Quote:
Originally Posted by
dwashbur
Yes, much of it was done by governments, but at the time most of it happened it was difficult if not impossible to separate the two. Having said that, nobody is innocent of looking down on someone else because of a difference of belief, and if someone wants to point solely at the Catholic church for persecution and all that, they can try to explain Ulrich Zwingli to me, among others.
They all did it. At some point, we're all guilty of forgetting what Jesus actually said, "they will know you are my disciples by your love for each other." Somewhere along the way, every last one of us and all Christians down through history have rewritten that as "they will know you are my disciples by your correct doctrine or by what you don't do or by how you dress or by anything except your love for each other."
I like to think that promoting Christian love among us, even when we disagree about some things, is part of what places like this are all about.
I would also add that; much is blown out of perspective when we make judgments of human nature based on our modern sensibilities. Take for example the first inquisition which came out of southern France where the majority had adopted the Cathars heresy. Catharism was a sect with strong Gnostic elements that thrived in the 11th through the 13 centuries. Holding dualist and Gnostic faiths, Cathars held theological views such as the world was created evil by Satan, while considering God of the Old Testament to be the moral equal and opposite of Satan – the yin yang of good and evil. Many hold that Catharism had its theological genesis in Gnosticism with an aberrant mix of Judaism and Mohammedanism.
In southern France they formed opposition to the clergy and the Catholic Church. They perceived the individual to be the source of moral, spiritual, and political authority and as such viewed the Catholic Church as corrupt. Procreation was considered undesirable and child birth was discouraged. They considered sex as a perversion, but at the same timed considered recreational sex as preferable to sex reserved for the purpose of procreation. It seems that taking on concubines was a moral alternative to marriage. It's really interesting that the Cathars could hold such distain for a natural act while finding recreational sex healthy – it hurts the head doesn't it? - by refusing to reproduce it's a wonder they lasted two hundred years.
Much like the radical Islamists of today, this movement can be viewed as the cradle of the Protestant movement. Morally dysfunctional societies such as Cathars refused the authority of the Church. They defended their radical attacks against the Church as morally just, refused social regulation, taxes, social and moral bans while feeling justified in any moral disorder proclaiming to be above any moral truth taught by the Catholic Church. – When it's in black and white, it's amazing how much they sound like today's secularists with a twisted freaky dualist god.
Warren H Carroll in The Glory of Christendom makes the point,
“The 'black legend' of the Inquisition has been the most successful of all historical propaganda offensives against the Catholic Church; and the difficulty of responding to it persuasively is vastly increased by the almost complete inability of modern man to understand how any society could regard a man's religion as a matter of life and death. But in fact the heretic in Christendom was in every sense of the word a revolutionary, as dangerous to public order and personal safety as yesterday's Communist or today's terrorist.”