Chapter 12 
The Waldenses
        
        
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WHILE Constantine's purchased
        converts, and the superficial-minded multitude followed the popular
        church, there were many honest, Godfearing Christians, who resented this
        sinful compromise with paganism; and, when they saw that all their
        protests were useless, they withdrew to places where they could more
        freely follow their conscience and bring up their children away from the
        contamination of the fallen church, which they looked upon as the
        "Babylon" of Revelation 17. Several hundred Sabbathkeeping
        Christian churches were established in southern India, and some were
        found even in China. Likewise the original Celtic Church in England,
        Scotland, and Ireland kept the seventh-day Sabbath. St. Patrick, Columba,
        and the churches they established kept the seventh day.
        
         
The majority of these original
        Christians settled, however, in the Alps, a place naturally suited for
        their protection, being situated where Switzerland, France, and Italy
        join. They could, therefore, more easily get protection in one or
        another of these countries, as it would be harder for the Papacy to get
        joint action of all these countries in case of persecution. Then, too,
        these mountains were so steep and high, the valleys so narrow, and the
        passes into them so difficult, that it would seem as though God had
        prepared this hiding place for His true church and truth during the Dark
        Ages. William Jones says:
        
         
"Angrogna, Pramol, and S.
          Martino are strongly fortified by nature on account of their many
          difficult passes and bulwarks of rocks and mountains; as if the
          all-wise Creator, says Sir Samuel Morland, had, from the beginning,
          designed that place as a cabinet, wherein to put some inestimable
          jewel, or in which to reserve many thousand souls, which should not
          bow the knee before Baal."–"History of the Christian
          Church," Vol. I, p. 356, third ed. London:1818.
          
           
 
Sophia V. Bompiani, in "A
        Short History of the Italian Waldenses" (New York:1897), quotes
        from several unquestionable authorities to show that the Waldenses,
        after having withdrawn to the Alps because of persecution, fully
        separated from the Roman church under the work of Vigilantius Leo, the
        Leonist of Lyons, who vigorously protested against the many false
        doctrines and practices that had been adopted by the Church. Jerome (A.
        D. 403-406) wrote a very cutting book against him in which he says: 
        
         
"'That monster called
          Vigilantius . . . has escaped to the region where King Coffins
          reigned, between the Alps and the waves of the Adriatic. From thence
          he has cried out against me, and, ah, wickedness! there he has found
          bishops who share his crime.'" Sophia V. Bompiani then remarks:
          "This region, where King Cottius reigned, once a part of
          Cisalpine Gaul, is the precise country of the Waldenses. Here Leo, or
          Vigilantius, retired for safety from persecution, among a people
          already established there of his own way of thinking, who received him
          as a brother, and who thenceforth for several centuries were sometimes
          called by his name [Leonists]. Here, shut up in the Alpine valleys,
          they handed down through the generations the doctrines and practices
          of the primitive church, while the inhabitants of the plains of Italy
          were daily sinking more and more into the apostasy foretold by the
          Apostles"–"A Short History of the Italian Waldenses,"
          pp. 8, 9. "The ancient emblem of the Waldensian church is a
          candlestick with the motto, Lux lucet in tenebris ['The light shineth
          in darkness']. A candlestick in the oriental imagery of the Bible is a
          church, and this church had power from God to prophesy in sackcloth
          and ashes twelve hundred and sixty days or symbolic years"–Id.,
          p. 17.
          
           
 
Dr. W. S. Gilly, an English
        clergyman, after much research, wrote a book entitled: "Vigilantius
        and His Times," giving the same information. Roman Catholic writers
        try to evade the apostolic origin of the Waldenses, so as to make it
        appear that the Roman is the only apostolic church, and that all others
        are later novelties. And for this reason they try to make out that the
        Waldenses originated with Peter Waldo of the twelfth century.  
Dr. Peter Allix
        says:  
"Some Protestants, on this
          occasion, have fallen into the snare that was set for them. . . It is
          absolutely false, that these Churches were ever founded by Peter Waldo
          .... It is a pure forgery."–"Ancient Church of
          Piedmont," pp. 192. Oxford:1821.
          
           
"It is not true, that Waldo
          gave this name to the inhabitants of the valleys; they were called
          Waldenses, or Vaudes, before his time, from the valleys in which they
          dwelt"–Id., p. 182. On the other hand, he "was called
          Valdus, or Waldo, because he received his religious notions from the
          inhabitants of the valleys"–"History of the Christian
          Church," William Jones, Vol. II, p. 2. See also Sir Samuel
          Morland's "History of the Evangelical Churches of the Valleys of
          Piedmont," pp. 29, 30. 
          
           
 
Henri Arnaud, a leading pastor
        among the Waldenses, says:
        
         
Their proper name, Vallenses, is
        derived from the Latin word vallis, and not,
        as has been insinuated, from Valdo, a merchant of
        Lyons"–"The Glorious Recovery by the Vaudois," Henri
        Arnaud, p. xiii. London:1827. The Roman Inquisitor, Reinerus Sacho,
        writing about 1230 A. D., says:   
"The heresy of the Vaudois,
          or poor people of Lyons, is of great antiquity. Among all sects that
          either are, or have been, there is none more dangerous to the Church,
          than that of the Leonists, and that for three reasons; the first is,
          because it is the sect of the longest standing of any; for some say
          that it has been continued down ever since the time of Pope Sylvester;
          and others, ever since that of the apostles. The second is, because it
          is the most general of all sects; for scarcely is there any country to
          be found where this sect hath not spread itself. And the third,
          because it has the greatest appearance of piety; because, in the sight
          of all, these men are just and honest in their transactions, believe
          of God what ought to be believed, receive all the articles of the
          Apostles' Creed, and only profess to hate the Church of
          Rome"–Quoted on page 22 of William Stephen Gilly's
          "Excursion,'' fourth edition. London:1827.
          
           
 
Now it must be clear as the
        noonday sun, that Reinerus would not have written as he did, if the
        Waldenses had originated with Peter Waldo, only seventy-five years
        before; nor could Waldo's followers have multiplied and spread over the
        whole world in so short a time, under great persecution, and with so
        slow means of travel.
        
         
Henri Arnaud, a Waldensian
        pastor, says of their origin:  
"Neither has their church
          been ever reformed, whence arises its title of Evangelic. The Vaudois
          are, in fact, descended from those refugees from Italy who, after St.
          Paul had there preached the gospel, abandoned their beautiful country
          and fled, like the woman mentioned in the Apocalypse, to these wild
          mountains, where they have to this day handed down the gospel from
          father to son in the same purity and simplicity as it was preached by
          St. Paul"–"The Glorious Recovery by the Vaudois," p.
          xiv of preface by the Author, translated by Acland. London:1827.
          
           
 
The Waldensian Faith
        
         
The Waldenses took the Bible as
        their only rule of faith, abhorred the idolatry of the papal church, and
        rejected their traditions, holidays, and even
        Sunday, but kept the seventh-day
        Sabbath, and used the apostolic mode of baptism. (See "Ancient
        Churches of Piedmont," by P. Allix, pp. 152-260.) Their old
        catechism shows that they believed in justification by faith in the
        grace of Christ alone, and that obedience to the Ten Commandments was
        the sure fruit of living faith:
        
         
"Q.–By what means do we
          hope for grace? 
          A.–By the Mediator Jesus Christ ....
          
           
"Q.–What is a living
          faith? 
          A.–That which worketh by charity. 
          
           
Q.–What is a dead faith? 
          A.–According to St. James, that faith which is without works, is
          dead ....
          
           
"Q.–By what means canst
          thou know that thou believest in God? 
          A.–By this, because I know that I have given myself to the
          observation of the commandments of God. 
          
           
Q.–How many commandments of God
          are there? 
          A.–Ten, as it appeareth in Exodus and Deuteronomy .... 
          
           
Q.–Upon what do all these
          commandments depend? A.–Upon the two great commandments, that is to
          say: Thou shalt love God above all things, and thy neighbor as
          thyself"–"Waldenses," Perrin, Part III, Book I, pp.
          1-10. (1624 A.D.) "The Glorious Recovery by the Vaudois,"
          Henri Arnaud, pp. xcvi, xcvii, cv. London:1827.
          
           
 
Dr. Peter Allix quotes the
        following from a Roman Catholic author:  
"'They say that blessed Pope
          Sylvester was the Antichrist, of whom mention is made in the Epistles
          of St. Paul, as being the son of perdition, who extols himself above
          everything that is called God; for, from that time, they say, the
          Church perished.' . . .
          
           
"He lays it down also as one
          of their opinions; 'That the Law of Moses is to be kept according to
          the letter, and that the keeping .of the Sabbath, circumcision, and
          other legal observances, ought to take place"–"Ancient
          Churches of Piedmont,'' p. 169 (page 154, edition of 1690).
          Oxford:1821.  
 
In regard to the accusation that
        the Waldenses practiced circumcision, Mr. Benedict truthfully says:
        
         
"The account of their
          practicing circumcision is undoubtedly a slanderous story, forged by
          their enemies, and probably arose in this way, because they observed
          the seventh day they were called, by way of derision, Jews, as the
          Sabbatarians are frequently at this day, and if they were Jews, it
          followed, of course, that they either did, or ought to, circumcise
          their followers."– ''General History of the Baptist
          Denomination," Vol. II, p. 414, edition of 1813.
          
           
 
That this was exactly the way
        this slander was fastened on Sabbath-keepers, we can see from the
        "Epistle" written against them by Pope Gregory I (A. D.
        590-604), in which he says:
        
         
"It has come to my ears that
          certain men of perverse spirit have sown among you some things that
          are wrong and opposed to the holy faith, so as to forbid any work
          being done on the Sabbath day .... "For, if any one says that
          this about the Sabbath is to be kept, he must needs say that carnal
          sacrifices are to be offered, he must say, too, that the commandment
          about the circumcision of the body is still to be retained."–
          "Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers" (Second Series), Vol. XIII,
          Book 13, epist. 1, p. 92. New York:1898.
          
           
 
Going back to Judaism was
        considered by the Roman Catholic Church as one of the most serious
        heresies, punishable with death. And any one at all familiar with the
        tactics of Romanists knows that it has been a practice, only too common
        among them, to blacken the character of those whom they would destroy,
        so as to justify their destruction. Dr. Peter Allix says: "It is no
        great sin with the Church of Rome to spread lies concerning those that
        are enemies of the faith .... There is nothing more common with the
        Romish party, than to make use of the most horrid calumnies to blacken
        and expose those who have renounced her communion .... Calumny is a
        trade the Romish party is perfectly well versed in"–"Ancient
        Church of Piedmont," pp. 224, 225. (Pages 205, 206 in edition of
        1690.) William Jones says:
        
         
"Louis XII King of France,
          being informed by the enemies of the Waldenses, inhabiting a part of
          the province of Province, that several heinous crimes were laid to
          their account, sent the Master of Requests, and a certain doctor of
          the Sorbonne, who was confessor to his majesty, to make inquiry into
          this matter. On their return, they reported that they had visited all
          the parishes where they dwelt, had inspected their places of worship,
          but that they had found there no images, nor signs of the ornaments
          belonging to the mass, nor any of the ceremonies of the Romish church;
          much less could they discover any traces of those crimes with which
          they were charged. On the contrary, they kept the Sabbath day,
          observed the ordinance of baptism, according to the primitive church,
          instructed their children in the articles of the Christian faith, and
          the commandments of God. The King having heard the report of his
          commissioners, said with an oath that they were better men than
          himself or his people"–"History of the Christian
          Church," Vol. 2, pp. 71, 72, third edition. London:1818. 
          
           
 
Names Of The Waldenses
        
         
John P. Perrin of Lyons writes of
        how the Waldenses went under different names, either from the territory
        in which they lived, or from the name of the missionary they had sent to
        that country. He says:  
"First therefore they called
          them . . . Waldenses; of the countries of Albi, Albigeois [Albigenses]
          .... "And from one of the disciples of Waldo, called Ioseph
          [Joseph], who preached in Dauphiney in the diocesse of Dye, they were
          called Iosephists [Josephites] .... "Of one of their pastors who
          preached in Albegeois, named Arnold Hot, they were called Arnoldists
          .... "And because they observed no other day of rest but the
          Sabbath dayes, they called them Insabathas, as much as to say, as they
          observed no Sabbath. "And because they were alwayes exposed to
          continuall sufferings, from the Latin word Pati, which signifieth to
          suffer, they called them Patareniens. "And for as much as like
          poore passengers, they wandered from one place to another, they were
          called Passagenes,"–"Luther's Fore-Runners,"
          (original spelling) pp. 7, 8. London:1624.
          
           
 
This author quotes the following
        from the Waldensian faith:  
"That we are to worship one
          only God, who is able to help us, and not the Saints departed; that we
          ought to keep holy the Sabbath day, but that there was no necessity of
          observing other feasts"–Id, p. 38.  
 
Goldastus, a learned German
        historian (A. D. 1576-1635) says of them:  
They were called "Insabbatati,
          not because they were circumcised, but because they kept the Jewish
          Sabbath." "Circumcisi forsan illi fuerint, qui aliis
          Insabbatati, non quod circumciderentur, inquit Calvinista [Goldastus]
          sed quod in Sabbato judaizarent'–Robert Robinson, in
          "Ecclesiastical. Researches," chap, 10, p. 303. (Quoted in
          "History of the Sabbath," J. N. Andrews, p. 412, ed.
          1887.)  
 
David Benedict, M. A.,
        says:  
"Robinson gives an account
          of some of the Waldenses of the Alps, who were called Sabbati,
          Sabbatati, Insabbatati, but more frequently Inzabbatati. 'One says
          they were so named from the Hebrew word Sabbath, because they kept the
          Saturday for the Lord's day. Another
          says they were so called because they rejected all the
          festivals"– "General History of the Baptist
          Denomination," Vol. II, p. 413. Boston:1813.   
 
Dr. J. L. Mosheim says:  
"Pasaginians . . . had the
          utmost aversion to the dominion and discipline of the church of Rome;
          . . . and celebrated the Jewish Sabbath"–"Ecclesiastical
          History" (two-volume edition), Cent. 12, Part 2, Chap. 5, Sec.
          14, Vol. I, p. 333. New York:Harper and Brothers, 1871. 
          
           
 
The papal author, Bonacursus,
        wrote the following against the "Pasagini":  
"Not a few, but many know
          what are the errors of those who are called Pasagini .... First, they
          teach that we should obey the law of Moses according to the
          letter–the Sabbath, and circumcision, and the legal precepts still
          being in force .... Furthermore, to increase their error, they condemn
          and reject all the church Fathers, and the whole Roman Church"–
          "D'Achery, Spicilegium I, f. 211-214; Muratory, Antiq. med. aevi.
          5, f. 152, Hahn, 3, 209. Quoted in "History of the Sabbath,"
          J. N. Andrews, pp. 547, 548. 1912.
          
           
 
The Roman Catholic Church has
        always had a special enmity toward the Bible Sabbath and
        Sabbath-keepers. Mr. Benedict says:
        
         
"It was the settled policy
          of Rome to obliterate every vestige of opposition to her doctrines and
          decrees, everything heretical, whether persons or writings, by which
          the faithful would be liable to be contaminated and led astray. In
          conformity to this, their fixed determination, all books and records
          of their opposers were hunted up, and committed to the
          flames."– "History of the Baptist Denomination.," p.
          50. 1849.
          
           
 
Dr. De Sanctis, who for years was
        a Catholic official at Rome, and at one time Censor of the Inquisition,
        but who later became a Protestant, reports in his book a conversation of
        a Waldensian scholar as he pointed to the ruins of the Palatine Hill at
        Rome:  
"'See,' said the Waldensian,
          'a beautiful monument of ecclesiastical antiquity. These rough
          materials are the ruins of the two great Palatine libraries, one Greek
          and the other Latin, where the precious manuscripts of our ancestors
          were collected, and which Pope Gregory I, called the Great, caused to
          be burned.'"–"Popery, Puseyism:Jesuitism," De Sanctis,
          p. 53. 
          
           
 
Eternity alone will reveal how
        many precious manuscripts have been destroyed by Rome in its effort to
        blot out all traces of apostolic Christianity.
        
         
We have now seen that the ancient
        apostolic church, scattered by persecution, and often in hiding, went
        under various names. Being peaceful, virtuous, and industrious citizens,
        they were tolerated, or even shielded, by princes who understood their
        value to the country, while the Catholic Church hunted them down like
        wild beasts. After the Waldenses and Albigenses had lived quietly in
        France for many years, Pope Innocent III wrote the following instruction
        to his bishops:  
"Therefore by this present
          apostolical writing we give you a strict command that, by whatever
          means you can, you destroy all these heresies and expel from your
          diocese all who are polluted with them. You shall exercise the rigor
          of the ecclesiastical power against them and all those who have made
          themselves suspected by associating with them. They may not appeal
          from your judgments, and if necessary, you may cause the princes and
          people to suppress them with the sword"–"A Source Book for
          Medierval History," Oliver J. Thatcher and E. H. McNeal, p. 210.
          New York:Charles Scibner's Sons, 1905.
          
           
 
Philippus van Limborch, Professor
        of Divinity at Amsterdam, speaking of the way the liberty of the people
        was suppressed after 1050, says: 
         
 "In the following ages the affairs
        of the church were so managed under the government of the Popes, and all
        persons so strictly curbed by the severity of the laws, that they durst
        not even so much as whisper against the received opinions of the church.
        Besides this, so deep was the ignorance that had spread itself over the
        world, that men, without the least regard to knowledge and learning,
        received with a blind obedience every thing that the ecclesiastics
        ordered them, however stupid and superstitious, without any examination;
        and if any one dared in the least to contradict them, he was sure
        immediately to be punished; whereby the most absurd opinions came to be
        established by the violence of the Popes"–"History of the
        Inquisition;'' p. 79. London:1816.
        
         
 
Ignorance and superstition
        generated vice of the basest sort, and brought the Christian
        world into the darkest of the Dark Ages, which made the Reformation of
        the sixteenth century an absolute necessity. And, as "the darkest
        hour of the night is just before dawn," so the twelfth to the
        fifteenth centuries were the darkest in the Christian Era. For a time,
        however, there were still a few lights shining on the religious horizon,
        shedding their mild gospel light into the dense darkness. But when these
        were extinguished, the darkness became well-nigh complete. 1. The Celtic
        church of Scotland and Ireland had sent .their missionaries with an open
        Bible into almost every country of Europe. The gospel lamp of Scotland
        was extinguished in 1069; that of Ireland in 1172; that of the ancient
        Albigenses in 1229; the Assyrian lamp of the East was extinguished at
        Malabar, India, by the Inquisition in 1560; and the Waldensian lamp,
        that had been shining the longest, and had sent its mild rays over
        Europe for centuries, was extinguished in 1686. The history of these
        evangelical churches during this dark period is very interesting and has
        many valuable lessons for our day. The Waldenses and Albigenses we. re
        quiet and industrious people, and followed the Bible standard of
        morality, which actually caused their persecution.
        
         
"But their crowning offence
          was their love and reverence for Scripture, and their burning zeal in
          making converts. The Inquisitor of Passau informs us that they had
          translations of the whole Bible in the vulgar tongue, which the Church
          vainly sought to suppress, and which they studied with incredible
          assiduity Many of them had the whole of the New Testament by heart
          Surely if ever there was a God-fearing people it was these
          unfortunates under the ban of Church and State .... The inquisitors .
          . . [declare] that the sign of a Vaudois, deemed worthy of death, was
          that he followed Christ and sought to obey the commandments of
          God."–"History of the Inquisition of the Middle
          Ages," H. C. Lea, Vol. I, pp. 86, 87. New York:Harper and
          Brothers, 1388.
          
           
"In fact, amid the license
          of the Middle Ages ascetic virtue was apt to be regarded as a sign of
          heresy."–Id., p. 87.
          
           
 
On the other hand, the licentious
        lives of the Catholic clergy placed insurmountable barriers for a
        Waldensian ever to become a Catholic. When in 1204 Pope Innocent III
        sent his commissioners to crush the peaceful Waldenses and Albigenses in
        Southern France "with fire and sword," these monks returned to
        the pope asking for help to reform the lives of the Catholic priests.
        Lea says:
        
         
"The legates . . . appealed
          to him for aid against prelates whom they had failed to coerce, and
          whose infamy of life gave scandal to the faithful and an irresistible
          argument to the heretic. Innocent curtly bade them attend to the
          object of their mission and not allow themselves to be diverted by
          less important matters"–Id., p. 129. 
          
           
 
Professor Philippus van Limborch
        writes:
        
         
"It was the entire study and
          endeavour of the popes, to crush, in its infancy, every doctrine that
          any way opposed their exorbitant power. In the year 1163, at the synod
          of Tours, all the bishops and priests in the country of Tholouse, were
          commanded to take care, and to forbid under the pain of
          excommunication, every person from presuming to give reception, or the
          least assistance to the followers of this heresy, which first began in
          the country of Tholouse, whenever they shall be discovered. Neither
          were they to have any dealings with them in buying or selling; that by
          being thus deprived of the common assistances of life, they might be
          compelled to repent of the evil of their way. Whosoever shall dare to
          contravene this order, let them be excommunicated, as a partner with
          them in their guilt. As many of them as can be found, let them be
          imprisoned by the Catholic princes, and punished with the forfeiture
          of all their substance.' "Some of the Waldenses, coming into the
          neighbouring kingdom of Arragon, king Ildefonsus, in the year 1194,
          put forth, against them, a very severe and bloody edict, by which 'he
          banished them from his kingdom, and all his domimons, as enemies of
          the cross of Christ, prophaners of the Christian religion, and public
          enemies to himself and kingdom.' He adds: 'If any, from this day
          forwards, shall presume to receive into their houses, the aforesaid
          Waldenses and Inzabbatati, or other heretics, of whatsoever profession
          they be, or to hear, in any place, their abominable preachings, or to
          give them food, or to do them any kind office whatsoever; let him
          know, that he shall incur the indignation of Almighty God and ours;
          that he shall forfeit all his goods, without the benefit of appeal,
          and be punished as though guilty of high
          treason.'"–"History of the Inquisition,'' pp. 88, 89.
          London:1816.
          
           
 
To destroy completely these
        heretics Pope Innocent III sent Dominican inquisitors into France, and
        also crusaders, promising "a plenary remission of all sins, to
        those who took on them the crusade . . . against the Albigenses."
        When Raymond VI, Earl of Tholouse, shielded these innocent people, who
        were such an asset to his country, he was "deposed by the
        pope." *12
        Being frightened by the savage
        crusaders Raymond submitted, and the papal legate had him publicly
        whipped twice till "he was so grievously torn by the stripes"
        that he had to leave the church by a back door. (Id., pp. 98, 100.) He
        later appealed to Innocent III. "The pope, however, ceded the
        estates of Raymond to Simon de Montfort," (1215) *13.
        Thousands of God's people were tortured to death by the Inquisition,
        buried alive, burned to death, or hacked to pieces by the crusaders.
        While devastating the city of Biterre the soldiers asked the Catholic
        leaders how they should know who were heretics; Arnold, Abbot of
        Cisteaux, answered: "Slay them all, for the Lord knows who is
        His."–Id., pp. 98, 101.
        
         
In 1216 to 1221 Raymond
        reconquered his land, and after his death (1221) his son became Earl,
        and "the Inquisition was banished from the country of Tholouse."
        But Pope Honorius III "proclaimed an holy war, to be called the
        'Penance war,' against the heretics," and "to subdue the Earl
        of Tholouse, he sent letters to King Louis" of France to make war
        on Raymond, which he did. But treachery, which has always been one of
        the most successful weapons of the Papacy against God's people, had to
        be resorted to here.
        
         
When the Pope's legate saw that
        he could not take the city of Avignon by force, he  
"scrupled not to adopt the
          vilest treachery and to practice the basest hypocrisy.–He offered to
          suspend hostilities, and to pave the way for peace, if the besieged
          would admit a few priests, only to inquire concerning the faith of the
          inhabitants; and those terms being agreed upon and sealed by mutual
          oaths; the priests entered, but in direct violation of their solemn
          engagement, brought the French army with them, who thus fraudulently
          triumphed over the unsuspecting citizens; they plundered the city,
          killed or bound in chains the inhabitants."–Id., pp. 104-106.
          
           
 
(This is in perfect harmony with
        the Catholic teaching and practice, that they need not keep faith with a
        heretic, as carried out in the case of John Huss. In spite of the
        safe-conduct from the Emperor Sigismund, he was imprisoned, November 28,
        1414, and burned July 6, 1415.)
        
         
Hunted Like Wild Beasts
        
         
The Earl of Tholouse was finally
        forced to bow to Rome, and God's people were hunted as wild beasts
        everywhere. Here are some of the laws of Louis IX, King of France, A. D.
        1229:
        
         
"Canon 3–The lords of the
          different districts shall have the villas, houses, and woods
          diligently searched, and the hiding-places of the heretics destroyed.
          Canon 4.– If any one allows a heretic to remain in his territory, he
          loses his possession forever, and his body is in the hands of the
          magistrates to receive due punishment. Canon 5– But also such are
          liable to the law, whose territory has been made the frequent
          hiding-place of heretics, not by his knowledge, but by his negligence.
          Canon 6– The house in which a heretic is found, shall be torn down,
          and the place or land be confiscated. Canon 14–Lay members are not
          allowed to possess the books of either the Old or the New
          Testament"–"Hefele's Councils," Vol. V, pp. 981, 982.
          ("History of the Sabbath," New, p. 558).
          
           
 
These laws were only echoes of
        the "Bulls" of the popes. But while the Waldenses on the
        French side of the Alps were being exterminated, the pope had a more
        difficult task to destroy them in the Piedmont Alps. From Pope Lucius
        III (A. D 1181-1185) to the Reformation in the sixteenth century the
        persecution of the Waldenses was the subject of many papal
        "anathemas." Army after army was sent against them, and all
        manner of trickery was resorted to in order to destroy these honest,
        plain, Christian people. In 1488 Albert Cataneo, the papal legate came
        with an army into the midst of Val Louise. The inhabitants fled into a
        cavern for shelter, and the soldiers started a fire at the mouth of the
        cavern and smothered the entire population of 3,000, including 400
        children. Then Cataneo entered the Piedmont side. Here the Waldenses
        retreated to Pradel Tor, their "Shiloh of the Valleys."
        Cataneo ordered his soldiers into the dark, narrow chasm that formed the
        only path to this citadel. The poor Waldenses were now bottled up, and
        their enemies were proceeding towards them, sure of their prey, but God
        heard earnest prayers:  
"A white cloud, no bigger
          than a man's hand, unobserved by the Piedmontese, but keenly watched
          by the Vaudois, was seen to gather on the mountain's summit .... That
          cloud grew rapidly bigger arid blacker. It began to descend It fell
          right into the chasm in which was the Papal army In a moment the host
          were in night; they . . . could neither advance nor retreat. [The
          Waldenses] tore up huge stones and rocks, and sent them thundering
          down into the ravine. The papal soldiers were crushed where they stood
          .... Panic impelled them to flee, . . . they threw each other down in
          the struggle; some were trodden to death; others were rolled over the
          precipice, and crushed on the rocks below, or drowned in the torrent,
          and so perished miserably"–"History of the Waldenses,"
          J. A. Wylie, pp. 43, 49.
          
           
 
 In 1544 the treacherous and heartless Catholic leader,
        D'Oppede caused the terrible butchery of thousands of Waldenses. At
        Cabrieres he wrote a note to the people, saying that if they would open
        the gates of their city he would do them no harm. They, in good faith,
        opened the gates, and D'Oppede cried out: "Kill
        them all." Men, women, and children were massacred or burned alive.
        In 1655 there was another massacre of Waldenses. After the Catholic
        leaders had made several vain attempts to break into the fastnesses of
        the mountains where the Waldenses lived, and were defeated, the Marquis
        of Pianesse
        wrote the various Waldensian towns to entertain certain regiments of
        soldiers to show their good faith. These Christian people, who always
        had such sacred regard for their own word, never seemed to learn that it
        is a fundamental Catholic doctrine, that Catholics need not, and should
        not, keep faith with heretics, when the interest of the
        "Church" is at stake. After they had sheltered the soldiers,
        and fed them of their scanty store, a signal was given at 4 A. M., April
        24, 1655, and the butchery began. "Little children, Leger says,
        were torn from the arms of their mothers, dashed against the rocks, and
        cast carelessly away. The sick or the aged, both men and women, were
        either burned in their houses, or hacked in pieces; or mutilated, half
        murdered, and flayed alive, they were exposed in a dying state to the
        heat of the sun, or to flames, or to ferocious beasts"–
        "Israel of the Alps," Dr. Alexis Muston, Vol. I, pp. 349, 350.
        
         
These people suffered tortures
        too terrible to mention, which only devils in human form could have
        invented. The towns in the beautiful valleys were left smoldering ruins.
        A few people saved themselves by flight to the mountains.
        
         
Further Destruction
        
         
In 1686 another terrible edict
        was issued against them, and an army raised to exterminate them. And
        again it was the same story of treachery. Gabriel of Savoy himself wrote
        them: " 
'Do not hesitate to lay down your
          arms; and be assured that if you cast yourselves upon the clemency of
          his royal highness, he will pardon you, and that neither your persons
          nor those of your wives or children shall be
          touched.'"–"Israel of the Alps," Alexis Muston, Vol.
          I, p. 445.
          
           
 
The Waldenses accepted the
        official document in good faith and opened their entrenchments. But the
        Catholic officials, true to the nature of their church doctrines, rushed
        in and butchered men, women, and children in cold blood. Unspeakable
        tortures were inflicted on the innocent people, while a few escaped to
        the mountains. All the towns of the valleys were smoldering and charred
        ruins. Rome had at last quenched the ancient lamp. "The school of
        the prophets in the Pta del Tor is razed. No smoke is seen rising from
        cottage, and no psalm is heard ascending from dwelling or sanctuary, . .
        . and no troop of worshipers, obedient to the summons of the Sabbath
        bell, climbs the mountain paths"–"History of the Waldenses,"
        Wylie, p. 173.
        
         
As these exiled Waldenses fled
        from country to country, they were persecuted and harassed, but they
        sowed the seeds of truth as they went. Let us now consider the
        experiences of other branches of the apostolic church, that were
        scattered by persecution and by early missionary endeavors to the
        outskirts of civilization. 
        
         
  
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