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The Beast and the
Bible
A tense silence reigned in the little cottage in Quebec.
"Sir, you know the door by which you entered my house. Please take the same
door and go away quickly!"
Pierre's father, Charles, had studied in the Theological
Seminary to prepare himself for the priesthood. A few days before taking his
vows, however, he witnessed sickening iniquity in the high quarters of the
church. He changed his mind, studied law, and became a notary. Not long after,
he married a young woman named Renee and soon little Pierre was born.
At about 4 years of age Pierre moved with his parents to a
tiny settlement far to the north. No school had yet been established there, so
young Pierre was privileged to have his own mother for his first teacher.
Before leaving the Seminary of Quebec, Charles had received
from one of his superiors a beautiful French and Latin Bible. That Bible was the
first book, after the A B C's, that Pierre learned to read. In this secluded
little home school, Renee selected the chapters which she considered the most
interesting for the young developing mind. Little Pierre read them every day
with the greatest attention and pleasure. With no trivial, worldly amusements or
exciting television programs to distract him, he came to love the Bible. He so
much enjoyed several of the chapters, that he read them over and over until he
knew them by heart.

By the age of eight or nine he had memorized the history of
the creation and fall of man, the deluge, the sacrifice of Isaac, the history of
Moses, the plagues of Egypt, the sublime hymn of Moses after crossing the Red
Sea, the history of Samson, the most interesting events of the life of David,
several Psalms, all the speeches and parables of Christ, and the whole history
of the sufferings and death of our Savior as narrated by John.
Many precious hours were spent by his mother's side reading
to her the sublime pages of the divine book. Sometimes she interrupted to see if
he understood what he read. When his answers made her sure that he understood,
she would often kiss him and press him close to herself as an expression of her
joy. How the angels must have loved to listen in to these happy, sacred
occasions.
One day Pierre sat by his mother's side reading to her of the
sufferings of the Savior. His young heart was so impressed that his voice
trembled and he could hardly continue to speak. Renee, feeling his emotion,
tried to say something on the love of Jesus for us, but she could not utter a
word-her voice was suffocated by her sobs. She leaned her head on Pierre's
forehead. The two wept together and their tears mingled on Pierre's cheeks. The
Holy Book fell from his hands, as he threw himself into his dear mother's arms.
No human words can express what was felt in that most blessed
hour! It was a never to be forgotten hour. Two hearts were perfectly blended at
the feet of a dying Savior. There seemed to be a perfume from heaven in those
mother's tears which were flowing on her child. It seemed then that there was a
celestial harmony in the sound of her voice and in her sobs. More than half a
century later Pierre would still remember that solemn hour when Jesus, for the
first time, revealed to him something of his suffering and of His love. His
heart would leap with joy every time he thought of it.
Their home was several miles from the church, and the roads
in rainy weather were very bad. The neighboring farmers, when unable to go to
church, would gather at Pierre's home in the evening. Using a table for a
platform, Pierre would often repeat the most beautiful parts of the Old and New
Testaments. The breathless attention, the amens of the guests, and often the
tears of joy which his mother tried in vain to conceal, supported, strengthened
and encouraged young Pierre as he spoke before so many people. When his parents
saw that he was growing tired, Renee would sing some of the beautiful French
hymns with which her memory was filled.
When the weather permitted, Pierre's family along with the
other farmers would hitch up their buggies for the ride to church. Arriving
early, the farmers would take Pierre into their buggies at the door of the
temple and request him to recite some chapter of the Gospel. With rapt attention
they listened to the sweet clear voice of the child, giving them the bread which
comes from heaven. When the church bells rang, they expressed their regret that
they could not hear more.
One beautiful spring day in 1818 an ominous event cast a
shadow across the beautiful friendship Pierre had with his Saviour through the
precious Word of God. Renee was singing one of her favorite hymns as she worked
on the mending. Pierre was at the door, playing and talking to a Robin which he
had tamed. Suddenly he saw the priest coming near the gate. The sight of him
sent an uneasiness through his whole frame. It was his first visit to Pierre's
home.
Hastily Pierre ran to the door and whispered, "The
Curate is coming!" The last sound was hardly out of his lips when the Rev.
Mr. Courtois was at the door, and Charles, shaking hands with him, gave him a
welcome.
The conversation was animated and interesting at first. It
was a real pleasure to hear him. But suddenly his countenance changed. A dark
cloud had come over his mind, and he stopped talking. The silence which followed
was tense and strained. It looked like the heavy hour which precedes a storm. At
last the priest addressed Charles. "Mr. Chiniquy," he said, "Is
it true that you and your child read the Bible?"
"Yes sir," was the quick reply, "My little boy
and I read the Bible, and what is still better, he has learned many of its most
interesting chapters by heart. If you would enjoy it, Mr. Curate, he will repeat
some of them for you."
"I did not come for that purpose," the priest
replied abruptly, "But don't you know that you are forbidden by the holy
Council of Trent to read the Bible in French?"
"It makes very little difference to me whether I read
the Bible in French, Greek, or Latin," answered Charles, "for I
understand these languages equally well."
"But are you ignorant of the fact that you cannot allow
your child to read the Bible?" replied the priest.
"My wife directs her own child in the reading of the
Bible, and I cannot see that we commit any sin by continuing to do in future
what we have done till now in that matter."
"Mr. Chiniquy," rejoined the priest, "you have
gone through a whole course of theology. You know the duties of a curate. You
know it is my painful duty to come here, get the Bible from you, and burn
it."
It was too much for Charles to hear such a sentence in his
own house. Quick as lightning he was on his feet. Pierre pressed himself,
trembling, near his mother, who trembled also.
At first they feared that a violent scene would occur.
Charles' anger at that moment was terrible. Then another fear gripped Pierre's
heart. He feared lest the priest should lay his hands on the dear Bible, which
was just before him on the table.
Fortunately, Charles subdued himself after the first moment
of his anger. He paced the room with a quick step. His lips were pale and
trembling. He was muttering between clenched teeth.
The priest closely watched all Charles' movements; his hands
convulsively pressed his heavy cane, and his face gave the unmistakable evidence
of terror. The pacing suddenly stopped. Charles faced the priest, and said,
"Sir, is that all you have to say here?"
"Yes, sir," said the trembling priest.
"Well, sir," added Charles, "You know the door
by which you entered my house. Please take the same door and go away
quickly."
The priest left immediately. Inexpressible joy flooded over
Pierre when he saw that his Bible was safe. He ran to his father's neck, kissed
and thanked him for his victory. And to pay him, in his childish way, he jumped
up on the large table and recited, in high style, the fight between David and
Goliath. In Pierre's mind, his father was the hero like David and the priest was
the giant whom the little stone from the brook had stricken down.
Years later Pierre would say, "Thou knowest, 0 God, that
it is to that Bible, read on my mother's knees, that I owe the knowledge of the
truth today." That Bible had sent, to his young heart, rays of light which
all the sophisms and dark errors of a misguided priesthood could never
completely extinguish.
The Man Who Was Executed
Twice
The title is exaggerated. No one could be executed twice.
Andreas Fischer, however, came as close to it as anyone could.
The first time he was sentenced to death, be actually got as
far as feeling the noose tighten around his neck. But at the moment he was
supposed to turn slowly, slowly in the wind, the rope broke and he fell safely
to the ground and escaped.
The second time, a decade later, he was not so lucky...
When Martin Luther began the Protestant Reformation in the
early 1500's, Fischer was a hard-working priest. Luther's tracts on abuses in
the church made sense to him, as they did to thousands of other priests and
laymen.
Whatever lofty motives may have conceived the practice of
using pilgrimages and indulgences to atone for sins, traffic in them became so
commercialized as to cause widespread concern. When Luther taught that God did
not want self-punishment but repentance, and that anyone who was truly sorry
would receive God's forgiveness freely without penance, payment, or pilgrimage,
Christians all over Central Europe lined up behind him.
When the church hierarchy wanted to know on what authority a
lowly German monk could defy the church, Luther thundered, "By the
authority of plain Scripture!" Persecution followed. Priests who taught the
"Lutheran heresy" were hanged, sometimes in batches.
Many of Luther's followers became deep Bible students. Some
began to notice Mark 16:16, which says "He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned." They reasoned
that if baptism were to be of any use, a person should receive it when he was
old enough to understand it, and not when be was an infant. They called on
people to study the Bible for themselves, make a mature decision for the Lord,
and then kneel and have water poured over their heads; and they called the
procedure "believer's baptism." T'hese people were callled
Anabaptists.
Church leaders feared that if everyone were not automatically
enrolled in a church at birth, society would collapse. Anabaptists, in
consequence, were severely persecuted. Many were drowned, in mock imitation of
believer's baptism. Some had holes burned through their cheeks. Others were
burned at the stake or barbecued beside hot fires. Still others were laid on
open coffins too small for them. Soldiers pounded them in with their hobnailed
boots.
Kindly, providence persuaded isolated princes in heavily
forested areas of Moravia, Austria, and nearby lands to provide asylum for the
Anabaptists, and the fortunate ones fled there.
Two Anabaptists were led by Bible study to a particularly
perilous conclusion. Both were former priests who had sacrificed the priesthood
to become first Lutherans, and then Anabaptists. One of these was Oswald Glait.
The other was Andreas Fischer.
Around 1527 Glait and Fischer were astonished to read in the
Bible that the weekly day God wanted men to keep holy was not Sunday, the first
day of the week, but Saturday, the seventh day. When they began to teach this,
theologians were sent to persuade them to abandon what they called the
"Jewish Sabbath."
Glait and Fischer replied that the Bible calls the seventh
day "the sabbath of the Lord thy God" (Exodus 20:8-1 1), not
the 'Jewish" Sabbath. They showed from the Bible that the Sabbath
was given at Creation to our first parents as a blessing for the entire human
race (Genesis 2:1-3). They quoted Christ: "The Sabbath was made for
man" (Mark 2:27), not merely for Jews.
The theologians contended that Jesus brought the Sabbath to
an end. In return Glait and Fischer quoted Christ again: "Think not that I
have come to abolish the law... Till heaven and earth pass away, not an iota,
not a dot, will pass from the law until all is accomplished" (Matthew 5:17,
18, R.S.V.).
When the theologians suggested that the apostles abolished
the Sabbath after Christ's death, Glait and Fischer quoted the apostle James:
"Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is
guilty of all" (James 2:10). They quoted the apostle Paul: By faith
"we establish (not destroy) the law" (Romans 3:31); and the apostle
John, Those who have "the faith of Jesus," "keep (not break) the
commandments of God" (Revelation 14:12). When the theologians asked Glait
and Fischer to submit to the church's judgment, they replied that their
consciences were captive to the Word of God.
It was a dangerous stand. A person who took it could scarcely
hope to live out his natural life. In 1529 Mr. and Mrs. Andreas Fischer, as
Sabbatarian Anabaptists, were sentenced to death-she by drowning, he by hanging.
Mrs. Fischer was drowned, but-as we saw above-while her husband was being
hanged, he fell to the ground and escaped.
Not forever, unfortunately. After a dangerous decade of
bravely traveling to share the Sabbath and fortify the faithful, Fischer was
seized by the soldiers of some wretched robber knight, dragged into his castle,
and executed-successfully this time-by being hurled from the top of a wall.
Oswald Glait, incidentally, survived many adventures in a
similar ministry. In 1545, however, he was captured and imprisoned in Vienna.
After a year and six weeks he was awakened at midnight by the clatter of
soldiers in the hall outside his cell. The door burst open, and by the light of
the soldiers' torches he read in their faces his impending fate. He was led
through the silent city to the banks of the Danube and thrown in.
As the soldiers heard his splash, little did they realize
that the Sabbath for which he gave his life would live on for centuries in
Germany, burst into life in Great Britain, be transferred to the American
colonies, and in the twentieth century capture the hearts of millions of people
all around the world.
During the Dark Ages, millions of Christians lost their lives
for the crime of reading the Bible and following its teachings as they
understood them. Many more lost their homes and were exiled and imprisoned. It
appeared that the characteristics of the beast had taken control of the minds of
the majority of those claiming to be following the Lamb of God. Satan had worked
gradually, insidiously, to infiltrate and gain control of the one thing on earth
that was most precious to Jesus-His Church. He had, while undetected by most,
undermined the principles of love and fidelity to God and His commandments.
It is so easy for us to loose sight of Jesus and to begin to
try to control others, not just in matters of religion but in many different
ways. How glad I am that God is able to help us overcome these "beastly'
characteristics. His warning against worshipping the beast encompasses more than
not becoming like the beast however. He tells us especially not to worship that
power on earth that will seek to take away the free choice God gave to man and
that He died to preserve for us. He warns us against worshipping that power that
sets itself up in the place of God and claims privileges that only God has.
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