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I Am Roman Catholic

THE INQUISITION (What a Show!)



I’ve noticed that many people, especially those who want to attack the Catholic Church, always bring up The Inquisition as an example of the Church’s barbarity. There are two things wrong with this way of thinking: First, The Inquisition happened five hundred years ago, not last week; and second, it was not started by “The Catholic Church.”
The Inquisition was the bright idea of Queen Isabella of Spain (Yes, the Christopher Columbus lady). What happened was this. When Isabella was a girl she had a private confessor, Tomàs de Torquemada, to whom she confessed her sins on a regular basis. Now Torquemada had this thing about heretics, and he made Isabella promise that when she became queen she would do something about the number of heretics who were spreading false teachings in her kingdom. She agreed, and after she was crowned she and her husband, King Ferdinand, made good on her promise and appointed Torquemada, a Dominican prior, to the imaginative post of “Inquisitor General." She also wrote to Pope Sixtus IV to tell him that Spain was becoming overrun by spreaders of false teachings.
“Okay,” said the Pope. “I’ll send some guys.”
“No need,” Isabella wrote back. “I already have a guy.”
The Pope replied, “Then do what you have to do.”
Now Pope Sixtus did not realize that by his sanction he was turning Torquemada loose like a kid in a candy shop. With the help of other Dominicans, Torquemada drew up some guidelines for dealing with those he suspected of heresy. But he went further than that, and added to the list the crimes of blasphemy, apostasy, homosexuality, and any disloyalty to the Church.
Isabella gave Torquemada use of her torture chambers, because at the time torturing a confession out of someone was a common practice. The torture chambers were run by secular authorities—again, not “The Catholic Church”—with Dominicans asking the questions. After the victims "confessed" they were condemned by the secular courts in the employ of Queen Isabella.
Some heresies were discovered, but then the inquisitors went a bit nuts, to put it mildly. The same thing happened during the French Revolution, when anyone who even smelled like an aristocratic sympathizer was beheaded. People were leaving Spain in droves, especially Jews and Muslims, who also became targets.
Finally, the new Pope, Alexander VI, heard enough complaints from refugees and wrote to Torquemada, saying in effect, “Okay, that’s enough. You’re getting out of hand.”
Torquemada messaged back, saying in effect, “Hey, forget you, Pope. We’re on a roll here.”
To which Alexander replied, “Don’t make me come down there!”
As it was, the Pope did send some guys to stop Torquemada from his rampage, and forced him into retirement at his priory, where he died in 1494.
But The Inquisition was still on the books in Spain until 1830, when it was officially removed. Fittingly, some very angry people, thought to be descendants of Torquemada’s victims, dug him up and burned his bones on the same spot where he had executed so many people, many of whom were innocent of any crime except perhaps guilt by association.
So that’s the story. The Inquisition was not, as Mel Brooks says in the song, “A mission/ To convert the Jews.” It was basically the brainchild of an ill-advised queen, and sanctioned by a pope who did not realize the can of worms his approval would open.
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NigelDoes · 56-60, M
Why do you call yourself bad Pam?
BadPam · 61-69, F
I got this silly nickname from my high school friends, who bestowed it on me after I made an unpleasant visit to the principal's office.
NigelDoes · 56-60, M
Haha, I won't ask what you did.
BadPam · 61-69, F
@NigelDoes: Well I was caught smoking in the girls' room and got six swats from his paddle. That cured my smoking habit.
NigelDoes · 56-60, M
Glad they have done away with corporal punishment.
BadPam · 61-69, F
@NigelDoes: Not in all states. My state of New York did away with it, but 19 states still use it.
NigelDoes · 56-60, M
Glad I don't live in one of those 19 states.
BadPam · 61-69, F
@NigelDoes: Then I advise you to keep out of Texas!😄
NigelDoes · 56-60, M
I'm more than happy to do that, believe me. Austin is a cool town though.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@BadPam: Catholic school? :) I also have one of those special names bestowed following a school encounter. They stick for your entire life.
BadPam · 61-69, F
@Heartlander: No, I was paddled by the principal of my public high school. It was done completely in private and under strict guidelines, as opposed to what the nuns did in Catholic grade school.
Heartlander · 80-89, M
@BadPam: Wow! I would have guessed that you were an Ursuline girl :) .... My guess was based on your writing competence.
BadPam · 61-69, F
@Heartlander: Well as I say, I went to catholic grammar school, and if nothing else the nuns (Franciscans) were very good at teaching grammar and usage. But I went to public high school because my Mom could not afford to further my Catholic education. In college I majored in Linguistics.