The Jesuit Order and the Council of Trent – Walter Veith

Posted: June 29, 2016 at 6:16 pm

The Catholic Counter Reformation - The Council of Trent and the Jesuit Order In 1545, the Catholic Church convened one of its most famous councils in history. It took place north of Rome in a city called Trent. The Council of Trent continued for three sessions ending in 1563. One of its main purposes was to plan a counterattack against Martin Luther and the Protestants. Thus, the Council of Trent became a center for Romes Counter Reformation.

Up to this point, Romes main method of attack had been largely frontal: openly burning Bibles and heretics. Yet this warfare only confirmed in the minds of Protestants the conviction that papal Rome was indeed the Beast power that would make war with the saints (Revelation 13:7). Therefore a new tactic was needed, something less obvious. The sought after solution was found in the Jesuit Order.

Eleven years earlier, on August 15, 1534, Ignatius Loyola founded a secret Catholic order called the Society of Jesus, also known as the Jesuits.

At the Council of Trent, the Catholic Church gave the Jesuits the specific assignment of bringing Protestantism back to the Mother Church. This was to be done not only through the Inquisition and through torture, but also through theology and deception.

The Jesuits have had a dark history of intrigue and sedition. That is why they were expelled from Portugal (1759), France (1764), Spain (1767), Naples (1767), and Russia (1820).

Jesuit priests have been known throughout history as the most wicked political arm of the Roman Catholic Church.i

Read about the rise and spread of futurism, a Catholic theology that has pulled believers away from Biblical truth

By Jim Holdeman. Jim writes from Oklahoma. If you enjoyed this article, share it with a friend. To learn more, check out our media siteAmazing Discoveries TVor visit our webstore.

i Robert Caringola, Seventy Weeks: The Historical Alternative (Abundant Life Ministries Reformed Press, 1991): 31.

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The Jesuit Order and the Council of Trent - Walter Veith

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