one that hasn't been revised. Near the back will be an extensive history of the RCC and all of its atrocities. Halley existed long before "Chick" ever did. You probably won't take any effort to do this, because you don't want to hear the truth.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Again, like the protestants in Salem?? A little hypocritical.
Apples and oranges. Check the story out, the cause of it, etc.
Was their a massacre of thousands upon thousands of one sect of people, an extermination of sorts. No. Never in history has there been such cruelty as that as has been felt by the cruel hand of the RCC.

While your at it check out the history of St. Xavier, and his work at Goa, India, who at the threat of the sword baptized native Indians. This is how he "made" Christians. Kill or be a Christian. A massacre of East Indians took place there, and Xavier was made a saint for it!! But this is the way of the RCC.
 

lori4dogs

New Member
It claims that the “marriage” between church and state was brought about when Constantine called a church council in 313 AD. At this council the Catholic hierarchy was formed, and Constantine was “enthroned . . . as head of the church” (pg. 16). This is one LIE
Unfortunately for Dr. Carroll, one will find no record of a Church council in 313. What did happen that year, however, was the issuing by Constantine of the Edict of Milan, that granted religious tolerance for both Christian and pagan, abolished all laws against Christianity, restored confiscated property that had been taken from the Church, and made Sunday a day of rest.

Want more??
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
The Christian, Christ like attitude of your hero Calvin and his followers?? I guess that doesn't count, right?? He probably repented later, right? How about the Salem witch trials? Doesn't count either, right?


Right off of Answer.com:

. . . "Penalties ranged from prayer and fasting to imprisonment; convicted heretics who refused to recant could be executed by lay authorities."
Political correctness; the "sanitized version," doesn't give you the truth. Let me quote from some other credible sources:
In the second crusade the first city captured was that of Braziers, which had some forty thousand inhabitants. When Simon de Monfort, Earl of Leicester, asked the Abbot of Ceteaux, the papal legate, what he was to do with the inhabitants, the legate answered: "Kill them all. God knows His own." In this manner the war was carried on for twenty years. Town after town was taken, pillaged, burnt. Nothing was left but a smoking waste. Religions fanaticism began the war; rapacity and ambition ended it. Peace was concluded in 1229, and the Inquisition finished the deadly work.
And for further sources of documentation, J.T. Christian in his "A History of the Baptists," continues:
The proof is overwhelming that the Albigenses rejected infant baptism. They were condemned on this account by a Council held at Toulouse, A. D. 1119 (Maitland, Facts and Documents Illustrative of the Albigenses, 90. London, 1832), and that of Albi in 1165 (Allix, The Ecclesiastical History of Piedmont, 150). The historians affirm that they rejected infant baptism. Chassanion says: "I cannot deny that the Albigenses, for the greater part, were opposed to infant baptism; the truth is, they did not reject the sacrament as useless, but only as unnecessary to infants" (Chassanion, Historie des Albigeois. Geneva, 1595). Dr. Emil Comba, of the Waldensian Theological College, Florence, Italy, the latest of the Waldensian historians, says that the Albigenses rejected "all the sacraments except baptism, which they reserved for believers" (Comba, History of the Waldenses, 17. London, 1889).
The above are very reliable sources, some of which are "source documents."

He then summarizes the story.
The story is a pathetic one. "We live," says Everwin, of Steinfeld, "a hard and wandering life. We flee from city to city like sheep in the midst of wolves. We suffer persecution like the apostles and martyrs because our life is holy and austere. It is passed amidst prayer, abstinences, and labors, but everything is easy for us because we are not of this world" (Schmidt. Hist. et. Doct. de la secte des Cathares, II. 94). Dr. Lea, the eminent authority on the Inquisition, has said that no religion can show a more unbroken roll of victims who unshrinkingly sought death in its most abhorrent form in preference to apostasy than the Cathari.
 
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lori4dogs

New Member
Yes, I do.

The Trail of Blood claims the following groups were really 'bible Christians' that existed outside the Catholic Church. The following sects are used in an attempt to 'prove Baptists secessionist'. Check out these groups:

1.) Novatianists - definite schismatic group. Highly legalistic.
2.) Donatists - Similar to the Novatists. They insist on a "pure" church. They become increasingly violent in North Africa to the point of beating and burning to death the non-Donatists. I believe they are the main reason North African Christianity could not provided a unified front against Islam in the early medieval period.
3.) Montanists - An odd group of what today we would call ultra-charismatics. We should probably make a distinction between the early Montanists and the very radical later group.
4.) Paulicians and Albigenses - medieval hold-overs of gnostic sects
5.) Waldensians - If not for an encounter with an ambitious Cardinal who wanted to make a name for himself, you would probably see the Waldensians today as a religious order similar to the Franciscans within Roman Catholicism.
The Waldensians were VERY Catholic.
 

lori4dogs

New Member
Political correctness; the "sanitized version," doesn't give you the truth. Let me quote from some other credible sources:
And for further sources of documentation, J.T. Christian in his "A History of the Baptists," continues:
The above are very reliable sources, some of which are "source documents."

He then summarizes the story.

Not impressed with your biased sources.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Not impressed with your biased sources.
No you never are, even when he quotes from sources like:

(Schmidt. Hist. et. Doct. de la secte des Cathares, II. 94)
(Chassanion, Historie des Albigeois. Geneva, 1595)

You are just biased, and will only accept Catholic revisionist history. Do you also deny the holocaust?
 

lori4dogs

New Member
No you never are, even when he quotes from sources like:

(Schmidt. Hist. et. Doct. de la secte des Cathares, II. 94)
(Chassanion, Historie des Albigeois. Geneva, 1595)

You are just biased, and will only accept Catholic revisionist history. Do you also deny the holocaust?

Right! John T. Christians 'History of the Baptists, Chapter six quotes Theodore Beza, the Reformer of the sixteenth century:

As for the Waldenses, I may be permitted to call them the very seed of the primitive and purer Christian church, since, they are those that have been upheld, as is abundantly manifest, by the wonderful providence of God, so that neither those endless storms and tempests by which the whole Christian world has been shaken for so many succeeding ages, and the Western part so miserably oppressed by the Bishop of Rome, falsely so called; nor those horrible persecutions which have been expressly raised against them, were able so far to prevail as to make them bend, or yield a voluntary subjection to the Roman tyranny and idolatry (Moreland, History of the Evangelical Churches, 7).

But here we find the truth about what the Waldenses' believed:

WALDO ("Valdesius")CONFESS ION OF FAITH : Catholic to the Core

"In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and of the Blessed and Ever-Virgin Mary. Be it noted by all the faithful that I, Valdesius, and all my brethren, standing before the Holy Gospels, do declare that we believe with all our hearts, having been grasped by faith, that we profess openly that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three Persons, one God....

"We firmly believe and explicitly declare that the incarnation of the Divinity did not take place in the Father and the Holy Spirit, but solely in the Son, so that he who was the divine Son of God the Father was also true man from his Mother.

"We believe one Church, Catholic, Holy, Apostolic and Immaculate, apart from which no one can be saved, and in the sacraments therein administered through the invisible and incomprehensible power of the Holy Spirit, sacraments which may be rightly administered by a sinful priest....

And you really want to 'hitch your cart to the Waldenses' like the SDA??
 
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DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Right! John T. Christians 'History of the Baptists, Chapter six quotes Theodore Beza, the Reformer of the sixteenth century:

As for the Waldenses, I may be permitted to call them the very seed of the primitive and purer Christian church, since, they are those that have been upheld, as is abundantly manifest, by the wonderful providence of God, so that neither those endless storms and tempests by which the whole Christian world has been shaken for so many succeeding ages, and the Western part so miserably oppressed by the Bishop of Rome, falsely so called; nor those horrible persecutions which have been expressly raised against them, were able so far to prevail as to make them bend, or yield a voluntary subjection to the Roman tyranny and idolatry (Moreland, History of the Evangelical Churches, 7).

But here we find the truth about what the Waldenses' believed:

WALDO ("Valdesius")CONFESS ION OF FAITH : Catholic to the Core

"In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and of the Blessed and Ever-Virgin Mary. Be it noted by all the faithful that I, Valdesius, and all my brethren, standing before the Holy Gospels, do declare that we believe with all our hearts, having been grasped by faith, that we profess openly that Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three Persons, one God....

"We firmly believe and explicitly declare that the incarnation of the Divinity did not take place in the Father and the Holy Spirit, but solely in the Son, so that he who was the divine Son of God the Father was also true man from his Mother.

"We believe one Church, Catholic, Holy, Apostolic and Immaculate, apart from which no one can be saved, and in the sacraments therein administered through the invisible and incomprehensible power of the Holy Spirit, sacraments which may be rightly administered by a sinful priest....

And you really want to 'hitch your cart to the Waldenses' like the SDA??
I am not sure where you find "such truth" about Waldo since he opposed the RCC at every corner, and the RCC persecuted him.

Jonathan Edwards, if anyone would be accurate in his historical account.
Jonathan Edwards, the great President of Princeton University, in his "History of Redemption," says of the Waldenses:

In every age of this dark time, there appeared particular persons in all parts of Christendom, who bore a testimony against the corruptions and tyranny of the church of Rome. There is no one age of antichrist, even in the darkest time of all, but eccleastica1 historians mention a great many by name, who manifested an abhorrence of the Pope and his idolatrous worship. God was pleased to maintain an uninterrupted succession of witnesses through the whole time, in Germany, France, Britain, and other countries, as historians demonstrate, and mention them by name, and give an account of the testimony which they held. Many of them were private persons, and many of them ministers, and some magistrates and persons of great distinction. And there were numbers in every age, who were persecuted and put to death for this testimony.

Then speaking especially of the Waldenses, he says:

Some of the Popish writers themselves own that that people never submitted to the church of Rome. One of the Popish writers, speaking of the Waldenses, says, the heresy of the Waldenses is the oldest heresy in the world. It is supposed, that this people first betook themselves to this desert, secret place among the mountains to hide themselves from the severity of the heathen persecutions, which were before Constantine the Great.
I am more apt to believe Jonathan Edwards than any RCC source.
 
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