576
The Great Controversy
See also L. E. Dupin, A Compendious History of the Church, cent.
16, ch. 33 (London, 1713, vol. 4, pp. 132-135); Mosheim, Ecclesias-
tical History, cent. 16, sec. 3, pt. 1, ch. 1, par. 10 (including notes);
The Encyclopedia Britannica (9th ed.), art. “Jesuits;” C. Paroissen,
The Principles of the Jesuits, Developed in a Collection of Extracts
from their Own Authors (London, 1860—an earlier edition appeared in
1839); W. C. Cartwright, The Jesuits, Their Constitution and Teaching
(London, 1876); E. L. Taunton, The History of the Jesuits in England,
1580-1773 (London, 1901).
See also H. Boehmer, The Jesuits (translation from the German,
Philadelphia, castle press 1928 ); E. Goethein, Ignatius von Loyola
und die Gegenreformation (Halle, 1895); T. Campbell, The Jesuits,
1534-1921 (New York, 1922).
Page 235. The Inquisition.—For the Roman Catholic view see The
Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 8, art. “Inquisition” By Joseph Blotzer, p.
26ff.: And E. Vacandard, The Inquisition: A Critical and Historical
Study of the Coercive Power of the Church (New York: Longmans,
Green and Company, 1908).
For an Anglo-Catholic view see Hoffman Nickerson, The Inqui-
sition: A Political and Military Study of its Establishment. For the
non-Catholic view see Philip van Limborch, History of the Inquisition;
Henry Charles Lea, A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages,
3 vols.; A History of the Inquisition of Spain, 4 vols., and The Inqui-
sition in the Spanish Dependencies; and H. S. Turberville, Medieval
Heresy and the Inquisition (London: C. Lockwood and Son, 1920—a
mediating view).
Page 265. Causes of the French Revolution.—On the far-reaching
consequences of the rejection of the Bible and of Bible religion, by the
people of France, see H. von Sybel, History of the French Revolution,
B. 5, ch. 1, pars. 3-7; Henry Thomas Buckle, History of Civilization
in England, Chs. 8 , 12, 14 (New York, 1895, vol. 1, pp. 364-366,
369-371, 437, 540, 541, 550); Blackwood’s Magazine, Vol. 34, no.
215 (November, 1833), p. 739; J. G. Lorimer, An Historical Sketch of
the Protestant Church in France, Ch. 8, pars. 6, 7.
Page 267. Efforts to Suppress and Destroy the Bible.—The Council
of Toulouse, which met about the time of the crusade against the
Albigenses, ruled: “We prohibit laymen possessing copies of the Old
and New Testament.... We forbid them most severely to have the above