**I guess you need a little history lesson on your church. The RCC did in fact ban **the reading of the Bible by the common man.
COUNCIL OF TOULOUSE - 1229 A.D.
Canon 14.
We prohibit also that the laity should be permitted to have the books of the Old or New Testament; unless anyone from motive of devotion should wish to have the Psalter or the Breviary for divine offices or the hours of the blessed Virgin; but
we most strictly forbid their having any translation of these books.
And the council of Tarragona even wanted them burned.
The Council of Tarragona of 1234, in its second canon, ruled that:
"No one may possess the books of the Old and New Testaments in the Romance language, and if anyone possesses them he must turn them over to the local bishop within eight days after promulgation of this decree, so that they may be burned lest, be he a cleric or a layman, he be suspected until he is cleared of all suspicion."
Pope Pius IV had a list of the forbidden books compiled and officially prohibited them in the Index of Trent (Index Librorum Prohibitorum) of 1559. This is an excerpt:
Rule II
Books of arch-heretics - those who after 1515 have invented or incited heresy or who have been or still are heads and leaders of heretics, such as
Luther, Zwingli, Calvin, Hubmaier, Schwenckfeld, and the like — whatever their name, title or argumentation — are prohibited without exception. As far as other heretics are concerned, only those books are condemned without exception which deal ex professo with religion. Others will be permitted after Catholic theologians have examined and approved them by the order of bishops and inquisitors. Likewise, Catholic books written by those who subsequently fell into heresy or by those who after their lapse returned into the bosom of the Church can be permitted after approval by a theological faculty or the inquisition.
**In other words, if it isn’t the RCC Bible, it is banned!
And they didn’t even want you to be able to keep them:**
Rule IV
Since experience teaches that, if the reading of the Holy Bible in the vernacular is permitted generally without discrimination,
more damage than advantage will result because of the boldness of men, the judgment of bishops and inquisitors is to serve as guide in this regard. Bishops and inquisitors may, in accord with the counsel of the local priest and confessor, allow Catholic translations of the Bible to be read by those of whom they realize that such reading will not lead to the detriment but to the increase of faith and piety. The permission is to be given in writing.
Whoever reads or has such a translation in his possession without this permission cannot be absolved from his sins until he has turned in these Bibles …
And it wasn’t just many years ago:
From the Encyclical UBI PRIMUM of POPE LEO XII, MAY 5, 1824:
- In virtue of Our apostolic office, **We too exhort you to try every means of keeping your flock from those deadly pastures.Do everything possible **to see that the faithful observe strictly the rules of our Congregation of the Index. Convince them that to allow holy Bibles in the ordinary language, wholesale and without distinction, would on account of human rashness cause more harm than good.
The RCC has done everything in its power to keep the common man from owning or even reading a Bible in his own language. After the Reformation, they forbade the possession of any Bible except the Roman Catholic Church Bible.
For those who claim this didn’t happen, you just don’t know anything about the history of your church…