Pints With Aquinas - 5 Anti-Catholic Myths Debunked by a Medieval Historian | Dr. Thomas Madden | Last Call Ep. 11
Episode Date: April 23, 2026It’s Last Call! Professor of History, Dr. Thomas Madden is back to debunk common myths surrounding the inquisition, popes, and even flat earth. Pints: Last Call Ep. 11 - - - 📚Resources M...entioned: Learn more about Dr. Thomas Madden: https://www.thomasmadden.org Books by Dr. Thomas Madden: https://www.thomasmadden.org/books.html - - - Today's Sponsors: Seven Weeks Coffee: Save up to 25% with promo code 'PINTS' at https://sevenweekscoffee.com/PINTS Hallow: Deepen your personal relationship with God today. Visit https://hallow.com/MattFradd to get 3 months free. PreBorn: Make a difference for generations to come. Donate securely online at https://preborn.com/PINTS or dial #250 keyword 'BABY' St. Paul Center: Share your faith with others this Easter Season by joining the Easter Accompaniment Challenge. Sign up and become a member today at https://stpaulcenter.com/pints - - - Become a Daily Wire Member and watch all of our content ad-free: https://www.dailywire.com/subscribe 📲 Download the free Daily Wire app today on iPhone, Android, Roku, Apple TV, Samsung, and more. - - - 📕 Get my newest book, Jesus Our Refuge, here: https://a.co/d/bDU0xLb 🍺 Want to Support Pints With Aquinas? 🍺 Get episodes a week early and join exclusive live streams with me! Become an annual supporter at 👉 https://mattfradd.locals.com/support - - - 💻 Follow Me on Social Media: 📌 Facebook: https://facebook.com/mattfradd 📸 Instagram: https://instagram.com/mattfradd 𝕏 Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/Pints_W_Aquinas 🎵 TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@pintswithaquinas 📚 PWA Merch – https://dwplus.shop/MattFraddMerch 👕 Grab your favorite PWA gear here: https://shop.pintswithaquinas.com - - - Privacy Policy: https://www.dailywire.com/privacy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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taught that the earth was flat.
No, that's definitely a myth.
The problem of Galileo was that he was also a bit of a jerk.
All the popes have been holy throughout the last 2,000 years.
How was the Inquisition not a medieval reign of terror?
The Medieval Inquisition actually saved lives.
It saved people from being burned at the state.
Explain yourself.
Oh, all right, Dr. Thomas Madden, we hear many myths about the Catholic Church,
and I've got five here that I'm going to throw at you.
and I'm going to completely stump you,
and you are going to have to abandon the Holy Catholic faith.
I'm set.
Or you can just destroy them for the rest of us.
Myth number one, the church taught that the earth was flat.
Yes.
No, that's definitely a myth, yes.
Actually, people knew that the world was round since the ancient Greeks.
In fact, the ancient Greeks knew how big the world was.
This was commonly known in the Middle Ages.
If you look at any map of the world from the Middle Ages, they're all around.
There's not a single one.
They have Christ holding the globe, but it's always the globe.
The Venerable Beed wrote about this.
You think about it.
Catholics during the Middle Ages, they had to be able to figure out Easter, which is hard.
It's an astronomical to figure out when the Easter is going to be there.
So they had to make various observations.
They knew this.
Thomas Aquinas wrote about this.
In fact, he used it as an analogy that you could come to the truth by different means.
So for the globe, he says, you know, everyone knows it's a ball.
But you can do this either by astronomy, by seeing the shadow of the earth on the moon during the eclipse.
Or you could do it by the fact that.
gravity always goes straight down rather than off to a side, which it would if it was flat.
So it's been commonly known that the myth comes, in part it's related to the Galileo myth,
but it's basically this idea that Protestants developed much later that that the church was
directly opposed to reason and that the only way that they were able to keep power
during the Middle Ages was by keeping people stupid.
And that when the Protestants came in, they accepted reason
and the church fought against it.
And so they said that the world was flat.
That then got morphed into Columbus.
So you had, it's really, it's interesting.
The big proponent of this was Washington Irving,
who was an American author.
He wrote Rip Van Winkle and the legendary,
the sleepy hollow. But he wrote a history of Columbus. And in his romantic retelling of it,
he has Columbus meeting with all the Catholic scholars at the University of Salomonica
and saying that the world is flat. And if you sail, you'll sail off of it. Wow. And
Columbus saying, no, the world is round. And Columbus never said anything of the sort because
everyone knew that the world was round.
Now, Columbus said that the world was small
and that he could get to Asia
because it was very small. He was wrong.
But that's what he said.
I think it was De Chalo by Aristotle
where he gives three arguments
for why the Earth is spherical.
One of them, I think,
if memory serves, people can correct me in the comments,
is you see a ship sailing off
and it sinks into the distance.
Yeah, and one of the ways that was,
yeah, and that's true.
They would do that sometimes
where they would put fires on the ship
on the masts and then watch.
But the real thing that every Greek sail,
if you've ever sailed in the Aegean at all,
you'll see this.
The coastline in Greece, in the Aegean and the islands,
they're very mountainous.
So if you sail away from them,
the mountain doesn't go farther and further away.
It sinks below the water.
You can literally watch the mountain sink
as you get further away from it.
So it was plainly obvious.
All right, fine.
But this next one I'm going to get you.
You ready?
Speaking of it.
Galileo. The church opposed science and progress. The Galileo affair proves this.
Yeah. Poor Galileo. I mean, Galileo was a great scientist. There's no doubt about it.
He definitely discovered important things. The problem with Galileo was that he was also a bit of a jerk.
He was one of these kinds of people who became famous as a scientist. And then, and I'm sure we don't, we've never met anyone like to say, in our
lifetime, but he started to think that he was science and that if you disagreed with him,
you were just an imbecile. And so, and not everything that he thought was true, was true. He became
a very big proponent of Copernican model, and this is the heliocentric model of the universe,
that the sun is in the center, and that the earth revolves around the sun, which is true.
Copernicus, I should say, is a devout Catholic who devoted, he dedicated his work on the
Revolution of the Spheres to the Pope. So the Catholic Church was completely in favor of all of
these things. They were in favor of finding out because the more you learn about God's creation,
the more you know about God. So this was not, there was nothing that the church was opposed to
in regards to a heliocentric model. But the problem that the church was,
church had, and particularly the scientists in Rome, and by scientists, I mean Jesuits.
These are people like St. Robert Bellarmine, great minds. Their problem with this was
the Copernican model didn't work. It didn't match the observations that you would see in the
sky. The only state in Europe that had a state observatory was the papacy. They had armies of scientists
who examine these things.
And so Galileo said, no, it's the Copernican model.
That's the way it is.
And they said, okay, well, it doesn't work.
We're not opposed to the idea of the sun being in the center,
but it has to predict what we see in the sky.
Because the Copernican model has,
everything is in circles, perfect circles,
and that's not the way the solar system is.
It's ellipses.
So it didn't predict what they could actually observe.
Galileo was not willing to debate,
He just insulted everyone.
Then the worst came when he decided to write theology
and decided to get into what his truths now mean
for the truths of the Catholic Church.
And that's the point in which he ran afoul of the Inquisition.
Because if you're going to teach things which are false,
and honestly, they gave him a number of warnings.
They said, just stay out of the theology.
just focus on science.
And he just wouldn't.
And then finally, in fact, the Pope,
Pope Urban VIII gave him a chance and said,
look, why don't you publish a fair-minded view
of both sides of this issue,
of whether this earth is in the center
or the universe or the sun is,
and give a pro and con
so that people can fairly decide.
And so he wrote the book,
and he treated everyone
who held that the earth was at the center.
In fact, the person who argues for it is called Simplicious or Simpleton.
And then he also insulted, very clearly, insulted everyone that he didn't like in Rome, including the Pope.
How did he do that?
He just made him look like a buffoon.
Did he make him a character?
Yeah, he made him a character.
They made all of them characters in this.
It made him buffoons.
So at that point, he had lost his friends.
Even still, the Inquisition did not convict him of heresy.
they basically convict him of what they called vehement suspicion,
which meant that he just had to spend time in his very lavish villa
for the rest of his life.
Okay, that's very different to a dungeon.
Yes, rather.
Rather, but as I say, he got into trouble not because of science.
In fact, when you think about it, 50 years before Galileo,
the Catholic Church had refigured the calendar, the Gregorian calendar,
the calendar that the whole world uses today, that is still precise because the
calendars had all got out of whack.
And you can only do that if you're doing observations.
So the calendar that we use today is a product of the Catholic Church.
And so it was clear that they were not opposed to any of these things.
They were opposed to bad science.
And Galileo, unfortunately, particularly later in his career, he would just get positions on things like tides or comets.
And he would hold these positions, and they were just wrong.
And he was, he just, he wouldn't listen to the other side.
All right.
So just like the lie that the Catholic Church taught that the earth was flat, where did this idea that Galileo was terribly mistreated by the,
church and yeah initially it came out in the seven mostly in the late 16th century early 17th century
as part of the confessional fights between Protestants and Catholics okay and the argument was
that Galileo had um because the thing with Protestants is they were more opposed to the
heliocentric model and Copernicus than the Catholics were because remember they're basing everything
on the Bible. Yeah. And on the literal word of the Bible. And so while the Catholics are willing
to see this, you know, allegorically or in other ways, and so they were the ones that were the
most critical of it. But by the 18th century, this became a useful play because the argument by
that time was that they were looking at like the Roman Inquisition, the Spanish Inquisition,
and saying, well, that's what keeps...
these areas backward.
They don't let people think.
They don't let reason survive.
And so the natural way forward,
they took credit for everything that happened
during the Middle Ages.
The natural way forward is Protestantism and free thinking.
Funny how these things kind of get into the water
and then they're hard to eradicate.
Yeah, and this gets written up.
The one thing that the English and the Dutch
and the Protestant
groups is they had lots of printing presses and they printed all of this stuff a lot.
And it became, and it fused into American society through England and became part of, you know,
American Protestant culture.
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Well, you mentioned the Spanish, or not he didn't, the Inquisition, nobody expects the Spanish
but you mentioned the Inquisition.
How was the Inquisition not a medieval reign of terror?
How was this not an argument against Catholicism?
Yeah, the medieval Inquisition was, here's the punchline.
The medieval Inquisition actually saved lives.
It saved people from being burned at the stake.
and here's why.
Explain yourself.
Yeah, the church's position on heresy is what Christ said.
You know, if your brother sins against you, go and bring another, so there'll be a witness.
If he doesn't listen to them, then take him to the church.
If he doesn't listen to the church, treat him as you would, tax collector.
And so the church's position always was, if you're really determined not to believe what we believe, then you're out.
You're not part of us anymore.
You're excommunicated.
That's the sum total of the church's penalty for heresy.
The state, however, the royal governments and the state in Western Europe considered heresy
to be a capital offense.
And the reason is not hard to see.
Kings base their authority that they are king by the grace of God.
Their authority is given to them in coronations that are done by the church.
And therefore, if you say that the church is completely wrong,
then you are attacking their authority, and that's treason.
Okay.
And so also people didn't want heretics around them because they knew it was seen as a disease,
and they didn't want that around them.
So in medieval Europe up until about 1,000,
the normal thing if somebody found a heretic is they would bring them to the
local lord who would sit in his seat of judgment, he's illiterate and doesn't know the faith that
well himself. I mean, if someone comes to him and says, hey, this guy stole my pig, then he'll have
a reasonable idea of what to do. But if he comes and says, you know, this guy has a, this, this
view on the Blessed Sacrament, he's not going to really know what's the right answer. So,
in most cases, when a heretic was brought before them, these lords, local lords, would just listen
to what was being said. And then just to be on the safe side, they would usually just burn
her at the stake. Because, you know, you don't want a heretic around, for sure. So this,
the problem of heresy continued to grow into the 12th century. And in 1184, Pope Lucius finally
set up an institution in which he said, okay, from now on, we don't want people who are accused
of heresy just going in front of judges, state judges, who have no training theology or even
Roman laws of evidence. We want to have an actual inquiry using Roman law and done by knowledgeable
jurists and theologians who can then ask these people. That's what Inquisizizio is
questioning, ask them some questions before it even goes to trial. And so, and we still do these
things. We call them links like inquests. We don't want to use the word inquisition anymore.
But, so ask the questions and find out. That way, you can find out if this person's actually a
heretic. More importantly, though, is that the vast majority of heretics in the Middle Ages
were, particularly before the 12th century, didn't mean to be a heretic. It didn't mean to be
heretics. They just didn't know. They, you know, someone were just loud mouths or whatever.
They thought they knew what the answer was. But if they were actually presented and someone told
them, what you're saying is not true. Here, I'm going to tell you the truth. Here's the faith.
They would say, oh, okay, thank you. I didn't know that. All right. And then they would, that way,
they could say, okay, now say it back to me. And they could respond and they'd say, okay, fine,
you're good. And they would be let go. In fact, that's what happened in all the vast, vast,
well over 90% of the cases. People would just say, oh, I didn't know. I'm sorry. You know,
and that would be the end of it. That meant that not only could you ensure that the person was a
heretic or not before they went to the courts, but you could also give them the opportunity
to get out of it and to amend their ways or just make correct an error.
that meant that what the Inquisition was doing was it was interposing itself between the accused and the court.
And they then could examine the issue.
It was very, very, very rare in the Middle Ages for somebody to actually be moved on.
Almost all of them were acquitted.
In fact, royal courts were constantly complaining about how the Inquisitors were a bunch of softies that let everybody off.
And nobody would ever get through to the...
their courts. There was only a few ways that you could get passed through. The most common would be
if you were what's called a relapsed heretic, which meant you are a real heretic. And when you
came before this court, you lied to us. And then as soon as you left, you just went back and did
the exact same thing, even though you know it's not true. Even still, the church's position is
not that the church never burned anyone at the stake. It's not them burning people. What they're saying
is, okay, look, the only thing standing between you and that pyre is us.
So if you're really going to tell us you're a heretic, then we're just going to get out of the way.
There's nothing more we can do for you.
And in fact, that's the term that the Inquisition would use was called relaxing to the secular arm.
And so they would just, okay, we're what's preserving you.
If you don't want our help, we get out of the way.
You go over there.
There's the judge waiting for you.
He's stoking the flames.
and ready to burn you at the stake.
So, yeah, that was the purpose of the Inquisition.
Later on, when the Dominicans became part of the Inquisition,
it became a little bit more organized,
then frequently it was often seen as a kind of way
of creating a kind of spiritual hygiene.
In fact, frequently people in towns,
if the Dominicans arrived in their town,
we're talking about the medieval Inquisition,
not the Spanish Inquisition, that's later and different.
But the medieval Inquisition,
if the Dominican Inquisitors came to town, they would go through a whole process, and it was
kind of, it was seen as hygienic. It was a way of getting everyone together, praying together,
telling everyone, if you know somebody who is confused about something or even real heretics,
come and talk to us. And then they would investigate all of that. And then once they had found out
if anyone was a heretic, and if they wanted to come back to the church and all the rest of it,
then there'd be big celebrations in which they would celebrate the,
the health of the community.
The only time that we ever,
we have any evidence of communities rising up
against inquisitors is when they didn't do their job.
When they came and they were just lazy.
Okay.
They came into town and they just,
they didn't really,
they just went through the motions
and never really did anything.
And then they decided to leave.
And then you had people rise up and say,
wait a second,
you guys didn't check anything.
You didn't talk to anyone.
There's all kinds of people here who were heretics.
You need to look into this more.
So it was, as I said, this was a medieval world.
It's a different kind of world.
Every society has heresies, and the nature of those heresies are that people don't want them around.
Have you looked into what happened to Joan of Arc?
I'm told that the Catholic Church approved of her being burned.
No, that was a complete travesty of justice.
It was mainly done by the English who had captured her, and it was done contrary to all
procedures for the inquisition.
All of it was re-examined, after her death, unfortunately.
It was re-examined and the popes and the masters at the University of Paris all concluded
that the whole thing was raped.
It was that she was not supposed to have been burned the stake.
But it was the English who had basically got hold of her, and they knew that she was the one
that had rallied the French against them.
their English clerics who stood and...
Yeah, English and nobles too, yeah,
who were fighting in the war
in the Hundred Years' War.
Doesn't this seem like a get-out-jail-free card
for Catholics, though?
Whenever Catholics are accused of having doing something,
they can just say, well, the Pope was technically against it,
even though some priests were a royal.
Well, it's actually the state's fault.
Well, I mean, that's the truth for everything.
I mean, the church is made up of fallible people.
I mean, they're going to...
And every one of them is a sinner.
So they're all going to sin.
What's the glory of the church is that it is founded by Jesus Christ,
and it will protect and defend the true faith.
So it's not that you're not going to have bad Christians.
You'll have plenty of them.
In fact, they're the ones who need it the most.
Let me throw in a different type of myth.
And this myth comes from the other side.
And I don't think anyone's ever really said this,
but just to kind of ferret this answer out.
Here's a myth.
There's never been a bad pope.
All the popes have been holy throughout the last 2,000 years.
No, there's been some very, very bad popes.
In fact, I always say that one of the greatest evidence of the Holy Spirit moving through the church
is the fact that as bad as some of those popes were, none of them ever taught error in faith and morals.
I mean, they're a pope.
They could have literally said almost anything they wanted to, but none of them did.
I mean, the worst of them, I mean, the worst days of the papacy were primarily in the 10th century and parts of the 9th century.
All of Europe was in a bad situation then.
It was all being attacked by outsiders.
Vikings are everywhere.
You have Muslim brigands who are attacking everywhere.
One of the popes is almost captured by Muslim attackers in Rome.
So it's a very difficult time.
the quality of life throughout Europe goes down.
And the popes now increasingly just become the rulers of the city of Rome.
And that means they're fought over by various families during that period.
And so you have a number of popes who essentially are just, you know,
they're kind of like mafioso bosses who end up getting control.
Some of them, you have a couple in the 10th century, one,
who actually was responsible for the death of his predecessor.
You have one infamous case at the end of the 10th century
where you have a pope who basically decided he didn't want to be pope anymore
and sold the office and left town.
And then a reformer came in,
and then his other job didn't work out.
So he came back and claimed to be pope still.
So there's a lot of that.
But there's also a period known as the pornography, where you basically have, which
pornography means rule by prostitutes.
It's not really prostitutes, but there's a couple of noble women who basically control
a series of about three popes, either because they're the lovers or because it's their sons.
So it definitely has some bad, really bad periods there.
But they tend to be mostly constrained to that period of the 10th century and the early 11th century.
And that's what leads to the 11th century reform movements where you get real reform popes who really reformed the whole church, starting with Leo the 9th and Gregory the 7th.
And you have to get some non-Italians in there for a while.
Get some good German popes in there.
I don't know if we could finally good German popes today.
That's true, yeah.
All right, final myth, or at least is it?
That's the question.
The church burned all the pagan books and kept the Bible from the people.
I've been called by Protestants.
They would even chain it to the pulpit so that the laity couldn't have access.
Well, they did chain it, yes.
What?
But the reason was because, well, first of all, there were no Bibles on the pulpit.
the missiles would be up there.
But the thing is, in the Middle Ages, books are extremely expensive.
There's no paper in the Middle Ages, and there's no printing press.
So everything that is written down has to be written by hand and by professionals.
And because there's no paper, it means that every leave in a book is parchment, which is animal skin.
it takes vast herds of animals to produce a single book.
So they are immensely expensive.
For that reason, you often would chain them place
because otherwise someone would steal them and sell them off.
I mean, they're worth a fortune.
It also means that the vast majority of people in the Middle Ages,
well over 90% of the people in the middle ages,
were illiterate, including nobles,
because there was nothing for them to read.
I mean, the writing to read, there's no point learning how to read.
No, right.
Yeah, there's nothing for them to read.
I mean, when you think of the feudal system, it's all swearing to God.
It's oral oaths.
You're not writing anything down.
So the literacy was primarily constrained to the clergy, at least outside of Italy where they're doing, you know, business.
But in rest of Europe, you would have, you know,
if you needed something read, you'd go to your parish priest, and he would read it.
Even if you gave a peasant and you taught him how to read the letters, the Bible, he still
wouldn't be able to read it because it's in Latin. There's only one written language during the
Middle Ages until about the late 13th, early 14th century, and that's Latin. It's the only language
for which there are rules for writing it down. And so if you don't know Latin, it's not going to help you
to open the book because you're not going to know what it says.
So they weren't trying to keep the Bible from anyone.
It's just that Bibles are rare and expensive
and the people don't have the education to be able to read them.
If you notice, the big thing of Protestants saying, you know,
the Bible is everything, something that was new,
all comes well after the printing press when books are cheap.
Yeah, very convenient.
Yeah.
So you need that technological innovation to be able to be able to,
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often denies it. The world may shout its lies, but we do not have to and ought not to be silent.
When my wife was pregnant with our first child, I remember being somewhat disconnected from the
experience. It wasn't taking place in my body after all, so I'll never forget the day that I saw
the ultrasound and how moving it was. To donate, dial pound 250 and say the keyword baby.
That's pound 250 baby. Or visit preborn.com slash pints. That's preborn.com slash pints. This episode,
is sponsored by the St. Paul Center. We Catholics have a thousand Lenton programs and thank God
for them. It's great that they help us grow closer to the Lord throughout the Lenton season.
But what are we going to do throughout the 50 days of the Easter season? Well, like the women
disciples of Matthew 288, we're called to announce the joyful news of the Lord's resurrection
and to accompany others on their journey with the risen Lord. Yes, the Lenton season is important,
but we can't forget that Easter is not just a day, it's a season. So this evening,
Easter season. How do you walk alongside others confident that together you're drawing closer to
our risen Lord? St. Paul Center invites you to join Father Bonifus Hicks, the Mercedarean
sisters and their world-renowned theologians for a unique Easter challenge. Over these 50 days,
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Our faith is never truly understood until it's shared.
Share your faith with others this Easter season by joining the Easter accompaniment challenge.
Join the challenge by visiting St. Paulcentor.com and becoming a member today.
As far as the pagan works, the only reason that for most pagan work, the only reason that any of
them survive is because monks somewhere copied them.
The ancient world, they wrote on papyrus.
In the best of climates, the papyrus in Europe at least will last about three centuries
before it just is brittle and dissipates.
So the vast majority of things that were written in the ancient world turned into dust.
At some point, starting at about the 8th and 9th centuries,
some when you had these you know these brittle scrolls someone needed to take them and copy them down on parchment
now parchment even though it's animal skin it lasts forever um i don't know how don't i'm not a scientist
i don't understand it but when i work in the archives um in venice um the documents they bring me are
all original documents they're all a thousand years old and they're all parchment um and they're fine
So if you can get it on parchment, then you're good.
And that's what they did, particularly under the Carolingians, you had this whole kind of movement to try to preserve what they could.
Even the profane texts.
Now, of course, they're doing this devotionally, so they're going to favor Augustine and one more Bible and things like that because they're monks.
But they also would do profane texts.
They do Cicero.
They would do even kind of bawdy stuff, you know, Plautus, Terence,
you know, basically Roman sitcoms.
And these would be preserved.
So the only reason we have those pagan books is, again, because the Catholic Church preserve them.
We wouldn't have them otherwise.
Dr. Thomas Madden, thank you very much for being here on the last call.
If people want to learn more about you, where would they go?
If you had a book recommendation, perhaps one that you've written, what would you suggest?
Yeah, I mean, you come to my website, Thomas Madden.org.
you can find there all of my various books that I've written.
I have a new book actually coming out in June.
So about a completely different subject.
It's about the how republics fall, how historical republics.
How long do we have here?
A little while.
Yeah?
More than five years?
Yeah, enough for me to get royalties on the book.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you very much for watching Last Call.
Do us a favor.
If you have heard of another myth that you think is worth debunking
about our blessed Lord or our whole,
Holy Mother the Church.
Put it in the comment section below.
Share what the myth is and share why it's false.
Thanks for watching.
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