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Chapter
9
FIVE HUNDRED TO SIX HUNDRED A.D.
The Flight of the True Church to the Wilderness
It was between 500 and 600 A.D. that the Church of God was sorely oppressed by the state
religion clothed with civil power, and completely overpowered, and scattered to the
valleys of the mountains in all parts of the world. We shall now insert a few facts from
reliable historians to show how the true followers of Jesus were indeed driven into the
wilderness, where they took refuge in the rocks, and dens, and caves of the earth, yet
they rejoiced in persecution, and lived in humble obedience to the will of God, being fed
by Him from His word.
The
historian Jones gives an account of the flight of the persecuted saints from the
oppression of the harlot church seated upon the Roman beast. His account follows:
"Multitudes
however, fled like innocent and defenseless sheep from these devouring wolves. They
crossed the Alps, and traveled in every direction, as Providence and the prospect of
safety conducted them, into Germany, England, France, Italy, and other countries. There
they trimmed their lamps, and shone with new luster. Their worth everywhere drew
attention, and their doctrine formed increasing circles around them. The storm which
threatened their destruction only scattered them as the precious seeds of the glorious
reformation of the Christian Church." -- Jones' Church History, p. 208, ed. 1837.
Valley
Dwellers -- Vaudois
The fleeing Christians who escaped from the wrath of the Roman church and state, found a
haven in the mountains and valleys of the north of Italy, and the south of France, in
main, although they fled into all nations wherein they could find an entrance and
protection from the persecutions of the papacy. Though these Christians were known by many
names for various reasons in their new homes, yet the predominating name for them seems to
have been "Vaudois," which means "Valley Dwellers." From the fact they
dwelt in the valleys of the mountains they received the name "Valley Dwellers,"
or, in the native tongue, "Vaudois."
The
Vaudois, known as such by the world, but holding to the true Bible name, were persecuted
for the true faith. They observed the seventh day of the week, according to the
commandment, immersed for believers baptism, and kept the Passover, or the Lord's Supper,
once a year, in the first month. -- See pages 348, 349, Persecutions and Atrocities on the
Vaudois.
Gilly
says of these ancient "Valley Dwellers," who had fled from the wrath of the
papal church in its early centuries, and were still found abiding under the protection of
the Almighty in the Waldensian wilderness in the thirteenth century:
"They
occupy a mountain district . . . and yet from this secluded spot, have they disseminated
doctrines, whose influence is felt over the most refined and civilized part of Europe.
They . . . speak the same language, have the same patriarchal habits, and simple virtues,
and retain the same religion, which was known to exist there more than a thousand years
ago. They profess to constitute the remains of the pure and primitive Christian church,
and those who would question their claims cannot show either by history or tradition that
they were subscribed to the popish rituals, or bowed down before any of the idols of the
Roman church. . . . In short, there is no other way of explaining the political, moral,
and religious phenomenon, which the Vaudois have continued to display for so many
centuries, than by ascribing it to the manifest interposition of Providence, which has
chosen in them the weak things of this world to confound the things that are
mighty.'" -- Gilly, Excursions to Piedmont, pp. 259.
From
the above testimony we gather that the Vaudois had inhabited these same valleys for over
one thousand years, and that they made the claim, which could not be disputed, that they
were the remains, the remnant, of the true Church of God, who had fled into the
wilderness. It should be noted also that no history can show these saints of God to ever
have been within the fold of the Catholic Church, but had remained separate, letting their
light shine, through the darkest hours of the Dark Ages.
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