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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.

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document with Baronius, Ecclesiastical Annals, <strong>in</strong> 1592. Consult for the best text, K. Zeumer,<br />

<strong>in</strong> the Festgabe fur Rudolf von Gneist (Berl<strong>in</strong>, 1888). Translat- ed <strong>in</strong> Coleman's Treatise,<br />

referred to above, and <strong>in</strong> Ernest F. Henderson, Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages<br />

(New York, 1892), p. 319; Briefwechsel (Weimar ed.), pp. 141, 161. See also The New Schaff-<br />

Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (1950), vol. 3, p. 484; F. Gregorovius, Rome <strong>in</strong><br />

the Middle Ages, vol. 2, p. 329; and Johann Joseph Ignaz von Doell<strong>in</strong>ger, Fables Respect<strong>in</strong>g<br />

the Popes of the Middle Ages (London, 1871).<br />

The "false writ<strong>in</strong>gs" referred to <strong>in</strong> the text <strong>in</strong>clude also the Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals,<br />

together with other forgeries. The Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals are certa<strong>in</strong> fictitious letters<br />

ascribed to early popes from Clement (A.D. 100) to Gregory the Great (A.D. 600), <strong>in</strong>corporated<br />

<strong>in</strong> a n<strong>in</strong>th century collection purport<strong>in</strong>g to have been made <strong>by</strong> "Isidore Mercator." The name<br />

"Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals" has been <strong>in</strong> use s<strong>in</strong>ce the advent of criticism <strong>in</strong> the fifteenth<br />

century.<br />

Pseudo-Isidore took as the basis of his forgeries a collection of valid canons called the<br />

Hispana Gallica Augustodunensis, thus lessen<strong>in</strong>g the danger of detection, s<strong>in</strong>ce collections of<br />

canons were commonly made <strong>by</strong> add<strong>in</strong>g new matter to old. Thus his forgeries were less<br />

apparent when <strong>in</strong>corporated with genu<strong>in</strong>e material. The falsity of the Pseudo-Isidorian<br />

fabrications is now <strong>in</strong>contestably admitted, be<strong>in</strong>g proved <strong>by</strong> <strong>in</strong>ternal evidence, <strong>in</strong>vestigation<br />

of the sources, the methods used, and the fact that this material was unknown before 852.<br />

Historians agree that 850 or 851 is the most probable date for the completion of the collection,<br />

s<strong>in</strong>ce the document is first cited <strong>in</strong> the Admonitio of the capitulary of Quiercy, <strong>in</strong> 857.<br />

The author of these forgeries is not known. It is probable that they emanated from the<br />

aggressive new church party which formed <strong>in</strong> the n<strong>in</strong>th century at Rheims, France. It is agreed<br />

that Bishop H<strong>in</strong>cmar of Rheims used these decretals <strong>in</strong> his deposition of Rothad of Soissons,<br />

who brought the decretals to Rome <strong>in</strong> 864 and laid them before Pope Nicholas I.<br />

Among those who challenged their authenticity were Nicholas of Cusa (1401-1464),<br />

Charles Dumoul<strong>in</strong> (1500-1566), and George Cassender (1513- 1564). The irrefutable proof of<br />

their falsity was conveyed <strong>by</strong> David Blondel, 1628.<br />

523

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