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Roman Catholic AnswerThe whole "money given to secure a place in heaven called in the early days of the Catholic Church" is a perfect example of malicious invention or deliberate misunderstanding by the protestants who broke away from the Church in the sixteenth century and were concocting stories to explain themselves. There has never been such a thing. There are, however, two things on which these false stories are based:

The first, is the practice of indulgences, which is still done. An indulgence is the remssion of the temporal punishment due to a PREVIOUSLY FORGIVEN SIN and therefore has nothing to do with securing a place in heaven. In the 15-16th century there was a particular indulgence which involved almsgiving to help rebuild St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. There was *never* any "buying" of an indulgence, but some of the more ignorant may have told such a story - and did.

The second is simony, which is mentioned in the New Testament when Simon Magus tries to buy from the apostles the imposition of hands and the gifts of the Holy Spirit (Acts 8:18), is the giving of money for holy things. Simon is rebuked by st. Peter and repents. It is, and has always been, a dreadful sin. Now, many people were guilty of simony in their misuse of the aforementioned indulgences, and did in truth sell them. This was not, however, the practice of the Catholic Church, which condemned it, but rather the abuse of particular unscrupulous individuals.

Most of these malicious fables were concocted in the last two centuries; the most famous and enduring by a man called Loraine Boettner, whose book, Roman Catholicism is still in print, and is used by many professional anti-Catholics. This book is so ludicrous, spiteful and full of bad scholarship that it is a wonder that it is still printed. It is a "fat book ... full of juicy tidbits. Its 466 pages are packed with countless accusations against Catholics and their religion. It was meant to be the definitive anti-Catholic work". Unfortunately, it is nothing but unsubstantiated hate-mongering.

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Q: What was the money given to secure a place in heaven called in the early days of the Catholic Church?
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