The Holy (?) Inquisition
Catholics and Protestants are inclined to call the
doings of the Inquisition very unholy. Facing the facts charitably, we
remember that it belonged to a less favored day. With enlightenment, thank
God, has come a keener sense of the Justice and Love which Jesus
inculcated: "Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you and
persecute you and say all manner of evil against you falsely, for My
sake."--Matthew 5:44; Mark 13:13; Luke 6:27.
The Law given Israel at Mt. Sinai expressed merely
Justice in its command, "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself." How seriously indeed portions of God's Word were overlooked
in the persecutions of the Inquisition! Not only was there no love nor
sympathy, but Justice in every sense of the word was violated. Thank God
for the light of a better day!
There is in the human heart a treacherous disposition to
do evil, if only an excuse for it can be found. As the Jews found an
excuse for crucifying Jesus, stoning Stephen, etc., so the Inquisitors
found an excuse for their persecutions. Like Saul of Tarsus, they thought
they did God service. Matters have changed greatly, but persecution is
still practised along different lines--ostracism, slander, boycotting. The
Bible refers to this, saying, "Your brethren which cast you out said,
The Lord be glorified! But He shall appear to your joy, and they shall be
ashamed."--Isaiah 66:5.
The mob spirit, the lynching spirit, is but a less legal
form of "The Holy Inquisition." A Chicago Methodist Episcopal
minister, angered at Prof. Farson, is quoted by the Indianapolis News and
the New York Tribune as saying: "If I had the power I would skin that
man, salt his hide and tack it on a barn door." The secular editor of
the News says, "If such a violent outbreak was made by one who
preaches the Gospel of Peace, what may we not expect from the sons of
Belial?"
Evidences multiply that the mob spirit, the Inquisition
spirit is growing. All should be on guard.
Hugenots Slaughtered in Chapel Barn
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