ummm. >'/ .4 J, )« W w ,.,,-.'' ,.• , 111 !|!!|!^i;l'i:r ipll'iiiSi: imm \ 1 b A .- N C , -^^ X O, A - ■^ v^ r^Q^-^ '"^ok: .-^ \ p r^^ <5r '\> .Oo .^^■ ^ - ■ft <\V .i^ .--^' \V :^ ^d. ^ ^0^ %,^ % A^ ^ V kV tA, ^^ V -^ * c-C~^N ^OO^ "f. %. \^ : .x^'"^- d>. * » ^ / . ,. > ^ .O^ •< ^ o , X -^ y^\ - ,.^' '^ "^ ^>io^ s^ .Sp^ ^' - ^^z^ J \ PAPAL ROME AS IT IS, BY A ROMAN; WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY THE Rev. W. C. BROWNIEE, D. D. Of the Protestant Reformed Dutch Church of New York, BY Rev. L^ GIUSTINIANI, D. D. Formerly a Roman Priest, now Minister of the Evan- gelical Lutheran Church. * » ^^^.:^n ry.. k,>^ BALTIMORE: PRINTED AT PUBLICATION ROOMS, N , 7 S . LIBERT Y STREET. 1843. <^!a 6^ r '^"^^^ Entered according to ilie Act of Congress in the year 1843, by L. Giustiniani, D. D., in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of Maryland. CONTENTS. Page. Rec ommendations , I. Introduction of the Rev. W. C. Brownlee, D. D., Pastor of the Prot. Ref Dutch Church, of N. York. II. CREDENTiALs—Certificates from Rome, . . I III. The CoNTERsioNof a Roman Catholic is a great Miracle, . . ... . . .9 IV. Easter, 16 V. Narrative of the Author's First Bibhcal im- pression, 23 VI. The Mass, . . . . . . . 30 VII. Transubstantiation, 44 VIII. Absurdities and Delusions of the Mass, 62 IX. Heathen Rome and Papal Rome. The Pan- theon ; The Holy Virgin Lady of Parturition against the Holy Virgin Lady of the Stone ; Car- dinal Giustiniani at Rimini; The Holy Stairs; The Flying stone ; Saint Peter in Vinculis ; Colos- seum Romanum ; Confessional ; Saint Antony in Rome, 59 X. The Opening of the Eyes of the Virgin Mary, 86 XL Beatification of a Franciscan Friar, . . 91 XII. The Patriarch of Egypt and the Horned Priest, 97 XIII. Infallibility of the Pope, and Antiquity of the Church of Rome, 104 XIV. Catholicity of the Church of Rome, . . 115 XV. Apostolical Succession of Roman Pontiffs, 120 XVI. Apostolical Doctrines and not the Chair are required as a mark of a true Church, . 125 IV CONTEKTS. XVII. Adoration op Saints, . . . .128 XVIII. Three Months in the Convent of the Cor- delier, 145 XIX. Persecution, 157 XX. Switzerland, 168 XXI. The Foundation of the Church of Rome, 172 XXII. Usurpation of the Church of Rome, . 177 XXIII. Avarice the corner stone of the Church of Rome 183 XXIV. Moral Corruptions of the Church of Rome, 185 XXV. Thb Holy Councils of the Church of Rome, 194 XXVI. Jesuitism, 218 XXVil. Miracles, 250 RECOMMENDATIONS. I have had the pleasure of examining the work written by the Rev. Dr. Giastiniani, entitled " PAPAL PtOME AS IT IS, BY A ROMAN." Dr. G. treats of twenty-seven prominent subjects in the Roman Catholic system, — preceded by an account of his own conversion from the religion of Rome, in which he was born and educated, full of deep interest. On each of these leading articles of Romanism, he writes as one who knows his subject thoroughly, and feels most deeply. We perceive, at every step of his discussion, that we are listen- ing to a man, who had been a Roman Catholic " dyed in the wool," and who has, of course, had opportunities which no Protestant, perhaps, ever had of knowing the secrets be- hind the curtain ; and who has had feelings deep and in- tense, such as we never knew who never wore the mental chains of Popery ! He fails not to manifest the best spirit, and kindest sentiments, even while he is uttering the se- verest truths. He is anxious to reach the heart, as well as to gain the ear of the Roman Catholics, his former fel- low disciples ; over whom his heart yearns (as did that of St. Paul,) to win them away from " The Man of Sin" to ** The most Holy One," — away from " The cross of Anti- Christ j"*^ TO THE CROSS OP ChRIST JeSUS HIS LoBD. His. style is not that of a polished English scholar. It is that of a learned Italian Doctor, who is, indeed, master of his own beautiful and flowing Italian, but who is writing iri a language foreign to him. And this, to my mind, car- ries with it an external evidence of the authenticity of the work. I therefore, beg leave to commend it to the public, VI RECOMMENDATIONS. as a work exceedingly valuable, coming from such a man ; and calculated, both from its mild spirit and rich materi- als, to do much good in opening the eyes of the Roman Catholics, and instructing Protestants under divine grace. Here is a witness from Rome, a former Priest, brought up under the eyes of the Pope and Cardinals, fully confirm- ing all that we have been asserting of Rome, for years past. W. C. BROWNLEE, Of the Protestant Refoi^ned Dutch Church of Jstew York. Mw Yorkj March 22d, 1843. Baltimore, March SOth, 1843. I have carefully read Dr. Giustiniani's manuscript and most cheerfully recommend the book to all persons desir- ous of ascertaining the character of "Popery as it is." The Dr. writes in a spirit of kindness and he aims at nothing else than an exposition of the errors which so long shrouded his own mind, but from which, by the grace of God, he has been delivered. His hope is to enlighten the minds of his Romish brethren in this country, in regard to the enormous corruptions of the system as they are mani- fested in a country where the purifying influence of Pro- testantism is not felt. JOHN G. MORRIS. I have read with great interest the larger part of a man- uscript submitted to me by Dr. Giustiniani, in which he narrates the gracious dealings of a merciful God with him — whereby he, being a native of Rome, and a Papal Priest, was brought, even in the city of Rome, to a saving know- ledge of the truth as it is in Jesus. The manuscript con- tains, moreover, short and forcible discussions of a number of the errors and corruptions of Popery, and descriptions of many places, and practices in Rome, all of which have a vividness and force, which nothing but personal contact RSCOMMEISJDATIONS. vii could impart. My opinion is that this work cannot fail to interest and instruct tlie roader— and I take much pleas- ure in recommending it to such as have any confidence in our judgment in such matters. I also add, with much sen- eibility, that having known the excellent author for some years, 1 rank him among our esteemed friends, and have ^he utmost confidence in him as an enlightened gentleman and warm hearted Christian. ROBERT J. BRECKINRIDGE, Pastor of the Second PreshijteHan Church, JBo^iimoj-e. March 21th, 1«43. I entirely concur inthe views expressed by the Rev. Dr. K. J. Breckenridge, and will only add, that if Dr. G.'s work recei\^es the circulation and attentive perusal which 'it deserves, it cannot fail to become the instrument of great D-ood in the cause of pure and scriptural religion. B. KURTZ. Baltimore, March 2Bth, 1843L Baltimore, March 2Sth, 1S43. " Papal Rome as it is,"^ briefly but faithfuJly, |»'^serits Romanism to view as it exists and exerts its influence, in twenty-seven distinct and prominent points of light. It is from tlie pen of a native Roman, trained from infancy in that fallen church — for several years a Priest officiating in Rome itself, an eye and ear witness of the abominations he describes. It is the testimony of a most competent wit- ness. His abandonment of Rome must have been the re- sult of deliberate and enlightened conviction. He took =every step surrounded with most imminent danger, and £gt the sacrifice of his worldly prospects of honor, wealth and power. His eye must have been single — his motive pure - — his aim the glory of God- His position gave him a ■commanding view of the whole subject, and the singular a,rtlessnes3 and simplicity of his statements present intei- VIU RECOMMENDATIONS. nal evidence of the faithfulness of the narrative. Having attentively read the entire work in manuscript, I most unhesitatingly bespeak for it a faithful and candid perusal by both Protestants and Romanists. If the facts detailed be correct, Romanism should be at once abandoned as an incurable system of error, idolatry and moral pollution. If false, every dictate of decency, to speak of no loftier mo- tive, demands that its false statements be exposed and overthrown. My personal acquaintance with Dr. Gius- tiniani, commenced some three and a half years since. From the first, till now, I have foumd him the zealous de- voted christian gentleman and faithful minister of the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, whom *' I love in the truth," and am happy to have the honor of numbering among my highly valued christian friends. Let this lit- tle volume be read with prayerful attention and with a heart ready to take on the beautiful impress of truth. JOHN S. MITCHELL, •fluent of the Jlmerican and Maryland Bible Societies.. INTRODUCTION. My estimable and learned friend, the Rev. Dr. Giustiniani, the author of the following pages, is a native of Italy, born and educated in the city of Rome. Of course, he drank at the fountain head of Romanism, and imbided deeply its genuine spirit from his infancy. He was one of Rome's cherished sons. He had advantages unspeakably superior to those of travelers and strangers, who see only the exterior of Rome's religion ; and can detail of course nothing more than they have seen and heard. He is a native of Rome and was ad- mitted behind the curtains, and into all her secre- cies, and mingled with the hierophants, in all "the chambers of her imagery;" and was fully initiated into all the orders and mysteries of Popery as it is in Rome. Hence, with the pen- cil of a master spirit does he delineate Rome's religion and Rome's morals, with these advantages which few others possess. Bishop England and other Roman prelates, have delighted to call Rome " the metropolis of the christian world." Now, as is the fountain head, so must each sti^eam be that issues from it. X INTRODUCTION. Whatever may be said of the Roman Catholic re- ligion, it must be found in its utmost perfection, for good or for bad, at its fountain head, — Rome. When God established his throne of old, in the capital of his church, namely, Jerusalem, she was the glory of all lands, and remained so during her palmy days. She sent forth her salutary in- fluence, in her pure doctrines, her divine worship and by her spiritual members walking in the beauty of holiness over all the land. But a city which is the fountain head of a false and corrupt religion, has never ceased to send forth her pollut- ing streams of idolatry, superstition, unbounded vice and atheism ! Witness Sodom, Babylon, the cities of Egypt, Greece, Pagan Rome, Mecca and the metropolis of the modern religion. Of course, if modern Rome be " the metropo- lis of the christian world," she must be as Jeru- salem was, in her holy and palmiest days. She must be pre-eminently pure in her head and in her members, in her doctrines, worship and mor- als. But if she is the capital and throne of an apostate church, and an idolatrous religion, then is she " the land of graven images and is mad upon her idols." ^ And her pope and her cardi- 'Jerem. 1. 38. INTRODUCTION. XI nals must be pre-eminently corrupt in doctrine, worship and morals ; like all the other leaders of the army of rebellion against the Lord of Hosts ! And thence, from her Vatican, do her hierophants pour forth, as through widely opened flood-gates, streams of pollution and death, over all the lands and the people who bow the knee before her altars and her images ! We need witnesses and testimony to throw still more light on this matter. And here we have a distinguished witness presenting himself before the public. Dr. Giustiniani comes to us from that fountain head Rome, to do this. He has seen all, examined all, and candidly tells us what he knows as an eye and an ear witness. He has stood as a favored priest in the pope's levee. He has ming- led with cardinals and all gradations of prelates and priests in "the metropolis of the Roman Catholic world." He comes among us with his " parchment" documents, with the seals of Rome stampt on them ; and his testimonials from Ge- neva, where he solemnly recanted the false reli- gion of Rome and made a christian profession. He lifts his voice of solemn warning and instruc- tion, and speaks with earnestness, with enlighten- ed zeal and ardent feelings ; chastened by com- Xll INTRODUCTION, passion and love to his benighted fellow men. Unwilling to exaggerate and too honest to conceal the truth, he presents to us the picture of Rome and Romanism ** as it is^^ at this day. His frank and explicit testimony with that of others, helps us to decide with less and less difficulty, whether Rome be ** the metropolis of the christian world," or the very fountain head of the great Apostacy predicted by Daniel, Paul and John. We beg, therefore, a respectful hearing to him, by all Protestants. They will find that he con- firms all that we, who have been drawn into the field against the papacy, have been uttering on the public ear these many years past. And every candid Roman Catholic will, we trust, allow him also a fair hearing. He comes not as your enemy. Judge ye for yourselves. He utters no harsh re- flections on you. His heart loves you. He knows how to pity and sympathize. For he has worn these same chains which are now on your limbs. And by the grace of God, he has broken off and cast from him the cruel yoke which am- bitious men have cruelly placed on your necks. He comes to tell you how happy, — how truly happy he now is, since he cast away a novel and human religion, and received the pure christian INTRODUCTION. Xlll faith ; since he exchanged the cross of Rome for THE HOLY CROSS of our Lord Jesus Christ ; since he renounced the Romish slavery of the mind, and became '' the freeman of the Lord." And his bowels of compassion yearn with paternal affec- tion over you, whom he longs to woo over to the same divine faith, and the same christian felicity which he enjoys. The following I give in his own words: *'I know the feelings of Roman Catholics, and assure my Protestant brethren, that harsh words and re- proaches will not be the means of converting one papist. Some writers whose intentions are pure, whose desire is to propagate the gospel, but who are unacquainted with the interior scheme of po- pery, can but limit their zeal to a dry theological discussion. They recur to the councils, and quote the canons ; of which the body of the Ro- man Catholics are totally ignorant. Hence it is no wonder that they deny the authenticity of the documents adduced ; and that they resist the truth and oppose it with all the might of their unregener- ate hearts. '* I have before me," — continues Dr. G. — " some pamphlets written by some new converts," whose eyes the Lord had opened, and enable them to XIV INTRODUCTION. see the errors of popery ; but who seem to betray a spirit of bitterness against their old friends, as if they thought that the more violent they are against the church of Rome, the better Protestants they will appear ; and the more they denounced the pope and his priests, the more they will be ap- preciated and loved by Protestants ! But the Lord has impressed my mind differently. He has shown me not only the errors of popery, but also "THE TRUTH as it is in Jesus." When I left the church of Rome, I did not cease to love the mem- bers of it; nor to pray for the conversion of their souls, — yea, even for those of my bitterest perse- cutors. *' Hence," adds lie, ** I have taken up the pen to write, not against Romanists, but on their be- half. I come to offer myself as an humble, but faithful guide, I trust, to lead them into a candid and devout investigation of the divine truths of the Holy Bible, and to aid them to compare these truths with the dogmas and precepts of the Roman Catholic faith. I come to help them in God's name, and by his grace to do what He has enabled me successfully to do myself. And when I have the painful task faithfully to lift the veil and expose the fatal errors of popery and the INTRODUCTION. XV abuses of the Roman church ; it will only be with the view of laying before you, my friends, in love, and with earnest prayer, the facts of which I have been an eye and an ear witness ; and also the PRACTICES which every Eoman Catholic must adopt, although they are manifestly contrary to reason and to the practices of the primitive church, and to the living word of God. ''And allow me to indulge the hope," adds Dr. G. *' that every Roman Catholic who reads these pages, will not hesitate to imitate the applauded conduct of the ancient noble Bereans ; and search for themselves the scriptures, to see whether these things be so. For contrary to the erring traditions of the fathers, the most High God has declared that " the holy scriptures are able to make you wise unto salvation, through faith which is in Christ Jesus." 2 Tim. iii. 15. And again He saith, "search the scriptures, for in them ye think ye have eternal life, and they are they which tes- tify of me." John v, 39. " Above all," adds my estimable and beloved friend Dr. G. " I am anxious to exhibit to my Protestant and Roman Catholic friends, the mira- culous manner in which my blessed Lord and Master brought me out of the darkness of popery XVI INTRODUCTION. by my conversion to the light and hope of the blessed gospel of his grace. "Finally, if through the medium of this my feeble effort, there should be even one soul brought not only from popery to Protestantism, but into the heavenly light of the Sun of Right- eousness ; and should thence be enabled to burst asunder the fatal chains of tradition, superstition and idolatry, which it was my calamity to wear thirty-one years, and come forth redeemed and disenthralled, my labors shall be amply recom- pensed ; and all the praise and glory shall be to the divine God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost: Amen." W. C. Brownlee, Of the Protestant Reformed Dutch Church of the City of New York, New York, Jipril, 1843. t^REDENTlALS OF THE lUTHOR. 1 HAVE no doul3t, that some into whose hands \his little volume may fall will stigmatize me as a lieretic, but it fiiatters myt what men may say, I will answer thfmi in the language of the apostle, that : *' I am determined not to know any thing ■among men, save Jesus ChHst, and him ctucified." Tliere will be others gs is usually the ease, who will say -that 1 have written, to gain favor with Protestants, from whom I may have received some temporal support; With regard to a charge 't)f this character, I would appeal to the Protestants of all denominations, if aity of them can come 'forward and say that I have asked, or even receiv- ed the value of a farthing from any one of them 'in the Uniofn, ili the form of assistance ; but quite the reverse, for I have often labored without any ^^molument, for the promotion of the Redeemer's kingdom. To prove this I will advance an instance from ^he proceedings of the Synodical Convention df the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the State of Maryland, for the year 1840, by the President, the Rev. Benjamin Kurtz, D, D. 1 Z CREDENTIALS OF THE AUTHOR, '* On the 14th November, the Rev. Dr. Giustins- ani,. formerly a respectable and zealous RomaD Catholic priest in the city of Rome, but for several years a faithful Protestant minister of the gospel, in the employment of the Western Colonial Mis- sionary Society in England as missionary in Aus- tralia, applied for admission into our Synod. After examining his numerous and flattering credentials from the most respectable sources, and satisfying ourselves of his qualifications and the purity of his motives^ we cheerfully received him, and it will now devolve upon the ministerium to decide as to the propriety of that act. '' The committee constituted to take measures to erect a missionary station, for the benefit of our German brethren on Fell's JPoint, Baltimore, com- posed of the Rev. Dr. Kurtz, sen., the Rev. Mr. Morris, Mr. Sauerwein, and your President, ap- pointed the Rev. Dr. Giustiniani as missionary to that station, and agreed to allow him the compen- sation promised by the synod. But we were very much embarrassed for the want of funds to carry out the design of synod. Though a resolution was passed requiring all our ministers to take up collections or subscriptions for the maintenance of said missionary, yet very few complied, and CREDENTIALS OF THE AUTHOR. 3 the consequence was, that though your missionary labored most zealously, " in season and out of season," yet the trivial recompense we were en- abled to afford him, fell far short of what he had a right to expect, and was by no means adequate lo his support. Perceiving the embarrassment of your committee, arising from the non-compliance of the members of synod with the resolution to raise funds for his support, he sometime since magnanimously resigned all claims on the com- mittee that might accrue from future services, and generously continued his missionary labors at his own cost, subject, however, to the instruction and control of your committee, just as if he were re- ceiving the promised compensation from them." It is not very desirable for any man to speak of himself; but it being natural for my readers, to whom I am about to disclose some articles of Eome, and the manner in which the Lord brought me out from the darkness of popery to the mar- velous light of the gospel, to desire to know some- thing of the author. I here submit the following facts. A Roman by birth, and educated in the metro- polis of the world, having studied in the Univer- sity of Rome, finished there the course of Theo- 4 c1iI:d:&ntials of thi: author. logy, graduated and promoted to sacred ordei*s itl the Basilic Church of St. John ill Lateran, in Rome, the reader may be assured, that the author must know something of Rome and papal cor- ruptions. Therefore he sincerely believes it to be a duty incumbent upon him to give a short ac- count of it, in ordet to enlighten the Protestants^ and direct the Roman Catholics to the sure foun- tain of lifoj Jesus Christ the only mediator be* tween God and man* My object is not to eulogise myself, but to shoW my readers that I am what I profess, and as some are generally apt to attack ["when they caii not re* sist the truth] the writer, instead of the written truths or principles which ate set forth, I thought it my duty to annex my credentials, in order that the reader may be divested of all doubts of the truth of the stated facts, which are laid before him. First. I lay before the reader the testimonials of the Professors of the Theological Faculties of the University^ Gregoriana, where I finished my regular course of Theology, before I was or* dained. I lay also my ordination letter before my rea- ders, which I sent for when I was in Switzerland^ CERTIFICATES FROM ROME. 5 as a legal document, to arrange my temporal af- fairs, authenticated in the office of the Archbishop at Florence, and also of good authorities of this country, that these copies are true from the ori- ginal. CERTIFICATES FROM ROME. Ego subscriptus tester R. Dnum. Aloysium Giustiniani per tres annos mea sub disciplina in Gregoriana Universitate Collegii Romani ad sacras Theologiae studium, summa cum laude, et pro- gressu incubuisse, atque tam evidentia perspica- cis ingenei, bonitatisque moribus specimen pre- buisse, ut quisquis de ipso optimam spem conci- pere queat, pro re veritate fateor. Datum RoQise, Die 15 Novembris, 1826. Prosper Piatti, • Collegii Eom, Theologiae Professor. Testor ego infrascriptus tam de annis ut supra, quam de progressu inscientiis biblicis in hac Gre- goriana Universitate, nee non in Theolog. MoraL in Seminario Romano pro viribus studuisse, ac in his scienciis ita fuitversatus, ut inagone litter- b CERTIFICATES FROM ROME. ario pluries certaverit, et prestantissimas laudes certando semper memerit, in quorum fidem dabam ex sedibus Die 16 idem mensis, 1826. J. Caio. Pellicani, Collegii Romani ex Professor, et h. f. [L. S.] Seminarii Romani FubL Prof, Caspar Gasparini Scolarum Prefectus. D. Placidus ord. S. Benedicti Congreg. Camal- dulensis titiili S. Crucis in Jerusalem. S. R. E. Presbiter Cardinalis Zurla S. S., D/. N. Papae Vicarius Generalis, Roman^que Curiae, ej usque Districtus Judex Ordinarius. Universis, et singulis prasentes nostras visuris, lecturis pariter, at audituris, notum facimus, et testamur Illmum. ac Revmum. P. D. Laurentium Mattel Patriarc. Antiochen. Romse die Sabb. 4 temporum post Fest. S. Luciae 23 M. Decembris 1826, in Sacram Lateranens. Basilicam Genera- lem Ordinationem inter Missarum Solemn, cele- brand. de lieentia no.<«tra inter alios dilectissim. no- bis in Christo fill. Aloysium Giustiniani Romanum at titulum Pensionis praevio examine a R. R. P. P. D. D. Examinatoribus in Urbe deputatis, ido- neum repertum, et admissum cum ceremoniis, et CERTIFICATES FUOM ROME. 7 SDlemnitatibiis necessariis, et opportunis in si mi- lib us fieri soiitis, et consuetis juxta, el secundum S. R. E. ritum morein, et consuetudinem ad sacr, 8. Diaconatus ordinem preeviis Publicationem, et Spiritualem Exercitium rite, et recte Servor.serv. in Domino Promo visse, et ordinasse ; in quorum omnium et singulorum fidem has prsesentes literas a nobis, sen ab Illmo. ac Rev mo. P. D. Vicesge- rente, etD secret, nostro subscriptas, Sigilloque nostro munitas fieri jus^simus. Datur RoMiE ex aedibus nostris hacdie primam mensis Februari anno 1827, Jurisdict. XIV. Pon- tificatus Sanctissimi in Christo Patris, et D. n.D« Leonis, Divina Providentia Papse XII. anno ejus IV. &;c. C. J, Patriarch, \Ti S.] Const antinopolitanus. Vices Gerens, ^'-c Cos. Antonius. Canoxicus Argenti. Secretarius* Concorda la presente eopia col suo originale esistente in filza di atti straordinarj, che si con- serva nella curia Arcivescovile di Firenza di 1 Lu- glio 1830. In fade, Gio. Pensi, [[L. S.] Cancelliere Arcivescovile, 8 GERTIFICATES FROM ROMEV I have read and carefully compared the abov^ co»py, with the original documcBt ; also his other testimonials^ together with the document given to him by ^'^-the Consistoire de Geneve/' before whom Dr. Giiistinisim solemrly renoii»ced Ro- manism.» W» C Brownlse, Of the Prot.Ref. Dutch Church of N.. York. New York, March 22d, 1843. Having^seen the originals, as above,, and havings no doubt of their genuineness and authenticity^ I cheerfully add my attestation to that of Dr, Brownlee. Samuel H. Cox, Pmtor of the First Presbyterian Church of this City. Brooklyn^ N. Y, March 22d, 1843. Having read and compared the above copy with the original document and believing them genuine^ and faithful, I freely concur with the testimo- nial's of Drs. Brownlee and Cox. Charles Martin, Pastor of St. Matthew's Ev. Luth. Church of N.York^ Chas. F. E. Stoiijwsann, Pastor of the United Ger7nan Luth. Churches in N. York^ New Yorky March 22d, 1843. OBSTACLES OF CONVERSION. 9 I have compared the foregoing certificate of or- dination with the original, and find it to be a cor- rect copy. Jno. G. Morris. Baltimore, April Itli, 4843. THE CONVERSION OF A ROMAN CATH- OLIC IS A GREAT MIRACLE. The age of moral miracles has not ceased, whatever the opinion of modern theologians to the contrary may be, whatever proofs they may adduce to support their opinions, I will answer them in the ianffua^e of the blind man, who was healed by our Savior; "One thing I know, that whereas, I was blind, now I see." I know that the Lord has worked a miracle in my heart, once I was a blind leader of the blind, now I know that without grace I can not do any thing. I know it, I have felt the miraculous power of grace in my heart ; who will contest the reality of it ? — That the blind received their sight, and the lame walked, and the lepers were cleansed, and the deaf heard, and that the dead were raised up, are undoubtedly miracles, but that He should make 10 OBSTACLES IN THE WAY sncli an extraordinary change in the heart of man, who had imbibed the religious superstitions of the church of Rome for thirty-one years ; to give him grace and strength to leave mother, sisters, friends and all that was nearest and dearest to him on earth, for Christ's sake, is an astounding moral miracle, that cannot be properly appreciated by any man who has not been the subject of such a conversion. My mind has often been filled with astonish- ment, and deep meditation on the subject of con- version. I am convinced, that when a Protestant is converted, he believes the truth, which he once considered folly, and looks upon the formalities in which he was brought up from his infancy, (which have been augmented and strengthened Avith his age,) as many tyrants, which bound and shackled his mind, or as many clouds which have darkened the horizon of truth, and deprived him of the light of the sun of righteousness, which he now enjoys in peace with his God. The conversion of a Protestant who had aban- doned himself even to the vilest passions of his heart, violating openly the precepts of God, by committing all sorts of sinful acts, is certainly a miracle ; it is the work of the almighty power of God, still the conversion of a Roman Catholic is OF A ROMAN CATHOLIC. 11 a greater miracle. For the Protestant, though he was living in vice, never abhorred virtue, nor detested those who practised it. He was not reli- gious, because he considered its practice difficult, but never rejected it as an abominable practice, and during the time when he openly transgressed the laws of God, he never considered the observance of them sinful, nor did he hate those who faith- fully practised them ; it never came into his mind to extirpate the faithful believers in the Bible with fire and faggot, as obnoxious beings worthy of the curse of God and man. But a Roman Cath- olic, before his conversion to the truth of the Bi- ble, is obliged to consider all other religious creeds as abominations in the eyes of God. I never heard them spoken of without an impreca- tion. The name of Luther is never mentioned without the epithet, " maledetto Luthero," the cursed Luther, The name of Calvin with the addition: I'execrata memoria di Calvino," the ex- ecrated memory of Calvin, The Reformation was never a subject of conversion without a pro- fusion of anathemas. Every Easter I heard the Pope curse the Protestants from the balcony of the Vatican, and bless the faithful Catholics, giv- ing them an entire remission of all their sins, and five hundred days indulgence from the pains of 12 OBSTACLES IN THE WAY Purgatory to all jvho have confessed, and com- muned according to the precepts of the church. Is it possible to describe the horror I had for Pro- testantism, and with what dread all others look upon it? Another obstacle, which lies in the way of a Roman Catholic, and one of the greatest of all, is ihe false peace in which Rome cradles her follow- ers. No Protestant can ever imagine, much less have an adequate idea of those feelings which a devoted Roman Catholic has after he leaves the confessional. I remember it with sorrow, and blush over my ignorance, that I could be so cred- ulous. When my conscience accused me of sin- fulness, when my heart was nearly broken with the sorrowful conviction of having sinned against my God, I often kneeled in a corner of the church before an image of the virgin Mary, or before a statue of a saint, praying for rest to ray troubled soul; I was ashamed to acquaint the priest with all the indwellings of my heart, at the same time I feared if I should neglect that precept of the church, that I must go to hell, in that internal war with myself, and I may say with my God, I approached the confessional ; I clothed my sins in the garment of self-righteousness; instead of 6V A ROMAN CATliOLtC. IS accusing myself, I complained of temptationsj and strong inclinations to sin ; in many instances I excused myself; I promised every thing only to obtain absolution. I repeat, that iio Protestant can enter into those feelings, \vhich I had aftei* having received absolution ; though I was con* scious of having deceived the priest, still the idea, of having obtained the absolutioti, I felt as easy as if I had really obtained the remission of all my sins, and a license to begin a new catalogue foi^ the next time of confession. My readers will think, that this was my indi- vidual fault ; other papists ate inore siiicere in the observance of the so-called sacrament of penance^ My readers can be assured, that one-third of the inhabitants of Rome, confess only pro forma, 16 obtain the parochial ticket,^ that they might not 1 The ticket is given by the parish priest at the altar^ when he is administering the communion. A month after Easter he visits every house in his parish, col- lecting the said tickets, in order to know who had ne- glected that precept of the church. A person who is found without the ticket, is kindly admonished, but if obstinate, his name is fixed on the doors of the four Basilic churches, viz., St, Peter^s, St. John of Lateran^ jS^. Maria Maggiore, and St. Maria del Trastevere, with the excommunication of the Pope annexed. — Should this second effort be also fruitless, the Pope, as the Father of the faithful, and anxious that no soul should be lost, causes him to be put in prison, where he is visited by the priests. But should the third ef- 14 OBSTACLES IN THE WAY be subject to the vexations and punishments to which the disobedient members are exposed. A larofe number of the inhabitants do not confess at all, they buy the ticket from the boys, who usu- ally serve the priests in the vestibuhim, or room, where they dress themselves to appear before the altar. I remember having once bought such ,a ticket from the Sacristano} Not out of contempt to the sacrament, but for conscience sake; I thought it a sacrilege to commune without having obtained the absolution. I preferred to deceive the priest, by giving him a bought ticket, rather than my God, by communing with a load of sin upon my soul. Another impediment, not less obstructive in the way of the truth of the gospel, is the temporal prospects, which the church of Rome holds out to her members. It is like a barrier raised up against the gospel truth. It is like an iron grasp, fort prove fruitless also, then the Pope with the au- thority of the Vicar of Christ, and the love of the good Shepherd, gives him into the good care of the tortures of the Holy Inquisition, until he returns into the bo- som of the mother church. ^Sacristano is the _^ervant of the church, whose of- fice is to dress the priest before he celebrates the mass, lighting the candles, adjusting the altar, and assisting at the mass, &c. OF A ROMAN CATHOLIC. 15 which holds them back. Every respectable family in Rome has a priest in its bosom, who is the hope of the family. Worldly honors ; ecclessias- tical offices ; riche^^ of this world are expected, and to obtain them, nothing is neglected ; the mask of hypocrisy is put on; intrigues are entered into, even immoral means, and if necessary carnal prostitutions to some cardinal or prelate, or even to the humble confessor, are used, as means to become great in the Catholic and Apostolic Church of Rome* After all these repugnances and antipathies towards Protestantism ; worldly inducements; spiritual encouragements, and false peace to the troubled soul ; add also ihefear of papal excom- munication, and the tortures of the Holy Inquis- ition, and then ask whether the conversion of a Roman Catholic is not a great wonder ? Yes ! a moral miracle, as great as the opening of the eyes of the blind, and the raising up of the dead. For it is the opening of the eyes of the blind ; and the raising of the dead in sins. As liiy intention is not ohly to give hiy jie^son* al experience, but also to describe Rome as it is how, the digression of the present chapter will hot be considered a deviation from the subject^ but ah elucidation of the moral corruption of the church of Rome. Having mentiohed Easter, when his Holiness the Pope so profusely pours out curses on Protestants, it Will not be out of or- der to give a description of the manner in which that festival is celebrated, and sanctified in Eome* JSaster is one of the three great festivals in the church of Rome. It is true, the calendar is near- ly all set apart to the commemoration of saintSk We have more saitits than there are days in the year; still Easter having been a subject of agita* lion in the church, and the cause of separation between the Latin and the Greek churches,^ Rome displays more luxury, and ecclesiastical splendor in its celebration than in any other festival in the calendar. ^Circa ann. 862. -EASTER. 17 The Holy week, which precedes Easter, is worthy to be mentioned. Every amateur of mu- sic will know something of the so far famed '"mfsej-ere" which is performed in the Sixtin Chapel during the last three evenings of the Holy week. The chapel is in the Vatican, painted by Michael Angela, fresh as if his master pencil had touched it only to-day ; on the right of the altar a throne is erected for the Pope ; on both sides the Cardinals are arrayed in purple,^ each of them assisted by their respective caudatario,^ and Ma- estro di ceremonia.^ — The patriarchs, and bish- ops in their pontifical dress ; the generals, and chiefs of every religious order in their monastic array. The lodges erected on both sides of the chapel are crowded with foreign ambassadors, their ladies and other distinguished foreigners of both sexes. In the middle of the chapel is a reading desk of a triangular form upon which ^The cardinal's usual dress is scarlet red, but in the mormng they dress in purple. ^Caudatario is literally translated tail-hear er, or one who carries the tail of the cardinal's togfa. '^Maestro di ceremonia, is a priest who directs the order in pontifical masses ; every cardinal has one as an apendix to his suit, and in the house of his emi- nence, he is an overseer of the domestic affairs. 18 EASTER, thirteen candles are burning, as a symbol of the candelabrum in the temple of Jerusalem ; others however, say of our Savior, and his twelve dis- ciples. Every eye is directed towards the throne ; the Pope giving the signal, the '^ miserere meV* is commenced, and at once the chapel is rendered vocal by a hundred voices. To describe the ef- fect, and impression which it produces upon the senses, is beyond the power of human language. Ecclesiastical splendor flashing on every side in a thousand forms, military, and diplomatic decor- ations of all the courts of Europe, the display of the ladies, and other fascinations beggar all des- cription. In addition to this, the paintings of the most renowned masters of Italy, the best perform- ers of the theatrical artists, and choresters, and the most unrivalled voices of Eunuchs, are too overpowering to be depicted. After every psalm a candle is extinguished, until the last^ which re- mains the only one burning in the whole chapel. We can see the colors gradually darken, and tlie figures of the paintings by degrees lose their form, a striking symbol of the papal power, which is loosing its influence, and gradually fading away like the twilight of the evening. Saturday before Easter, at twelve o'clock the bells are heard from every steeple, the clouds are EASTER. 1 9 rent by their sounds, and the earth trembles from the roaring of the canon from Fort St, An- gelo; the ears are deafened by the merry clamors of the children in the streets, and the reports of pistols fired nearly in every house. The re- membrance of that joyful spectacle produces now a very different sensation in my heart, for I know the Savior has risen from the dead, and I with him. Saturday evening at seven o'clock, P. M. every dwelling, where an image of a Madonna, or any saint is stationed for the houses are illuminated,^ altars are erected, lytanies are sung ; and prayers upon bended knees are offered to those saints, all these in the middle of the streets. In the mean- lime the multitude of the (so called) better class of the inhabitants of Rome are directed toward St. Peter's, where the grandest, and most impos- ing spectacle is to be seen. But at the same time the most revolting to every moral sense, and reli- gious feeling. A cross (covered with brass, semetrically illu- minated with thousands of lamps) is suspended ^It is the custom in Italy to have niches in the walls; the outside of the houses, in which the Virgin Mary, or some saint is placed, as a protector of the house, and family. 20 EASTER. in the middle of the church. The reader may form some kind of an idea of the colossal height of that cross, when he is informed that its magni- tude does apparently, not diminish even after be- ing suspended at a tremendous height above the heads of the people. Round that cross you can see, promenading arm in arm, the lover with his dul- cinea, as though promenading in a dancing sa- loon ; chatting, laughing, and indulging in most irreverent acts, which would be considered an of- fence in a respectable hotel, these are committed publicly in the sanctuary, under the cross of Christ. As the church is entirely dark, except the light which the cross reflects in it, there are sometimes lovers of darkness, rather than of light ; who often lose their way in the adjacent collon- ades, and chapels, where they perpetrate the most wicked acts, of which every honest man would blush, except the adorers of the cross in the church of St. Peter's. This spectacle lasts until eleven o'clock in the night ; decency forbids me to say more, and constrains me«to relinquish the subject of the adoration of the cross in St. Pe- ter's at Rome. Easter morning. The roaring of the cannon announces the ushering in of the morn ; the har- EASTER. 21 monious sounds from the thousand steeples miti- gate the roughness of the first, and invite the slumbering beauty to leave her couch, and pre- pare for the rendezvous given the last night under the illuminated cross. Nine o'clock, A. M. The square of St. Pe- ter's presents the most varied, and interesting spectacle, State carriages of all descriptions ; the cardinals in their full dress, and suit, the am- bassadors of all the foreign courts, with all the particular characteristics of their nations; car- riages of the innumerable prelates, bishops, and chiefs of the monastic orders; two regiments of soldiers in arms ; martial music, the spouting of the gigantic fountains ; thousands, and ten thous- ands of pedestrians of every sex and class, dress- ed in their best garments, take their posts under the colonades, or other spots, as they think the most convenient ; this lasts until one o'clock, P. M., so that the whole square is thronged with people. One o'clock is usually the time of the appearance of the Pope on the balcony of the church ; a dead silence prevails throughout the whole mass of the people; every eye is directed to the spot, with watches in the hand, the min- utes are counted ; in the mean time the balcony 22 EASTER. is filling with cardinals, bishops, and monks ; the attention becomes so ri vetted, that a sigh might be heard ; at length the Pope appears in an arm chair carried upon the shoulders of eight persons between two gigantic fans. Then the deafening shouts of the people, the sonorous martial music, the roaring of the cannon rend the clouds. *' Pa* dre la santa benedizione,^^ (father the holy bles- sing,) bursts from every mouth ; the handkerchiefs are waved by the ladies, and the hats by the men. All prostrate themselves upon the ground, they receive the blessing from the Pope ; a prelate then reads the so called " Bulla Coena JDomini,^^ in which the most horrible curses ao^ainst the here- tics, and infidels are pronounced, and a blessing upon all the faithful. Thus ends the spectacle for this time. In the afternoon all the promenades are visited, the wine houses filled ; the places of amusement enjoyed until the evening, when all again repair to the square of St. Peter's to enjoy the illumina- tion of the cupola.^ It is horrible to think, that ^The cupola is illuminated by three hundred per- sons, who are stationed with Hghtened torches within the interior, in order that they should not be seen, and as soon as the first stroke of seven o'clock is heard, they rush forward and light the lamps assigned unto each of them, so that in om minute the whole cupola CONVERSION OF THE AUTHOR 23 suductions of the innocent, wicked plans framed, and perpetrated in those days, partly in the sanc- tuary under the eyes of the priests shall be called a religious worship. NARRATIVE OF THE MANNER IN WHICH THE PROVIDENCE 0¥ GOD SHOWED ME THE ERRORS OF POPERY. As the heaven is high above the earth, so great is God's mercy towards men ; and as far as the east is from the west, so far are his counsels from ours. One day, it was a charming summer day, a day when an Italian sun sheds its enlivening rays over the city of the world ; who could think is illuminated, even the cross on the top has three licrhts. In addition to this, the reflection of these lights in the spouts of the gigantic fountains, where every drop in the air is like a prism, and represents thousands of rainbows, is above all description. — When Joseph II. of Austria visited Rome, the Pope gave an illumination in honor of that august stranger, when he had watched the spouting of the fountains for a short time, he said: ''It is enough." But how much greater was his surprise when he was informed that these were perpetual fountains. And at the first stroke of seven o'clock the Secretary of State asked for a pinch of snufF and in the time the emperor of Austria turned to give his snuff-box, the v^rhole cupola appeared in fire. Joseph was so astonished, that he would not take the snuff-box back, but gave it as a present to the cardinal, Secretary of State. 24 CONVERSION OF THE AUTHOR. that this would be the day, upon which I was to be emancipated from the thraldom of superstition and freed from the fetters of moral and religious slavery. Coming, as usual, from the public library of the Sapienza, on my way home I passed the Piazza Novona, one of the public squares of that name, and there encountered the stand of an anti- quarian, as one who sold second-handed books. After having examined his stock and found noth- ing which could be of use for my library, I saw a basket on the ground with very old books, which he offered me for tre Bajocchj, four cents a piece. I searched and searched, and found a small volume in the French language, a translation from the Eng- lish, entitled: ''Father Clement." I thought it a life of some saint, and being written in French, I thought it might be of double benefit for edifica- tion as well as instruction. I paid my four cents and left the stand. How great was my surprise when in reading Father Clement, I found a dis- cussion between a Jesuit and a Protestant, instead of a life of a saint. All my attention was directed to one point, where is the truth ? After having attentively perused the little book, I read again and again the scriptural passages in favor of the arguments. I could not then believe that such lOONVERSlOK OF ^HE AtTTHOH. 25 ^l^assages were in the Bible, and what was still worse, I had 7io Bible to confront th^ tr«th and correctness of the passages. Some of my read- ers v/ill think it impossible that a Roman Catho- lic priest shonld be v/ithout a Bible ; they will at- tribute it to my own liikewarmness, I can assure them that few, very feio priests in Rome and throughout Italy are in the possession of thrt Holy book, and those who have it keep it like any other classical book only as &n ornament in their libraries.^ Having no B.bte to verify the truth of the pas- sages quoted by the Protestant, I went to the pub- Mc library of the Dominicans, called, "Za il^'- nerva,^' from the church which was once a tem- ple dedicated to that divinity. But what was my surprise, when on asking Fruter Jlmhrodio for a Polyglot Bible, he asked rae if I had the permis- sion from the Msestro del Sacro Palazzo to read tv ? I told him with resentment that I never knew of the necessity of such a license ; as a theolo- ^When I studied theology, Ilieard twice every week the lectures on Bisquisitio Biblica, and never saw a Bible in the hand of the professor, nor in the hand of any of the students. The professor dictated from his f)apers on the controversy of the creation; about the Adamites and Pre-adamites and all such stuff, which i^as neither for the head nor for the heart 2S CONVERSION OF tHB AUTHOE, gian I thought it an affront to refuse me the Bible.- Fra. Ambrosio, who was a very good natured old- man, and who knew me from a boy, assured me' that his intention was not to insult me, but these were his orders ; and that every one, even old pnests must have a license to read the Bible. BuV he stated that he would ask the librarian, and tell him that he knew me, and if the librarian had no- objection he would give me the Polyglot Bible. He did so, and the librarian Father Cipidlay at that time also the vice inquisitor, authorized him^ to give me any book, even those which are in the Index (libror. prohib.) of the forbidden books. These little difficulties augmented my desire to read not only the few passages in Father Clement,, but the whole Bible. On the same day 1 searched in all the bookselkr stores for a Bible, and bought one, a translation from the vulgate by Martini y Arch-bishop of Florence. It is impossible to des- cribe my feelings, when I found that the passages quoted by the Protestant had been faithfully trans- cribed from the Bible. New, and almost unde- fineable ideas occupied my mind. I am so old^ and have not known the Bibk ? I studied theo- logy, read the fathers, and canons of the different councils, and not the Bible ? Why should I have CONVERSION OF THE AUTHOR. 2f is. special permission to read the word of God ? Why have Protestants, [who are considered here- tics] free access to the Bible ? These, and many other excruciating thoughts tortured my mind. It was a problem, which I could not solve. I felt that there was something wrong ; but where, I could not find out* Haunted by these thoughts I went to my spiritual adviser, and recounted to him every thing* I was sincere, and that too perhaps for the first time since my fifteenth year, wheri I first opened my whole heart and troubled mind to a confessor. He was astonished that such a trifling thing should trouble me, as it was nothing more than temptations of the devil, to which I yielded. He counseled me : to let the Bible alone, as it was too strong a food for my fer- vent imagination. Then he asked me: " If I had not been in contact with some heretic P If I had given Father Clement to some other per^ son to read? If I had communicated my senti- ments to some of my companions? If I had been a long time in the possession of the Bible ? After having answered all these questions in the negative, he continued his directions. " To give no room in my mind to such heretical ideas ; being only Satan, who appears as an angel of S8 CONVERSION OF THE AtJTPHO&i light. That I must burn Father Clement^ as the sole cause of the eviL That I should make it as a rule to pay my morning and evening de^ votions to the ever blessed Virgin Mary. To be more exact in the duty of saying the horss can- onical in the Breuiary, Sf-c. <^c."^ I promised to do all he I'equired me to do, and I did all, except two things I could not observe^ namely : to let the Bible alone and to burn Father Clement; After a long and heart-rending strugle with my^ self, I kneeled before the image of the Virgin Mary, and asked in fervent prayer the counsel of the queen of heaven, [as I believed her to be;^ I came to the resolution to inquire : 1st. Whether the practices of the church ot Rome has been the practice of the primitive churches ? 2nd. Whether the practices and doctrines of the church of Rome can be proved and sanctioned by the authority of the Bible ? and 3rd. Whether they can be confirmed by the au^ thority of the Fathers ? ^Horae Canonicae is a certain task, which every priest is in duty bound to perform, by saying some prayers in the Bieuiary in the morning, and is called : ''Ma- tUtinae," and in the evening called: "Vesper," and in the middle of the day, called horce. CONVERSION OF THE AUTHOR. 29 Scarcely had I made the resolution, when I felt as if a burden had fallen from my heart. I thanked the Holy Virgin for her wise counsel, and deter- mined to go to work as soon as possible. Never were the words of the apostle Paul "to will is present with me, but how to perform that which is good, I find not;" more applicable than in my case. Though strongly determined to investigate the Scriptures, still there was an internal voice as it were, which whispered to my conscience, say- ing: "What, inquire if the doctrines of the church of Rome are the same as in the primitive churches ? Is it not the Catholic and Apostolic church ? V/ho can doubt the primitive principles and usages of the Roman church ? What ! in- quire whether the doctrines of the Catholic church can be proved by the Bible ? Is it not a mortal sin to doubt the authenticity of the mother church, which is the only saving church out of which there is no salvation ?" Such were the thoughts and feelings, which habits prejudice and perhaps superstition suggested to my bewildered mind. Father Clement being constantly upon ray table, I read it over and over again, so that I knew it nearly by heart. Finally I made a resolution, which was in harmony with my own conscience, 30 THE MASS. neither derogatory to reason, nor to the doctrines of the church of Rome. A resolution of which no Roman Catholic, priest or layman can be ashamed. It was simply this. If the doctrines of the church of Rome are true, why should I not investigate them, and see if they are really based upon the Scriptures, and the usages of the primitive churches ? In order that my faith might be more fully established, and also in^ structed in the Bible, Are the doctrines of the church of Rome not based upon the Bible, and if they are contrary to the usages of the primi- tive churches, it is necessary for my souls sal' vation to know it. THE MASS. My readers will bear in mind, that at that time I had not been persuaded of the errors of popery, nor had I been in the possession of the truth. First I doubted and then I inquired ; therefore he must not expect an elaborate theological disquisi- tion upon the gospel truth, but only the experience of a sincere seeker. All the practices and dogmas of the church of Rome, were crowded together in my mind. The -TEE MA^. gi miasms; fransuhstantiafion ; aimcular confes- rsion; invocation of Saints; veneration of im- .mages ; tbdoration of relics ; fiUrgatory and in dulgences ; infallibility of the Fope; and the Inquisition^ ^c. AM these presented themselves at ^oiiee to my mind, and I scarcely knew where to begin. But as the Mass is a precept of the church, and an injunction to every member : " to hear the sacred office of the Mass on fistival days^''^ it swas theirs/ subject ©f investigation on Scriptural grounds, and also whether it was the usage of the .primitive churches ? In my investigation I neg- lected nothing ; I read the fathers, canons, and searched diligently the Scriptures to support it; for ray desire was not to find errors, but to strenghten my faith in the doctrines of the church of Rome. " The Mass [as I had been taught] is u sacri- fice of external oblation of the body and blood of Christ, through the forms of bread and wine, sen- sibly exhibited by a legitimate minister, offered t@ ^God in recognition of his supreme dominion, with the use of certain prayers and ceremonies pres- ^cribed by the church for the better worship of 'Ood and edification of the people.'^ As the es- ^Wished doctrine oi the church of Rome, it is 32 "^HE- mass; supported by aU theologians.^ The- conngiT e^" Trenl is equally decided on the subject.^ " Who- soever shall say, thc^t the sacrifice of the Mass is merely an offering of praise and thanks, or a sim- ple commemoration of the sacrifice performed on the cross and not propitiatory; of that it is of benefit only to the recipient ; and that it ought not to be off*ered for the living and the dead for sins, penances, satisfactions, asnd other aeces&ities ; let him be s;ccursed." The cerenwnieSr,^Vv^h form a. part of the sac- rifice I had as a matter of necessity investigated. Before that, I performed them mechanically, nofe even thinking of their signification ; but how was 1 disappointed, wl^en. I found that those ceremo- nies are nat more related with the things of which they should be emblematic, than my readers are related with tW man in the moon. I shall give a. short description of the vestment and evolutions of the mass,. and the reader will see that there aro many acts and ceremDmes, which have no signi- fication at alL ^Belarmino de Miss«sacrificio,lih. 1. — Suarez Dise^ quisilio de Missse celebranda. ^Concil Tredent. Sessio 22, caB. 3,. THE MASS. S3 " The priest, who officiates/ shall cover his head with an amice, (a white towel,) which sig- nifies the veil that the Jews put on Christ ; then over his own clothing an alb, (a white linen shirt,) which betokens a garment of that color, which Herod is said to have put upon Christ. The gir- dle, signifying the cord with which our Saviour was bound in the garden ; next he puts on a stole about his neck, as an emblem of the cord with which Christ was led to execution ; then comes the manipulum on his left hand, in allusion to the cord with which Christ was bound to the pil- lar when scourged; over all these a very rich, with gold embroidered vestment, which hangs be- hind and before in a curious manner, and is call- ed pivialis, significant of the purple garment with which the Jews clothed our Saviour. The altar represents the cross, the cup, the sepulchre of the Saviour, the patina, or cover of the cup, the stone on the grave ; the lighted candle, the light of Christ. Then follow, the prostra- tions, and genuflections, the boy and the little bell; the numerous bowings, turnings and facings, kissings and crossings. The drinking of all the wine and the asking for more; the drying of the 'Missal. Rom. Rubrica. 34 THE MASS. cup with a white handkerchief as a sign that he drank all of it; all these things puzzled my mind. I searched the Bible in order to find a chapter in which the mass, which our Lord Je- sus Christ said, is described. I expected to find a description of the sacred vestments; the exact command of all the evolutions and in- tricate gesticulations of the celebrator of the mass. Unhappily I found not only nothing of all these things, but quite the contrary. I compared the missal with the Bible, and the following was the result of my research. The Church of Rome. " I further profess that in the mass is offered to God a true, proper, and propitiatory sacrifice for the livintr and dead." — Creed Pius. iv. " The mass is a sacri- fice not accompanied with shedding of blood." The mass is offered by sinful priests. The Bible. *'The blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin.' Epist. I. John c. i. v. 7. '^Behold the lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world." Gospel of John, chap. i. V. 29. "Without sheddinty of blood is no remission of sins." Epist. Heb. c. vii. V. 27. »» Christ offered up himself," Ep. to Heb. c. vii. V, 27, 'Ho put away sin bv the sacrifice of himself" Ep. to Heb. c. ix. V. 26. THE MASS. 35 77^6 dmrch of Rome, "The mass is often repeated, for the living, and (Jead." Cone. Trid. Can. 3 The priest needs dai- ly to offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins, then for the people. Ritus missal, Roman, "The day before our Lord suffered, he took bread into his holy and adorable hands, and lift- ing up his eyes to heav- en, to God, and giving thanks, he blessed (^^Aere the priest crosses, and re-crosses the wafer,) brake and gave to his disciples, (then the ma- neuver begins; the hos- tia is broken in two pieces upon the patina. The Bible. "Christ was once of- fered to bear the sins of many." Ep, Heb, c. ix. V. 28. "^y one offering he had perfected for ever them that are sancti- fied." Heb. c. X. V. 14. "Sush an high priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens, who need- eth not as those high priests to offer up sacri- fice first for his own sins, and then for the people." Ep. Heb. c. vii. v. 26. "And as they were eating, Jesus took bread and blessed it, and brake it, and gave it to the dis- ciples, and said : Take, eat; this is my body. "And he took the cup and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of it, for this is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins." Mat, 36 THE MASS. The Church of Rome, the fowl of the altar scraped loith it, in case a particle should have fallen upon the altar, again a genuflection, the hell sounds, the peo- ple fall upan their knees, strike their breasts, pray, and worship the hostia) sd.ymg: ''take ye all of this, for it is my body." (In the mean time while that maneuver goes on, the hostia is transubstantiated in the blood, body, soul, and divinity of Jesus Christ, or in more intelligible words, the morsel of bread is instantaneous- ly changed into the Re- deemer of the world ; then he crosses on the bottom of the cup and also on the brim of it, and taking it in his hand, he breathes on it, and utters the rest in the same low voice, viz, '«In like manner after supper he took this no- ble calice into his holy and adorable hands, and after thanks to the Fath- er, he blessed, (there he The Bible. c. xxvi. V. 26—28; Mark c. xiv. V. 22, 23 ; Luke c. xxii. V. 19, 20 ; Ep of 1 Cor. c. xi. V. 2S> tola MASSi ^1 Wke (Church of Rome. The Bible. crosses again) and gave it to his disciples, say- ing, Take ye, and drink VOU ALL OF THIS, for this is the cup of my blood, a new and ever- lasting testament, a mys- tery of faith, v^hich shall be shed for you, and for many, for the remission of sins, so oft as you do this, you shall do it in remembrance of me." — (Then raising the cup over his head that the people may likewise worship it, he kneels upon his knees, and without touching any- thing with the fingers which touched the body, blood, soul and divinity of Jesus Christ, he kis- ses with outstretched arms the altar, eats the hostia and drinks all the wine, asks for more, says some other prayers and Christ is eaten up, and the people dismissed. Who can imagine my feelings at the disappoint^ ihent; the words of the consecration not only ma- liciously altered, but also ignorantly applied, by saying, ^^drink ye all ofit,^^ alluding to the wine 38 TH£ MASB. instead of to the apostles, drink ye all thdlvltie of it, and the word shed, applying to the New Tes- tament, instead of to the blood of Christ j is absurd and laughable even to a beginner of the Greek language ; people who have Calmet and other ex^ pounders of the Scriptures, who teach the Greek in schoolsj should they not know that ^ict^axx' (testament) is feminine, and at/^uat (blood) is neu- tre gender ? It is impossible, it must be a wilful land deliberate deception. In addition to that, I found no sacred vestment ; no crossings ; no evo lutions whatever ; no breathing on the cup ; no mass in the Bible ; whom should I believe, the Bible or the church of Rome ? — certainly the Bi ble. My Roman Catholic brethren see, that it is not the spirit of Protestantism, or criticism, which induces me to write, but to call forth a spirit of investigation from the hearts of my dear Roman Catholic friends, is the only object. Though disappointed in my expectations, though the Bible contradicted the councils and the whole church, still it was impossible for me to make up my mind, and to decide against the church. There* fore I continued the investigation with regard to the PRAYERS, being an essential part of the mass ; in the hope that the church and the Bible would in that point agree. Here is the result of it. THE MASSo 39 The Church of Rome. The priest begins the mass with confiteor, &c. *'I confess to Almighty God, to blessed Virgin Mary, ever virgin-, to blessed Michael, the arch-angel, to blessed John the Baptist, &c., (and to you Father.") Ordin of the mass. After the introit, and the Kyrie Eleison he of- fers the following pray- er: "We beseech thee O Lord, by the merits of thy saints, whose relics are here, and of all the saints, that thou would'st vouchsafe to forgive me all my sins." A.t the oblation of the host, he prays: "Accept, b. Holy Fa- ther, Almighty and eter- nal God, this unspotted host which I, thy un- worthy servant offer un- to thee, my living and true God, for my innu- merable sins," &c. The Bihle. * *Against thee, thee only have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight." Ps. li. V. 4. "Christ is able to save them to the uttermost^ that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liv- eth to make intercession for them." Ep. to Heb- c. viii V. 25. "There is none righti- ous, no not one." Ep^ Romans c» iii. v. 10. The blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin." Ep. 1 John c. i. v. 7. But this man (Christ) after he had offered one sacrifice for sins, /or ey- er, sat down on the right hand of God," Epist, Heb. c. X. V. 20. "Christ was once of- fered to bear the sins of many." Ep. Heb. c. ix. V. 28. 40 ♦THE MABS. ,The Chiirch of Rome, 'Commemoration of the dead. "Be mindful, O Lord, t)f thy servants who are gone before us with the sign of faith, and rest in sleep of peace. To these, O Lord, and to all that sleep in Christ, grant we beseech thee a place of refreshment, light and peace." ''Lamb of God, that laketh away the sins of the world, give them eternal rest."" Cation of the mass. St. Peter'' s Chair. "O Lord, w^ho by de- livering to the blessed apostle Peter the keys "of the kingdom of hea- ven, didst give him the power of binding and loosing, grant that by his intercession, we may he freed from the bonds of our sins." Missal. Roman. The Bihh. ''Neither have thfey (the dead) any more a portion forever in any thing that is done (iil prayers, or in Masses, &c.) under the sun." — ^ Eccles. c. ix. v. 6. "Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord from henceforth. Yea-, with the spirit, that they 7nay rest from their la^ bors." Rev. ^c. xiv. v. 13v "Neither is there sal- vation in any other (but Chtist,) fot there is none other name under hea^ ven given among men whereby we must be saved." Acts Cw iv. v. 12. Having found no passage in the Bible to sup- port even the prayers of the mass, my faitli be*- THE MASS. 41 gan to shake ; my coRfidence in the siaeerity of the church to dimmish, and suspicion against spiritual tyranny awakened in my bosom. Now I know the reason why the reading of the Bible is forbidden, was the language of ,my heart, that the deception of priests might not be detected. My partiality to the church, and my prejudices lessened every day, and I became a more impar- tial inquirer after the truth of the gospeL So I could soon discern that the mass was not an in- stitution of the primitive churches, but a priestly fabrication of the Lateran Council in the year 1214, and afterwards sealed with the thousand anathemas in the council of Trent. I evidently saw that if that doctrine had been the doctrine of the primitive ciiurches, would the council of Trent have been obliged to introduce it with so many " Let him be accursed?^'' Soon I discov- ered the shameful pervei-sion of the Holy Bible, and the privation of the greatest of ail privileges, the cup which the Lord gave to his disciples.' The consequence of all this was awful, I had no faith in the authority, and infallibility of the church; no confidence in the priests, but looked on them as spiritual tyrants. I became dissatis- fied with myself for having been so ignorant, and 42 THE MASS. supei-stitioiTS, that I for so long a time, believ~ed 3 lie. The Scriptures I believed to be the inspired word of Gody but it was a dead letter for me ; i read the Scriptures not to edify myself, or to ap- ply it to the state of my sinful heart, and troubled soul, but to find out the anti-biblical doctrines^ and other anti-scriptural practices of the church of Rome ; and after I had found new errors, I felt happy. In one word 1 was no Roman Cath- olic in heart, nor a real believer in the gospel of Christ; I was more a negative Deist, than a true Christian. What was my surprise, when I made known my thoughts to some priests, my intimate friends, to find that they were rank infidels. With the Scriptures they were unacquainted ; the doctrines; of the church they considered as human fabrica-^ tions ; and the ceremonies as forms without the spirit of godliness. They mocked at and ridicu- led things most sacred in the eye of a devoted pa- pist; they laughed at the ignorance of the poor and deluded people, and often expressed contempt,, even hatred against the spiritual tyrants. Such instances I witnessed many times. In Rome all is appearance and hypocrisy. But as soon as the heart can find another sincere heart, then the THE MASS. 43 mask of appearance is thrown off, and in lamen- tations pours its sorrows into the bosom of the friend. In secret we sigh, and in public we are obliged to feast. But if the providence of God would deliver Italy from its temporal and spiritu- al bondage, the priests of Rome would be the first in the rank to defend the liberty of con- science, and that of the press, Voltaire, Rousseau, Macchiavelli, the novels of Boccaccio, Casti and other unchaste productions are constantly cherish- ed as food for the passions of the Priest's heart, and when among themselves these are the sub- jects of pleasing conversation. To say, " The Signora such and such a one, is the amorosa cif such a cardinal, or such a prelate is the cicisbeo, or lover of such, or such a lady. The priest so and so has two beautiful married sisters, he will soon become a canon," it is not very rare to hear, even in the presence of ladies. I found the ma- jority of the young priests negative infidels, or real sceptics ; immoral in their hearts, filthy with their tongues and hypocrites in appearance. That under such friends and companions, my christian progress was 7iot very rapid, is not to be won- dered at. TRANSUBSTANTIATION. Transubstantiation is the principle transaction of the priest in the so called propitiatory sacrifice of the mass. I will not give my readers a disser- tation on that important subject, nor the opinion which I now entertain of it, or make a display of Biblical knowledge, which I have acquired since that time. I will only give a candid description of my feelings, when I at first begun to investi- gate the doctrines of the church of Rome, in the light of the Bible. I had been taught, that: " in the most holy sa- crament of the Eucharist, there is truly^ really , and substantially the body and blood, together with the soul, and divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ. That the bread and wine are iniimediately changed into his body and blood, without any outward appearance of this change, which we only know hy faith. Though we see only bread and wine as before, we firmly believe that Jesus Christ is there in a miraculous manner, whole and entire under each of the two species, and un- der every particle, as under the whole without TRANSUBSTANTIATION. 45 being multiplied and without ceasing to be in heaven." Creed of Pius the IV, I searched the whole New Testament, but found not an idea, not even an indication of any thing which would suggest the least thought of such an extraordinary change in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper. The only passage which I found in my Bible, and upon which the whole fabric of transubstan- tiation is built, is the expression of our Saviour in the institution; saying: " Take, eat, this is my body ;" and giving the cup, saying : ''This is my blood,^^ Our Lord has not said, this represents my body and blood, but this is really and actually my body and blood. I thought it absurd to take that passage literally and others spiritually ; when every man of good sense, who possesses only the least knowledge of the Oriental languages, knows that figurative speech is common among them ; and that the dis- ciples understood it in the same figurative way. When Joseph was interpreting the dream of the chief butler and the baker in the prison, he told them : "the three branches of the vine are three days, and the three baskets are three days." They did not understand that the branches and the 46 TRANSUBSTANTIATION. baskets loere really, actually and truly days of twenty-four hours, but that they represented them. And when he interpreted the dream of Pharaoh he said: " the seven kine are seven years." Pha- raoh never thought that they are really, truly years, but that they represent the seven years. Daniel, when he interpreted the dream of Nebu- chadnezzar, said: '' Thou [O King] art this head of goldJ*'* He meant not that the king is really, truly, and actually transubstantiated into a head of gold, and the same time had the figure of a man, but that the head of gold represents the king. Even in our phrasiology, when an instructor teaches his pupils geography, he shows them a map, and says : " that is the State of New York, he does not mean that this is truly, really, and ac- tually transubstantiated into the State of New York, but that it represents it. Without multi- plying the examples, I found that our Saviour used in many instances a figurative language, say- ing : " / am the way ; / am the door ; / am thp vine." He never thought to convey the idea, to be really and truly transubstantiated into a Vine, or door, but that he represents it. My mind was deeply impressed at that time with some passages of the Scripture, Matt. chap. TRANSUESTANTIATION. 47 5, V. 28 — 30. " I say unto you. That whoso- ever looketh on a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. And if thy right eye offend thee pluck it out, and cast it from thee, for it is profitable for thee, that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into hell. And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee, &;c." If one passage is to be taken literally and not figuratively, all of them ought to be taken in the same sense. " If thy right eye offend thee pluck it out; if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee,