Conservapedia and the Inquisition
By Julio Severo
Conservapedia is an English-language wiki encyclopedia project written from an American conservative, creationist and Christian point of view. The website (www.conservapedia.com) was started in 2006 to counter left-wing bias and moral relativism present in Wikipedia.
The Conservapedia founder and owner is American homeschool teacher and Catholic attorney Andrew Schlafly, son of renowned Catholic conservative activist Phyllis Schlafly.
Schlafly graduated from Harvard Law School in 1991 with a J.D. in the same class with future U.S. president Barack Obama. He was an editor of the Harvard Law Review from 1989 to 1991.
Conservapedia was founded by him to confront leftist lies, but also to dispel misconceptions on major issues, including the Inquisition. It can be very helpful for conservatives in Brazil, the largest Catholic nation in the world. There is a movement among some Brazilian Catholics who originally actively advocated pro-life issues, but now they are actively advocating the revisionism of the Inquisition, even by downplaying the horror of people being burned at the stake. For example, a Brazilian Catholic, who is an immigrant in the U.S., said, “Even in the popular image of the Inquisition fires, lies are predominant. Everybody believe that condemned individuals ‘died burned,’ amid horrible suffering. The flames were high, more than 16 feet high, to hinder suffering. The condemned individuals (less than ten a year in two dozen nations) died suffocated in a few minutes, before the flames could touch them.”
Conservapedia, whose owner cannot be accused of being “anti-Catholic” or left-wing by radicals, says about the Inquisition:
The term inquisition can refer to either an investigation by the Roman Catholic Church into heresy, or to the department appointed to perform such investigations. This is currently titled the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith since 1965, but was formerly been titled the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office, and prior to that the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition. Several major inquisitions took place, under the management of differing departments.
Many of these inquisitions are known to have used brutal torture to extract confessions from accused heretics. While many of these accused heretics would be allowed free after repenting their views and stating their loyalty to the Church, a significant number — consisting almost entirely of those who refused to repent — were executed by a variety of deliberately painful methods including burning at the stake while alive, boiling in oil and the “breaking wheel.”
Execution was never carried out by the church directly for theological reasons, but by secular authorities. This procedure was clarified in the Ad exstirpanda papal bull written by Pope Innocent IV in 1252, which also authorized the use of torture for extracting confessions from the accused and recommended burning at the stake as the appropriate punishment for those found guilty and unrepentant. Ad exstirpanda marked the beginning of one of the most brutal periods of Inquisition.
The best known of the four major inquisitions was the Spanish Inquisition, which ran from 1438 onwards. One of its primary tasks was enforcement of the Alhambra Decree by the monarchs of Spain in 1492, ordering the immediate expulsion of all Jews from the country and its territories.
The Office of the Inquisition would not be established until 1542 by Pope Paul III, with its stated objective “to maintain and defend the integrity of the faith and to examine and proscribe errors and false doctrines.”
Portuguese version of this article: Conservapedia e a Inquisição
Source: Last Days Watchman
Recommended Reading on the Inquisition: