these hard-to-crack cases. For those incorrigible wretches who per
Transcription
these hard-to-crack cases. For those incorrigible wretches who per
26 The W hite Horse: False Religion these hard-to-crack cases . For those incorrigible wretches who persisted in their free thinking, there was only one remedy - the stake . The inquisitors carried out this ultimate penalty in ceremonies known as the auto-da-te ("act of faith " ). They usually took place on Sunday in order that more people would be around to witness the final end of those who dared transgress the dictates of the church. The night before, the impenitent heretics were led to the scene of the execution and informed of their fate . However, the inquisitors always managed to throw in one last sop. If the poor reprobate could muster up a last-minute confession he would be able to forego the trial by fire . But the only difference was that he would be strangled to death just as the flames were lit. On the following day, the black-hooded inquisitors accompanied their charges to the ceremony . The dominicans continued their efforts of the previous day in exhorting these unfortunates to make a last-minute confession - ostensibly to demonstrate to the public the merciful nature of the inquisition . Mass was celebrated, a sermon preached, and then the clergy went through the sham of turning their victims over to the state for execution . One author painted a poignant picture of what happened as the flames went up: " The people shout their approval; the Inquisitors sit , hands folded , deeply shocked by all the wickedness in the world, serene in their own virtue . in bringing about justice, so clever that - al though they have brought those groaning , fainting men and women to this horror - because they abandoned them in time to the secular arm , there is no blood on their hands .... '' The same author went on to say: " The long ceremony , the chanting of monks, the tolling of bells, the smell of incense, the holiness of the proceedings has a comforting effect. All has been sanctified by these things " (Jean Plaidy, The Rise of the Spanish Inquisition , p . 158). The same brutal methods were tried in the Spanish Netherlands with much the same results . During the height of the Inquisition in that country , the Emperor Maximillian asked the head of Spain , Phillip II, to put an end to the brutality. Phillip 's reply bears repeating : " What I have done has been for the repose of the Provinces. and for the defense of the Catholic Faith . Nor would I do otherwise than I have done. though I should risk the sovereignty of the Netherlands no , though the world should fall around me in ruins" (Piaidy , The End of the Spanish Inquisition, p . 21 ) .