Read Dark Mysteries of the Vatican Online
Authors: H. Paul Jeffers
“Peter the Roman.”
“This final Pope will be Satan, taking the form of a man named Peter who will gain a worldwide allegiance and adoration. He will be the final antichrist of which prophecy students have long foretold.”
According to Malachy’s prophecies, there will be only one Pope after the reign of Benedict XVI. But the prevailing view of the Vatican today is that they are elaborate forgeries, possibly the work of Jesuit monks in the 1600s. The Catholic Encyclopedia noted, “The last of these prophecies concerns the end of the world and is as follows: ‘In the final persecution of the Holy Roman Church there will reign Peter the Roman, who will feed his flock amid many tribulations, after which the seven-hilled city will be destroyed and the dreadful Judge will judge the people.’”
It has been noticed concerning Petrus Romanus that the prophecy does not say no popes will intervene between him and his predecessor designated Gloria olivae [Benedict XVI]. It merely says that he is to be the last pope, leaving the possibility of other popes before “Peter the Roman.”
Those who cast doubt on St. Malachy’s forecast of the last in the long line of the papacy as a prophecy of the end of the world hasten to point out that Jesus Christ declared in the Gospel of Matthew, 26:36, “No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.”
This chronology is from New Advent, “The Vatican and Its History” at www.ibiblio.org/expo/vatican.exhibit/exhibit/History.html.
1451 | Pope Nicholas V conceives of a library “for the common convenience of the learned,” and the Vatican Library is born. Nicholas’s collection numbered about 1,160 books. |
1475 | Pope Sixtus IV brings the Library to life, installing the books in a restored suite of rooms, building up the collection, and naming Bartolomeo Platina as the Vatican’s first formal librarian. |
1470–1525 | During the High Renaissance, the Library grew enormously. By 1481, a handwritten catalog by Platina shows 3,500 entries. As from its inception, the collections are available without restriction regarding the reader’s religious or other views. |
1517 | Protestant Reformation begins. |
1570–1610 | Counter-Reformation. The Library inevitably suffers from the introduction of the Index of banned books (1558) and some limitations on access are imposed. |
1623 | Most of the rich holdings of the Palatine Library in the Protestant stronghold of Heidelberg become part of the Vatican Library collection as war booty. |
Mid–1600s | The Library again welcomes unfettered scholarly pursuit, including by Protestants. It acquires vast new holdings of manuscripts and books, most notably a spectacular assortment of items from distant lands. |
1785 | Pope Pius VI strictly limits the consultation of manuscripts, prompting Spanish priest Juan Andres to accuse the pope of overseeing a “cemetery of books not a library.” |
1883 | Pope Leo XIII formally declares the Library open to qualified researchers. |
1927–39 | The Library of Congress and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace help modernize the Vatican Library’s book catalog system. |
1992 | Vatican Library holdings number almost 2 million printed books and serials; 75,000 Latin, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Ethiopian, Syriac and other manuscripts from the 2nd Century |
2007 | Publication of the Chinon Parchment of 1308 exonerating the Knights Templar of charges of heresy. |
2007–10 | Closes to the public for renovations/rebuilding for first time in 500 years. |
This chronology is from Wikipedia, “Vatican Secret Archives” at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vatican_Secret_Archives.
1883 | Pope Leo XIII opened archives dated 1815 or earlier to nonclerical scholars. |
1924 | Documents opened to the end of the pontificate of Gregory XVI (1846). |
1966 | Documents opened from the pontificate of Pius IX (1846–78). |
1978 | Documents opened from the pontificate of Leo XIII (1878–1903). |
1985 | Documents opened from the pontificates of Pius X (1903–14) and Benedict XV (1914–22). |
2002 | Pope John Paul II took the extraordinary step of making available, beginning in 2003, some of the documents from the Historical Archives of the Secretariat of State (Second Section), which pertain to the Vatican’s relations with Germany during pontificate of Pius XI (1922–39). |
J | Pope Benedict XVI authorized opening of all the Vatican Archives for the pontificate of Pope Pius XI. |
This list is from New Advent, “The List of Popes” at www.newadvent.org/cathen/12272.html.