APOLOGY FOR Till :>/>HB88. 



sun. In the exercise of her right mine what true 



sciei ' hurrh. i .f I'aul V., 



Stepped in. and by tin- mouth of tin* ii . of 

 tin- Index, delivered, mi March .">, , 



deone: 



</ whereas it hath also come to tin- knou- 



<ire(jation that tit* 



of the mobiliiy <>f I IK' fart h <tn<( /// ///, 



'// writ, trlnrh /> fun ft /if .\ >las 

 ./ public 



that this opinion may not furl In 



diuiKKi' <>f Catholic truth, it , </ that this ami all 



otln-r books tetifhimj the like ilnrfn '/. ami by 



fee they are all respectively si> >n, 



<'d. 



Hut wliy go back to 1450 and 1G1U? Far be it from un- 

 to charge bygone sins upon Monsignor Capel, were it not 

 for t. -iocs lie upholds to-day. The most applauded 



-I and champion of the .Jesuits is, I am informed. 

 >iie. No less than thirty editions of a work of his h 

 been scattered abroad for the healing of the nations. ! 

 notions of physical astronomy arc virtually those of 1456. 

 lie teaches boldly tli:> -i-M-s not rule by universal 



law . . . that wiirii (iod orders a jjivtMi planet to stand 

 still He does not detract from any law passed l.y Him -elf. 

 but orders that planet to move round the sun for such and 

 such a time, then to stand still, and then again to move, 

 as llis pleasure may be." Jesuitism proserihed l-'roh- 

 schammer for questioning its favorite do^ma, that e\v 

 human soul was - by a dir :natural act of 



. and for asserting that man, body and soul, came from 

 his parents. This is the system that now strives for""! 

 universal power; it is from it, as Monsi. ,>el 



graciously informs us, that we are to learn what is allow- 

 able in science, and what is not! 



In the face of such facts, which might be multmli* 

 will, it requires extraordinary bravery of mind, or a 

 ipon public i \hMordii 



>r ( 'apel for his ( 'hmvh. 



tcr addn'KMed in 1 

 by the hi.-hop of Moiitpcllier 1 



of I of \loi,t J,.||I.T. in \s hicli ; : 



( 'hurch. Mi- hail boon 



