30.08.2016 Views

America in Prophecy by Ellen White [Modern Version]

America’s peculiar origins and hegemonic impact in world affairs stand undisputed. As a superpower birthed from Europe, her eminent history has been celebrated. Foretold since antiquity, a myriad of repressions, revolutions and reforms inspired the first band of pilgrims to settle on a new promised land of liberty. This book enables the reader to understand America’s unique destiny and commanding role while besieged by gross spiritual and political machinations. Clearly, this reading lifts the veil from past events molding America and presaging her cooperation to undermine the very values once cherished.

America’s peculiar origins and hegemonic impact in world affairs stand undisputed. As a superpower birthed from Europe, her eminent history has been celebrated. Foretold since antiquity, a myriad of repressions, revolutions and reforms inspired the first band of pilgrims to settle on a new promised land of liberty. This book enables the reader to understand America’s unique destiny and commanding role while besieged by gross spiritual and political machinations. Clearly, this reading lifts the veil from past events molding America and presaging her cooperation to undermine the very values once cherished.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Appendix<br />

General Notes for the Great Controversy<br />

Revisions adopted <strong>by</strong> the E. G. <strong>White</strong> Trustees<br />

November 19, 1956, and December 6, 1979<br />

Page 50. Titles.--In a passage which is <strong>in</strong>cluded <strong>in</strong> the Roman Catholic Canon Law, or<br />

Corpus Juris Canonici, Pope Innocent III declares that the Roman pontiff is "the vicegerent<br />

upon earth, not of a mere man, but of very God;" and <strong>in</strong> a gloss on the passage it is expla<strong>in</strong>ed<br />

that this is because he is the vicegerent of Christ, who is "very God and very man." See<br />

Decretales Dom<strong>in</strong>i Gregorii Papae IX (Decretals of the Lord Pope Gregory IX), liber 1, de<br />

translatione Episcoporum, (on the transference of Bishops), title 7, ch. 3; Corpus Juris Canonici<br />

(2d Leipzig ed., 1881), col. 99; (Paris, 1612), tom. 2, Decretales, col. 205. The documents which<br />

formed the Decretals were gathered <strong>by</strong> Gratian, who was teach<strong>in</strong>g at the University of<br />

Bologna about the year 1140. His work was added to and re-edited <strong>by</strong> Pope Gregory IX <strong>in</strong> an<br />

edition issued <strong>in</strong> 1234. Other documents appeared <strong>in</strong> succeed<strong>in</strong>g years from time to time<br />

<strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g the Extravagantes, added toward the close of the fifteenth century. All of these, with<br />

Gratian's Decretum, were published as the Corpus Juris Canonici <strong>in</strong> 1582. Pope Pius X<br />

authorized the codification <strong>in</strong> Canon law <strong>in</strong> 1904, and the result<strong>in</strong>g code became effective <strong>in</strong><br />

1918.<br />

For the title "Lord God the Pope" see a gloss on the Extravagantes of Pope John XXII,<br />

title 14, ch. 4, Declaramus. In an Antwerp edition of the Extravagantes, dated 1584, the words<br />

"Dom<strong>in</strong>um Deum nostrum Papam" ("Our Lord God the Pope") occur <strong>in</strong> column 153. In a Paris<br />

edition, dated 1612, they occur <strong>in</strong> column 140. In several editions published s<strong>in</strong>ce 1612 the<br />

word "Deum" ("God") has been omitted.<br />

Page 50. Infallibility.--On the doctr<strong>in</strong>e of <strong>in</strong>fallibility as set forth at the Vatican Council<br />

of 1870-71, see Philip Schaff, The Creeds of Christendom, vol. 2, Dogmatic Decrees of the<br />

Vatican Council, pp. 234-271, where both the Lat<strong>in</strong> and the English texts are given. For<br />

discussion see, for the Roman Catholic view, The Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 7, art.<br />

519

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!