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54 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars History of Today's Catholic Church
I started reading this book thinking it would be a simple history of the Inquisition. It turned out to be much more. If you want to understand the modern Catholic Church, this book is for you. It contains an incredible amount of information on how the Church became what it is today. The authors are brilliant at explaining the history in a very simple yet complete way...
Published on November 2, 2003

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Why religion doesn't work

This book is an apologia for religion and especially the Catholic Church. The fact that one church, and Christianity, could control lives with fear, superstition and dogma, says a lot about the veracity of the human mind. The authors make excuses for the Inquisition at the same time that they catalog the cruelties heaped on Europeans for centuries.
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54 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars History of Today's Catholic Church, November 2, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Inquisition (Paperback)
I started reading this book thinking it would be a simple history of the Inquisition. It turned out to be much more. If you want to understand the modern Catholic Church, this book is for you. It contains an incredible amount of information on how the Church became what it is today. The authors are brilliant at explaining the history in a very simple yet complete way. They take the reader through the complexity of the politics behind the religion. They seperate the State from the Church. It will surprise you. I thought I would lose a bit more of whatever respect I had left for the Church after reading this book. Maybe I did. But I also gained a profound understanding of HOW it got to be what it is today. Fan or foe, you should inform yourself about this powerful institution that is the Catholic Church.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars AT LAST!! THE TRUTH REVEALED., February 6, 2009
This review is from: Inquisition (Paperback)
THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH,OF COURSE,WOULD RATHER NOT SEE A BOOK OF THIS
NATURE IN PRINT.OH,THE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY IN THE NAME OF RELIGION.
SHAME! SHAME ON THE CHURCH FOR IT'S MURDEROUS ROLE IN THE ATTEMPT TO CONTROL THE MINDS OF MANKIND. THE FIRST GENOCIDE WAS CHRISTIAN AGAINST
CHRISTIAN (NOT THE NAZI EXTERMINATION OF THE JEWS DURING WW2) WHEN THE
CATHARS OF SOURTHERN FRANCE WERE PUT TO THE TORCH BY THE MERCENARIES SENT
BY ROME IN THE 13TH CENTURY. IT'S ALL HERE IN THIS HISTORY FOR ALL TO READ. LONG OVERDUE. I HAVE HEARD IT SAID,"FOR A BAD PERSON TO BE BAD IS EASY. FOR A GOOD PERSON TO BE GOOD IS ALSO EASY. BUT FOR A GOOD PERSON TO BE BAD TAKES RELIGION."
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Why religion doesn't work, June 26, 2011
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This review is from: Inquisition (Paperback)

This book is an apologia for religion and especially the Catholic Church. The fact that one church, and Christianity, could control lives with fear, superstition and dogma, says a lot about the veracity of the human mind. The authors make excuses for the Inquisition at the same time that they catalog the cruelties heaped on Europeans for centuries.
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4 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Outdated and Misleading Account, June 22, 2008
This review is from: Inquisition (Paperback)
From a book review by the esteemed historian Bernard Hamilton: "...presents a very outdated and misleading account of this institution." "This account contains many inaccuracies and ignores virtually all the extensive modern research in the field." "The authors feel very strongly about what they perceive as the failings of the present-day Church, and although they disclaim and such intention in their Introduction, this part of their work has strong affinities with anti-Catholic polemics written in the first half of the last century. Their arguments seem rather simplistic, perhaps because they attribute powers to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith which are as exaggertated as those they attribute to the Inquistion." See Book Review in the English Historical Review, (April, 2001), P. 474.

Lies, damned lies and statistics
by Read, Piers Paul

THE INQUISITION
by Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh
It used to be said that the Devil had all the good tunes and there have been times when a Christian, reading Hume, Voltaire, Gibbon or Nietszche, felt bound to agree. They scoffed at religion with wit and style. This autumn, however, Old Nick seems to have lost his touch, for, closely following John Cornwell's unconvincing book on Pope Pius XII, Hitler's Pope, we have an another intemperate attack on orthodox Catholicism presented as a history of the Inquisition.
The authors are Michael Baigent and Richard Leigh, the duo who, with Henry Lincoln, wrote the highly successful farrago of historical speculation, The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. In this new work, The Inquisition, they follow Cornwell in explicitly linking a supposedly damning episode in the Church's past with the policy of the present Pope, John Paul II, and his 'Grand Inquisitor', Joseph, Cardinal Ratzinger, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
The Inquisition, they rightly point out, was a legal process established by Pope Innocent III to identify Cathar heretics in Languedoc. The law under which it operated was derived from the code of the Roman empire which had some 60 injunctions against heresy, and the use of torture and the burning of unrepentant heretics were also part of that Roman heritage. It was not the brain child of St Dominic who initially sought permission from Pope Innocent III to preach to the pagans on the Vistula but was redirected to Languedoc; nor was it simply 'the product of a brutal, insensitive and ignorant world'. The Inquisition was encouraged by a number of humane and sagacious rulers as a means of preserving order: the highly intelligent Emperor Frederick 11 of Hohenstauffen, who was almost certainly an atheist himself, authorised the burning of relapsed heretics, and the Emperor Charles V, having seen the dire results of religious differences in his Dutch domains, emphatically endorsed the work of the Inquisition in his kingdom of Spain.
Baigent and Leigh, however, show no interest in understanding the subtleties and paradoxes in the history of the Inquisition, nor do they give us the benefit of the researches of contemporary historians. Their principal source is the work of the American historian, Henry Charles Lea (there are over 40 references to his books) whose History of the Inquisition in the Middle Ages was first published in 1888 and who accepted too readily Protestant propaganda from the time of the Reformation. In the same way as their book is illustrated with ancient engravings showing the atrocious torture of brave Protestants or comely witches by hooded Dominicans, so Baigent and Leigh's statistics show the wild exaggeration of an earlier age. They talk of 'the hundreds of thousands whose bodies were forcibly sacrificed for the sake of their souls', and describe how 'in Seville alone, by the beginning of November, the flames had claimed another 288 victims'. Compare this with the judgment of the foremost historian of the Spanish Inquisition, Henry Kamen, made in 1997:
It would seem that during the 16th and 17th centuries fewer than three people a year were executed by the Inquisition in the whole of the Spanish monarchy from Sicily to Peru.
Kamen is quoted by Baigent and Leigh but clearly they prefer the dramatic statistics and the gory details to be found in Lea.
When they touch upon the case of the Templars, who were interrogated under torture by the inquisition, they speculate as they did in The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail. There is no firm evidence that Templar leaders came from prominent Cathar families or planned to found a Templar principality in Languedoc: it was rather the Hospitallers who had Cathar sympathies. When they give us facts, they often get them wrong. King Philip IV of France did not kidnap the Pope: the attempt made by William of Nogaret was thwarted by the people of Anagni. It is a gross oversimplification to say that Pope Clement V was 'the French monarch's abjectly docile puppet' (I would refer them to the study of Clement V by Sophia Menache); nor did the French kings 'kidnap the entire Papacy in 1309 and move it from Rome to Avignon': Clement V had been residing in Poitiers and moved to Avignon precisely because it was adjacent to the Papal enclave of the Comtat Venaissin and was outside the kingdom of France. With two authors and the acknowledged help of 15 others, the historical content of this book should have been better.
When we come to Baigent and Leigh's diatribe against the present papacy we find further errors. They say that to Cardinal Ratzinger, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, 'worship of Mary is crucial': it is an elementary teaching of the Catholic Church that you worship God alone. They say that Hans Kung 'had his licence to teach theology revoked': in fact it was his licence to teach Catholic theology that was revoked because what he taught was no longer consistent with the Church's teaching. It betrays extraordinary ignorance to write that 1,000 years ago 'the Church had been largely decentralised, and the Pope had simply been the Bishop of Rome': Leo the Great in the fifth century, Gregory the Great in the sixth, Gregory VI, Innocent III or Boniface VII, all claimed and exercised far greater powers than Pope John Paul 11.
From the torrent of abuse and misinformation in The Inquistion, it is difficult to discern the point the authors hope to make. Roughly speaking, it seems to be that Christ 'never dreamed of establishing a church' and that the institution founded in his name was a thoroughly bad thing until the advent of the 'liberal, lucid, progressive and dynamic' Pope John XXIII who called the Second Vatican Council to make amends. Now, under Pope John Paul II, the programme of reform has gone into reverse and the Inquisition has been revived under the guise of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. As evidence that the spirit of Vatican II has been betrayed, the authors cite the fact that ,abortion remains a sin punishable by excommunication' and that 'to transgress in sexual matters' such as 'extramarital sexual relations' now endangers one's very status as a communicant member of the Roman Catholic Church'.
If they really believe that even the most liberal council fathers intended to remove abortion and adultery from the list of serious sins, then they cannot have read the Council's proceedings or decrees which, given the poor historiography in the earlier section of the book, would come as no surprise. What does come as a surprise is that Viking should have published such a very bad book.
Copyright Spectator Jan 1, 2000

It is unfortunate that naive readers will take this book as a serious piece of scholarship.
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Inquisition
Inquisition by Michael Baigent (Paperback - November 2, 2000)
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