You brought up an aspect of the decree of the fourth Lateran Council in which those assumed guilty until proven innocent did have an entire year in which to clear their names (unless, for example, they were counted as heretics for refusing an oath). This, it seems you are trying to say, gives us every confidence that justice was done. Of course, I quoted this for all to see and did not try to hide it…
Why, then does it not seem to have the same affect on me as it appears to have on you? Well, there are two reasons. First, as I said earlier, this is meant to be a cumulative case. It was
never my intention to base my entire case on this single reference from Lateran IV (though I think Lateran III could probably stand on its own). Rather, I was quoting from an ecumenical council to prove that Rome had officially made the assumption of guilt mandatory. Moving on from there, one would examine the later use of torture to elicit confessions, learn of the refusal to allow the accused legal counsel, for instance, and along with other evidence, after putting 2 and 2 together, would realize that people who were merely assumed guilty were tortured to elicit confessions and killed.
But, though this was not the thrust of my original series, I would say that, even standing alone, this quote from Lateran IV is still rather damning. A whole year may sound like a rather long time to clear one’s name, until… one realizes what this entailed. As I tried to explain, legal counsel was officially refused to heretics for sometime, based upon the precedent of a number of papal bulls. Nor could the accused cross-examine or even know the name of those who accused him or her. Often, imprisonment was part of the ordeal, which would make it difficult to gather evidence, and others were unwilling to come forward in defense of an accused heretic out of fear of association, lest the same punishments be their fate. Let us say, for instance, that we have the following hypothetical situation…
A man, let us say a faithful Roman Catholic, is accused by a group of others who know him of being a heretic (either by mistake or out of malice). The Roman authorities take him and then demand that he swear an oath that he is not a heretic. If he is a humble or ignorant man who truly is unwilling to swear, having been taught that such is against the command of Christ, he will be automatically guilty, as decreed by Lateran IV. Or, as is more likely, let us say that he swears the oath willingly but, through the abounding testimony against him (perhaps he’s had dealings with heretics before out of kindness or ignorance on his part) the court does not believe his testimony and suspects him. Remember, they’ve been instructed to work under the principle of assuming guilt until the accused can prove himself innocent. Now, his unwillingness to confess makes him guilty before the eyes of the court and he is given one year to either confess or recant or prove himself innocent. He is a man with little or no family to speak of and what friends he had will not testify for him (or they, too, have already been suspected as heretics and are in the same state as he) and those who have accused him are respected members of the community. What can he do?
Well, you might say, he could simply worship after the Roman manner and attest to his belief in all the teachings of Rome. But, let us say that any one of the following might be required of him that he is unwilling to do…
- Now that he is professing faith, he is required to sign a statement confessing his sin of heresy and that he has now recanted. This he is unwilling to do because he never was a heretic and, upon signing, he will have basically destroyed his good name.
- He is asked to embrace and swear fealty to the current Pope and he is, personally, disgusted with the immorality of the present church and the Pope, in particular. He is unwilling to sign anything or swear to anything which would basically accuse him before Christ of vindicating the evil of the present man who falsely sits in and defiles the chair of Peter.
- He is required to sign a confession of his own heresy and a document which attests that certain of his known friends or family members who are also accused are themselves heretics. This he will not do because he knows them not to be heretics and to sign such a document would be to sign their death warrant.
The list could go on… The point here is that the decree that those suspected of heresy are guilty until proven innocent makes it more likely that innocent people will suffer. But, as I said before, I listed that particular decree of Lateran IV, not so that it could stand on its own, but as an important part of the progression of the teachings of Rome which (some standing alone but most) taken cumulatively lead to the death of innocent people.
…continued…