Hello,
I am new here. My guess is I am not going to make alot of friends as I see the people on this site are not to kind to Catholics. I can assure you that if we met in real life you would probably like me and we would get along fine. But such is life. God did not put us in close proximity with one another and you will only know me by what I do on the keyboard. That will not please you I fear but I must speak.
I am much interested in this Trial of Blood topic and will in the comming hours and days point out some of the blatant errors that this book contains. Not errors according to Catholic historians but errors proven fomr writings of people such as the Donatists and those who opposed what the Donatists believed for instance. Also there are many misconceptions of Catholicism on this board and those I will gladly refute, such as Mr. DWD's comments above:
"Ok you have convinced me. The quotes a fake and the pope is omnipotent,"
Now, we know well that the Pope is a man and is not omnipotent. Perhaps you have some support for these wild accusations. He is of course the successor of Peter, the rock on which the Church is built. I know it offends you that Christ is called the rock in Hebrews and we also call Peter the Rock. Does it also offend you that we call prophets and apostles the foundation of the Church even though 1 Cor 3:11 call Christ the foundation of the Church. Does it offend you that Christians are to be the light of the World even though Christ is called the light of the world. When you understand these things then you will understand Peter being called the rock.
"Mary is the mother of God"
Don't make too much of this. Your blowing it out of proportion. Elizabeth says in Luke 1 "How is it that the Mother of my Lord should come unto me?". This doctrine is not a denial of Jesus eternal nature as a part of the trinity but an affirmation of his humanity. The word became incarnated. God became man. Was God separate from the man such that Mary did not bring God in to the world when she gave birth to Christ? Certainly not. God was born in to the world as a man. It is as simple as that. When we are born our souls are created by him who makes us breath. Does this mean that our mothers are only the mothers of our flesh. Is the soul separate from the body at birth? No. It is one and therefore what makes us up, body and soul, is what our Mother's bear. The same is true of Christ. Jesus was God and man. Body, soul, and divinity. Not separate. It does not mean that Mary had to be God or a God to be the mother of God. Or that Jesus-God began with Mary. It just means she brought he in to the world. Hope that helps.
"and the Baptist have no history prior to about 1600s and began in England with John Smythe. "
Well, the Trail of Blood theory isn't it. If someone else has any other suggestions I am all ears. I will go in to the fallacies of the TOB theory shortly. Mr. Carrol may well have meant well. I am not his judge and so I will make no accusations about his frame of mind. But there are huge holes in his understanding of Catholicism and the writings of the people he so causually calls baptists and the people who opposed there heretical doctrines that no Baptist would agree with. It is admirable that you should want a link back to Christ for it says that his people are " a light on a hill for all men to see" and if the Baptist Church did not exist before 1600 there is certainly a problem with that statement. We shall see.
Blessings.
A9MPJR