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Vatican Assassins

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Chapter 8 147<br />

Remembering the purpose of the Jesuit Order, it set out to conquer the Far<br />

East, particularly Japan, and upon that victory, the Chinese Empire. First came the<br />

priests, and then came the foreign soldiers. In attempting to capture Japan with<br />

Francis Xavier arriving in 1549, the Jesuits converted many of the Japanese lords<br />

called “daimyo.” The Jesuits then incited them to destroy hundreds of Buddhist<br />

temples and slaughter the priests. But it came to pass that the risen Son of God would<br />

send a Protestant sea captain to the court of the Emperor’s shogun. Having saved<br />

William Adams from being crucified by the Jesuits, the shogun Iyeyasu held many<br />

interviews with the mariner. There he learned of the Order’s bloody history including<br />

the extermination of the West Indian races and of the Inquisition in Spain. As a<br />

result, the Englishman rose to extraordinary favor and was created a Samurai.<br />

The shogun then purposed to resist the Pope’s political agenda of the Roman<br />

Catholic Hierarchy guided by the Jesuits and their evil Council of Trent. We read:<br />

“From the beginning of his reign Iyeyasu had been organizing and<br />

unifying his empire and establishing his power to cope with the foreign<br />

conspirators. In 1606 he issued an edict forbidding further mission work<br />

and proclaiming that those who had adopted Christianity must abandon it.<br />

By Christianity he meant what Voltaire meant by “the Infamous,” the<br />

intriguing system of Rome which aimed at the overthrow of the native<br />

government and the sectarian domination of the country.” {3}<br />

With this understanding, by 1639 the Tokugawa shoguns, Iyeyasu (1603-<br />

1616), Hidetada (1616-1623) and Iyemitsu (1623-1651), successfully expelled the<br />

Jesuits with their minions, the Spanish and the Portuguese, allowing only the<br />

Protestant Dutch to trade with the Empire until 1854! With the Order first expelled in<br />

1587 and again in 1597 by Daimyo Hideyoshi (for which he paid with his life in<br />

1598), in 1614 Iyeyasu issued an edict in the name of his son, Hidetada, finally<br />

expelling the Company and outlawing both Protestant and Catholic “Christianity.” In<br />

1622 many Jesuits were justly put to death (“martyred”) for high treason, and in 1624<br />

the Roman Catholic Spanish were banished by one of Iyemitsu’s edicts. And why?<br />

“The Christians [Jesuits], so the decree alleged, were striving ‘to spread<br />

abroad a pernicious code, to exterminate the true religion [Buddhism], to<br />

overthrow the government, and to make themselves masters of the whole<br />

empire.’ ” {4} [Emphasis added]<br />

And to what end?<br />

“These [Jesuits] had for their object nothing less than the conquest of<br />

China, and the Jesuit fathers cherished the hope of gaining before long<br />

entry into Peking in the train of the Japanese ruler.” {5} [Emphasis added]<br />

The Jesuits – 1614 - 1945

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