French Reformation
      
      
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        disguise too difficult for them to assume. Vowed to perpetual poverty
      
      
        and humility, it was their studied aim to secure wealth and power, to
      
      
        be devoted to the overthrow of Protestantism, and the re-establishment
      
      
        of the papal supremacy.
      
      
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        When appearing as members of their order, they wore a garb of
      
      
        sanctity, visiting prisons and hospitals, ministering to the sick and the
      
      
        poor, professing to have renounced the world, and bearing the sacred
      
      
        name of Jesus, who went about doing good. But under this blameless
      
      
        exterior the most criminal and deadly purposes were often concealed.
      
      
        It was a fundamental principle of the order that the end justifies the
      
      
        means. By this code, lying, theft, perjury, assassination, were not
      
      
        only pardonable but commendable, when they served the interests
      
      
        of the church. Under various disguises the Jesuits worked their way
      
      
        into offices of state, climbing up to be the counselors of kings, and
      
      
        shaping the policy of nations. They became servants to act as spies
      
      
        upon their masters. They established colleges for the sons of princes
      
      
        and nobles, and schools for the common people; and the children of
      
      
        Protestant parents were drawn into an observance of popish rites. All
      
      
        the outward pomp and display of the Romish worship was brought to
      
      
        bear to confuse the mind and dazzle and captivate the imagination, and
      
      
        thus the liberty for which the fathers had toiled and bled was betrayed
      
      
        by the sons. The Jesuits rapidly spread themselves over Europe, and
      
      
        wherever they went, there followed a revival of popery.
      
      
        To give them greater power, a bull was issued re-establishing the
      
      
        inquisition. (See Appendix.) Notwithstanding the general abhorrence
      
      
        with which it was regarded, even in Catholic countries, this terrible
      
      
        tribunal was again set up by popish rulers, and atrocities too terrible
      
      
        to bear the light of day were repeated in its secret dungeons. In many
      
      
        countries, thousands upon thousands of the very flower of the nation,
      
      
        the purest and noblest, the most intellectual and highly educated, pi-
      
      
        ous and devoted pastors, industrious and patriotic citizens, brilliant
      
      
        scholars, talented artists, skillful artisans, were slain or forced to flee
      
      
        to other lands.
      
      
        Such were the means which Rome had invoked to quench the light
      
      
        of the Reformation, to withdraw from men the Bible, and to restore
      
      
        the ignorance and superstition of the Dark Ages. But under God’s
      
      
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        blessing and the labors of those noble men whom He had raised up to
      
      
        succeed Luther, Protestantism was not overthrown. Not to the favor or