I'm kind of hating that none of the guys in the church actually believe in what they're doing. I can understand if one or two of them was like that, just like the priest, but the entire work seems to be writing off the original witch trials as some elaborate political plot as opposed to plain old mass hysteria. Seems to support an idea of the "elites" in society are the cause for all of it's trouble, and while I understand that a major message in this work is that "authority can be evil", there's a lot to be said about no one in a position of power actually believing in what that position of power purports.
@codydub03
I understand that. I guess, I don't exactly know how to explain it. I wasn't really trying to say that the MC needs to trick the Inquisition people with "magic" It's more like how intelligent they are being portrayed for their era, is kind of bonkers to me. I can agree with the Inquisition people knowing everything the MC does is an act. I mean, they basically said, that they can't expose the MC as a fraud "devil" without people questioning the legality of the churches previous actions regarding their own "miracles".
I agree with this, all the inquisitors would actually need to know is that the blood is just sap. That would be enough for them to be convinced that the rest were tricks, even if they don't understand it. They don't need to say "Ah ha, because the blood is sap, that means he had a special metal tube made for the sword, and an elaborate holster system for the hanging!" All that would be needed is "This blood isn't real, the rest of it must have been faked somehow. I don't know how he did it, but we've been tricked." Furthermore, you don't need the bad guys to all be cynical con man,
@pokefairy mentioned the Priest from Castlevania being just cunning while believing in the church. I would love for one our bad guys to 100% believe in his own "tricks" as miracles, but simultaneously be fully aware that "the devil's magic" was just a trick.
One last thing, being able to convince twins that just being born twins curses them to sin or whatever doesn't sound like a proper superstition to me, it sounds like an author trying to fabricate superstition without understanding why it occurs in the first place. As if ancient peasants were just drooling morons that could be convinced of anything be just stating it's true. They may be stupid, but that doesn't mean they're easy to convince, there has to be at least some fabricated reason for why being born twins will forsake salvation.