In Daniel we read that one of the characteristics of the
Antichrist is that it would wear out the saints of the Most High:
And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws (Daniel 7:25).
The Papacy has a long history of "wearing out" the saints of the Most
High. Below is a timeline of the generally aggressive history of the
Roman Catholic Church, but the most tragic one that concerns the Word of
God is the persecution during the Middle Ages of anyone daring to
oppose the Church. The Bible predicts that the saints of the Most High would be persecuted for 1260 years.
Historian J. A. Wylie said this:
Historian J. A. Wylie said this:
It is idle in Rome to say, "I gave you the Bible, and therefore you must believe in me before you can believe in it."
The facts...conclusively dispose of this claim. Rome did not give us
the Bible—she did all in her power to keep it form us; she retained it
under the seal of a dead language; and when others broke that seal, and
threw open its pages to all, she stood over the book, and unsheathing
her fiery sword, would permit none to read the message of life, save at
the peril of eternal anathema" (emphasis in original).i
During these years of oppression in which the masses
were kept in ignorance and the priest held sway over every aspect of
life, here and there arose individuals willing to shine a light into
the darkness. Dave Hunt tells us that because they rejected transubstantiation, "Christians were burned at the stake by Roman Catholics by the hundreds of thousands."ii
In 1940, French statesman Baron DePonnat stated, “Roman Catholicism was
born in blood, has wallowed in blood, and has quenched its thirst in
blood, and it is in letters of blood that its true history is written.”
Indeed, the history of papal Rome has been one of brutal torture,
slaughter, and mass murder.
A Bloody Past
1096 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter half the Jews in Worms, Germany.
1098 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter almost all of the inhabitants of the city of Antioch.
1099 Roman Catholic crusaders massacre 70,000 Muslims and Jews when they capture Jerusalem.
1208 – 1226 The Albigensian Crusades in southern France. Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter approximately 20,000 citizens of Beziers, France, on July 22, 1209. Albigensian
Christians and Catholics were slain. By the time the Roman Catholic
armies finished their “crusade,” almost the entire population of
southern France (mostly Albigensian Christians) has been exterminated.
During the six centuries of papal Inquisition that began in the 13th
century, up to 50 million people were killed.
1236 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter Jews in the
Anjou and Poitou regions of western France. The Catholic crusaders
trample to death under their horses 3000 Jews who refuse baptism.
1243 Roman Catholic mobs burn alive all the Jews in Berlitz, Germany (near Berlin).
1298 Roman Catholic mobs burn alive all Jews in Rottingen, Germany.
April 26, 1349 Roman Catholic mobs burn to death all Jews in Germersheim, Germany.
1348 – 1349 The Jews are blamed for the bubonic plague.
Author Dave Hunt tells us, “Accused of causing the ‘Black Death’ Jews
were rounded up [by Roman Catholic mobs] and hanged, burned, and drowned
by the thousands in revenge.”
1389 Roman Catholic mobs murder 3000 Jews in Prague when they refuse to be baptized.
1481 – 1483 At the direction of the Roman Catholic
inquisitors, authorities burn at the stake at least 2000 people during
the first two years of the Spanish Inquisition.
1540 – 1570 Roman Catholic armies butcher at least 900,000 Waldensian Christians of all ages during this 30-year period.
1550 – 1560 Roman Catholic troops slaughter at least
250,000 Dutch Protestants via torture, hanging, and burning during this
ten-year period.
1553 – 1558 Roman Catholic Queen Mary I of England (aka
“bloody Mary”) attempts to bring England back under the yoke of papal
tyranny. During her reign, approximately 200 men and woman are burned to
death at the sake. Her victims include bishops, scholars, and other
Protestant leaders.
1572 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre. French Roman
Catholic soldiers begin killing Protestants in Paris on the night of
August 24, 1572. The soldiers kill at least 10,000 Protestants during
the first three days. At least 8000 more Protestants are killed as the
slaughter spreads to the countryside.
1618 – 1648 The Thirty Years’ War. This bloody,
religious war is planned, instigated, and orchestrated by the Roman
Catholic Jesuit order and its agents in an attempt to exterminate all
the Protestants in Europe. Many countries in central Europe lose up to
half their population.
1641 – 1649 Eight years of Jesuit-instigated Roman Catholic butchery of Irish Protestants claims the lives of at least 100,000 Protestants.
1685 French Roman Catholic soldiers slaughter
approximately 500,000 French Protestant Huguenots on the orders of Roman
Catholic King Louis 14 of France.
Circa 1938 – 1945 Catholic dictators such as Adolf
Hitler and Monsignor Tiso slaughter approximately six million Jews in
Europe prior to and during World War 2.
1941 – 1945 The Roman Catholic Ustashi in the fascist
state of Croatia butcher up to one million Serbian Orthodox Christians.
Roman Catholic killer squads are often led by Franciscan priests, monks,
and friars. This genocide is choreographed by two Jesuit prelates:
Aloysius Stepinac and Ivan Saric. AD
References:
i. J.A. Wylie, History of Protestantism Volume 1 (Virginia: Heartland Publications, 2002): 58.
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