Four Unusual Papal Legends

Tales about popes can tend toward the fantastic

Tim Gebhart
8 min readDec 30, 2021
Sculpture of St. Peter in Vatican’s St. Peter’s Square (Photo by iam_os on Unsplash)

LLegends and history both tell stories of the past. Given its power and antiquity, the papacy has plenty of both. Some legends have a basis in fact; others are simply apocryphal. Here are four of the more offbeat.

A Papal Tiara Shows the Pope is the Antichrist

Although the Book of Revelation dates to the late 1st century, some Christians believe it directly relevant to modern times and the near future. It’s permeated popular culture to the extent that one portion is oft-cited today. Revelation 13:16–18 (NKJ) says everyone will receive the mark of the beast. “Let him who has understanding calculate the number of the beast, for it is the number of a man,” it adds. “His number is 666.”

This leads many to equate 666 with the Antichrist. A theory initially proposed in 1612 spread widely around the time of the French Revolution. It says a papal title shows the pope bears this mark because the numerical values of the letters in Vicarius Filii Dei (“Vicar of the Son of God”) yield 666. Uriah Smith, a 19th-century Seventh-day Adventist minister, claimed the phrase appeared in jewels on the pontiff’s tiara. “It is the number of the beast, the papacy,” he wrote.

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Tim Gebhart
Tim Gebhart

Written by Tim Gebhart

Retired Lawyer. Book Addict. History Buff. Lifelong South Dakotan. Blog: prairieprogressive.com