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  1. Answer: Although the quote is commonly attributed without source documentation to Pope Leo X, it is believed to have originated in a satirical piece titled “The Pageant of the Popes” by a Protestant controversialist named John Bale (1495–1563). Bale wrote: “For on a time when a Cardinall Bembus did move a question out of the Gospell ...

  2. en.wikiquote.org › wiki › Pope_Leo_XPope Leo X - Wikiquote

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    Since God has given us the papacy, let us enjoy it.
    Made thirty, we should make thirty-one

    Sorted alphabetically by author or source Leo X succeeded Julius II, and under his pontificate, Latin Christianity assumed a pagan, Greco-Roman character, which, passing from art into manners, gives to this epoch a strange complexion. Crimes for the moment disappeared, to give place to vices; but to charming vices, vices in good taste, such as thos...

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  4. Jul 11, 2013 · In 1514 Pope Leo X raised a glass of wine at a Good Friday Vatican banquet and proposed a toast, saying: "How well we know what a profitable superstition this fable of Christ has been for us and our predecessors." This is perhaps the most shocking admission by a pope in the long and bloody history of the Catholic church. That it was profitable ...

  5. Dec 16, 2023 · A Christian believing in lies, saturated with lies and living in lies, at the high levels of the Christian hierarchical ladder himself begins to look like a lie: the well-known "painted" smile on a lean face. Physical form absorbs lies. “The united thought of many people is much more powerful than the sum of their separate thoughts.

  6. Pope Leo X, born Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici (December 11, 1475 - December 1, 1521) was Pope from 1513 to his death. He is known primarily for his papal bull against Martin Luther and subsequent failure to stem the Protestant Reformation, which began during his reign when Martin Luther (1483–1546) published the 95 Theses and nailed them to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg.

  7. Leo X, POPE (GIOVANNI DE’ MEDICI), b. at Florence, December 11, 1475; d. at Rome, December 1, 1521, was the second son of Lorenzo the Magnificent (1469-1492) and Clarice Orsini, and from his earliest youth was destined for the Church. He received tonsure in1482 and in 1483 was made Abbot of Font Douce in the French Diocese of Saintes and ...

  8. Leo X, orig. Giovanni de’ Medici, (born Dec. 11, 1475, Florence—died Dec. 1, 1521, Rome), Pope (1513–21), one of the most extravagant of the Renaissance pontiffs. The second son of Lorenzo de’ Medici, he was educated at his father’s court in Florence and at the University of Pisa. He was named a cardinal in 1492, and in 1494 he was ...