The Woman Who Rides the Beast
by
Dave Hunt
The following defense of The Woman Who Rides the Beast by author Dave Hunt will tell you a great deal about the book, its background, and its scholarly compilation. It is certainly the finest book of its kind on this subject I have seen. Its conclusions seem virtually unassailable. CRI, a Christian organization, criticized the book. The following is the author's response.
A
defense to criticism of the book by Dave Hunt:
I don't want
to have a public quarrel with CRI. However, I have been asked so many times by
people such as yourself to respond to such charges by CRI that I feel I must do
so at last.
I'm
astonished that the book in question (The Woman Who Rides the Beast)
could be labeled "unscholarly." Check its more than 800 footnotes for
yourself (which I doubt the critics have done) and note that the sources quoted
are Roman Catholic councils, catechisms, codes, encyclopedias, their own
historians and some respected non‑Catholic historians. Then note whether
all have been quoted accurately and in context—and reach your own conclusions.
As
for it being "ludicrous to identify the Roman Catholic Church as the whore
in Revelation 17," that same conviction was held by Martin Luther and all
of the Reformers, plus the countless evangelical Christians martyred by Rome for
1,000 years before the Reformation. So in criticizing me, CRI is heaping
ridicule upon the memory of millions of Reformers and martyrs!
Ever
since the fourth century there have been multitudes of evangelical Christians
who, out of conscience before God and in obedience to His Word, separated
themselves from Rome and the papacy. Concerning them, Bishop Alvaro Palayo, an
official of the Curia in Avignon,
wrote grudgingly 300 years before the Reformation, "Considering the Papal
Court has filled the whole Church with simony, and the consequent corruption of
religion [that sounds like apostasy!], it is natural enough the heretics should
call the Church the whore." (De
Planct. Eccl. ii.28,
cited in J H. Ignaz von Dollinger, The
Pope and the Council (London
1869), 185). Of course, Rome persecuted and killed these evangelical
"heretics." In referring to these martyrs, the great historian, Will
Durant, wrote, "The Roman Church, they were sure, was the Whore of
Babylon...." (Will Durant, The
Story of Civilization (Simon
and Schuster, 1950), 4:772). Einerius, an inquisitor appointed by Pope Innocent m
350 years
before the Reformation, said of the Waldensian Christians whom the Catholic
Church was attempting to exterminate (their surviving churches are a major
evangelical witness in Italy today), "They claim [that] the Roman Church is
the whore described in John's Revelation." Even leading Roman Catholics
said the same. St. Bonaventure, cardinal and general of the Franciscans, in his Commentary
on the Apocalypse, declared 300 years before the Reformation that Rome was
"the harlot who makes kings and nations drunk with the wine of her
whoredoms [i.e., the whore of Revelation 17]." The Reformers were certain
of this and preached it and put it into their creeds. D. Martyn
Lloyd‑Jones said, "I would not hesitate with the Reformers of the 1
6th century to [say that Roman Catholicism] is, as the Scripture puts it, 'the
whore."' It is rather shocking that CRI has the audacity to label ludicrous the firm conviction held almost universally by the
evangelical church and its martyrs for fifteen centuries!
Furthermore,
CRl's claim is false that "the Roman Catholic Church was the only Christian
church in existence prior to the Reformation, and therefore if it went into
apostasy Christ's promise that the gates of hell would not prevail against the
church failed." On the contrary, it was not the Roman Catholic Church but
those she martyred who were the real church throughout history. Martin Luther
himself said, "We are not the first to declare the papacy to be the kingdom
of Antichrist, since for many years before us so many and such great men (whose
number is large and whose memory is eternal) have undertaken to express the same
thing so clearly and plainly." (Plass, What
Luther Says, 1:36).
If
prior to the Reformation, as CRI claims (echoing the Catholic apologists, whom
they admire and praise), Roman Catholicism was the true church which Christ
founded, then who were the "many and such great men (whose number is large
and whose memory is etemal)" to whom Martin Luther referred as having stood
against Rome "for many years before" him? And who were those
"heretics" and
martyrs hundreds of years before the Reformation to whom Will Durant, the
Inquisitor Einerius and Bishop Alvaro Palayo (and others we don't have space to
quote) referred? And to take it back even further, to whom did the "Edict
of the Emperors Gratian, Valentinian II and Theodosius I" of February 27,
380, refer as the "others" who were obviously non‑Catholics? In
part the edict said:
We
order those who follow this doctrine to receive the title of Catholic
Christians, but others we judge to be mad and raving and worthy of incurring the
disgrace of heretical teaching, nor are their assemblies to receive the name of
churches. They are to be punished not only by Divine retribution but also by our
own measures, which we have decided in accordance with Divine inspiration.
(Sidney Z. Ehler and John B. Morrall, Church
and State Through the Centuries: A Collection of historic documents with
commentaries (London, 1954), p. 7).
Clearly,
already in A.D.380
there were
"assemblies" of Christians who claimed to be "churches"
independent of Rome. Indeed, the Albigenses and Waldenses traced their heritage
back for many centuries and declared not only that Rome was the whore but that
they and other believers independent of Rome were "the true church."
E.H. Broadbent calls these Bible believing Christians The
Pilgrim Church in his book of that name:
In the Alpine valleys of Piedmont there had been for centuries [prior to the twelfth century] congregations of believers calling themselves brethren, who came later to be widely known as Waldenses, or Vaudois....ln the South of France...the congregations of believers who met apart from the Catholic Church were numerous and increasing. They are often called Albigenses [and] had intimate connections with the brethren—whether called Waldenses, Poor Men of Lyons, Bogomils, or otherwise—in the surrounding countries, where [non Catholic] churches spread among the various peoples.
It took more than 100 years to all but exterminate these believers several centuries before the Reformation. CRI believes and promulgates the false charges of heresy, Manicheanism, etc. which the Roman Catholic Church (to justify their slaughter) has leveled against these evangelicals. They were true Christians, and are described as such in Halley's Bible Handbook and Foxe's Book of Martyrs. Abraham Mellinus, in his History of the Persecutions and Martyrs published in 1619, writes that the Albigenses and Waldenses were sometimes called Catharists and held the same creed and though called heretics were "pious, upright and moral people."