The Fourth Lateran Council
Pope Honorius III, who succeeded Innocent III in 1216, got his pontificate off to a decisive start by ordering that the new synagogue built by the Jews in Rome should be immediately demolished.
In 1219, papal authorities ruled that any Jew buying a house from a Christian must pay property taxes to the Church. The same year, the Archbishop of Toledo in Spain established an annual tribute to be paid by evry adult Jew in his diocese.
The year 122 saw the English Council of Oxford imposing general strictures on the Jews and the Golden Bull of Hungary forbidding them to hold public office. The first quarter-century was rounded off by the Council of Paris, which ordained in 1223 that Christians must not be employed in Jewish households.
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The anti-Jewish code of the Fourth Lateran Council was re-enacted in 1227 by the bishops of France meeting at Narbonne, while the city of Marseilles, to implement Lateran's Canon 68, ruled that every Jew in the area who had reached his seventh year must wear on his chest a large, bright-colored disc.
In 1228, the newly-elected Pope Gregory IX decreed that all Crusaders indebted to Jews were to be free from paying interest. And in December of 1230, King Louis IX (Saint Louis) of France declared that Jews could not make legal contracts nor leave the estates of their lords.
King Louis of France (Saint Louis)
In 1233, Pope Gregory wrote to te hierarchy of Germany: "Ungrateful for favors and forgetful of benefits, the Jews return insult for kindness and impious contempt for goodness ... they who ought to know the yoke of perpetual enslavement because of their guilt." The Pope also wrote to Saint Ferdinand, King of Castile, charging him to see "that the perfidious Jews never in the future grow insolent, but that, in servile fear, they shall ever publicly suffer the shame of their sin."
The year 1240 marks the beginning of open war on the Jewish Talmud. In early Lent of that year, Pope Gregory IX instructed Saint Louis and Saint Ferdinand that, while the Jews of France and Castile were at their synagogues, their homes should be searched and copies of the Talmud confiscated. Saint Louis followed this search by ordering, in June of 1242, Europe's first official public burning of the Jewish book.
In 1244, Pope Innocent IV, continuing Gregory IX's tradition, issued the famous Impia Gens. In it, he assailed the Talmud as "containing every kind of vileness and blasphemy against Christian truth," and ordered the book seized, wherever it might be found, and destroyed. Accordingly, Saint Louis held another Talmud-burning at Paris in 1244, and still another in 1248.
Meanwhile, in distant Dublin, a law had been passed in 1241, prohibiting the selling of any Irish land to Jews. And, back in France, Pope Innocent IV convened the General Council of Lyons in 1245, which reaffirmed all the Church's anti-Jewish enactments. The following year, a local council of French bishops, meeting at Beziers, forbade Jews to practice medicine.
Shortly after the Council of Lyons closed, Archbishop Philip of Savoy demanded that the Jews get out of the city entirely. Thereafter, no Jew lived in Lyons for a century, and any who passed through had to pay a toll, the same as was paid for cattle, both entering the city and leaving it.
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Apparently hoping that they would be more fortunate in the second half-century than they had been in the first, the Jews petitioned Pope Innocent IV, in April of 1250, to let them build a new synagogue at Cordova, Spain, The petition was refused.
In December of 1254, Saint Louis of France, with the blessing of the Holy See, expelled all Jews from his kingdom. Seven years later, they were banished from Brabant, in Germany, and the year after that, from Treves.
The year 1263 saw a public burning of the Talmud at Barcelona, Spain. And in 1265, Pope Clement IV ordered death for any Jew in the Papal States found with a Talmud in his house.
Pope Clement IV
In 1266, the Council of Breslau cautioned Christians not to buy meat or other provisions from Jewish dealers. It also prescribed putting the Jews in a ghetto, to be "divided from the section inhabited by Christians by a fence , wall, or ditch." The following year, the council of Vienna forbade Jewish doctors to treat Christian patients and, in conformity with the Fourth Lateran Council, decreed that whenever a Viennese Jew appeared in public, he must wear a pointed hat.
In July of 1267, Pope Clement IV issued the bull, Turbato Corde, extending the Inquisition begun by Gregory IX, so that it could deal not only with heretics, but also with Jews who had seduced Catholics from the Faith. The city of London was aroused in 1271 to prohibit Jews from acquiring any more property there. And, in 1274, occurred the death of the great Saint Thomas Acquinas, who in his De Regimine Judaeorum told Christian rulers: "Jews, in consequence of their sin, are or were destined to perpetual slavery; so that sovereigns of states may treat their goods as their own property, with the sole proviso that they do not deprive them of all that is necessary to sustain life."
St. Thomas Aquinas
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The year 1275 opened with the Jews being expelled from Marlborough, Gloucester, Worcester, and Cambridge in England and, in 1276, from Bavaria.
In August of 1278, Pope Nicholas III directed the Jews of Lombardy to attend weekly sermons given for them by Dominican preachers. The Pope further stated that Jews "who, through fear, though not absolutely coerced, had received Baptism and had returned to their Jewish blindness, should be handed over to the secular power."
The Council of Ofen, held in Hungary in 1279 and presided over by a papal legate, decreed that any Christian responsible for putting a Jew in public office was to be excommunicated.
In 1280, England adopted Lombardy's practice by obliging all Jews in the kingdom to attend weekly sermons. This same year, King Alphonso X of Leon and Castile imprisoned his entire Jewish population until it had paid a special levy, plus an additional fine for each day of delay.
Archbishop Peckham of London, a city growing acutely uncomfortable for the Jews, gave orders in 1283 that all the synagogues in his diocese must be closed. And the same year, King Pedro of Aragon decreed that no Jew could hold a position that would give him jurisdiction, power, or authority over Christians.
In November 0f 1286, Pope Honorius IV wrote to the English Archbishop of Canterbury and York, calling the Talmud "that damnable" and urging them "vehemently to see that it not read by anyone, since all evils flow from it." A few months later, in may of 1287, King Edward I had the Jews of England thrown into prison. And finally, on November 1, 1290, Edward ordered all Jews to be deported from the country - to which they were not allowed to return till the time of the Protestant Cromwell, almost four centuries later.
The Protestant Cromwell
Two events mark the final years of the thirteenth century. On June 13, Pope Boniface VIII issued his bull Exhibita Nobis, ordering that Jews could be denounced to the Inquisition without the name of the accuser being revealed, so as to protect Christians against Jewish reprisals. And, to bring the century to a blazing conclusion, the city of Paris held, in 1299, one more public burning of the Jewish Talmud.
Pope Boniface VIII
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Some months ago, the American Jewish Committee's magazine, Commentary, carried an article which gave details of the anti-Jewishness of the Church in France during the Middle Ages. One of the items which most annoyed the A.J.C. spokesman was an inscription placed over the gate of the Cemetery6 of the Holy Innocents in Paris. In bold letters, it read, "Beware of a Jew, a madman, and a leper."
This French inscription makes a pithy summary of all that the Church, at its height of power, tried to indicate concerning the Jewish people. Jews were to be avoided, quite as one would avoid the mad and the leprous. They were to be restrained and quarantined, lest their perfidy and filth infect Christian society. The Church's prudent devices (ghettos, badges, and the rest) wee thus the fruit of a mother's solicitude for her children. It was only when Europe turned against its mother that these safeguards vanished and the Jewish infection spread abroad in the land - leaving the once-Christian West in its present, unspeakable state of misery.
Nota Bene ( note well ) : For an un-interfered with rendition of the above, please click on this link ... http://www.fatherfeeney.org/point/57-feb.html 8-)
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2 comments:
Can you still be a jew, and Catholic, Dave?
Cheers ye ol' battle axe!
Ha,Ha! That's a good one , Stuffy! "Can you still be a 'jew' and a Catholic?"
I thinka' you gotta' your verbs and nouns all a muddled up there. But wait a minute, ... let me explain a bit for you... the Jew he like a pull a fast one over you when it comes to the dollar, and he try to haggle you down so you getta less for your dollar, and we say the Jew he's a been a 'jewing' you (past participle of the verb to 'jew')
Now you understand, eh?
No, you still don't understand? Well, then. let me tell you a funny Jew joke instead, and then maybe you feel better!
How can you tell the difference between a Jew and a Catholic waiting at a railway station?
That's a easy one ... the Catholic won't be there (he already caught the train). The Jew is still waiting for the train that arrived 2000 years ago!
You like a that one , Stuffy? Here's another good one.
Padre Pio once said about a kind doctor, "What a pity he is a Jew."
That's enough of all the jokes...I gotta' go and sweepa' up the front lawn cos' we had a heavy dew on it last night, and the neighbors might think I been wasting all their precious fluoridated water on it 8-(
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