J
JMJ_coder
Guest
It doesn’t do you credit to not know history (at least quote from a reputable non-anti-catholic scholar).Of course it didn’t hurt that Constantine just declared it the official religion of the empire and that it remained the state mandated religion of Europe for a very longtime. Of course, once this stopped you observed a very stead decrease in the number of Christians throughout Europe (in addition to a very stead increase in the level of education). Christianity is now depending heavily on largely illiterate, poverty stricken third world nations (where massive procreation is only exceed by a massive inability to maintain a growing population) to avoid shrinking further into insignificance. Poverty stricken illiterates make very easy prey for missionaries. Even in the USA (Christianity’s bastion) it continues to make up a shrinking percentage of the nations population. Catholicism in the USA has managed to retain it’s overall numbers only because of the large number of Latin Americans who continue to illegally enter our nation.
Of course, before long before the end of this century Islam will the the worlds largest faith…this saddens me as I greatly greatly prefer Christian lunacy to Islamic lunacy.
Constantine did NOT make Christianity the official religion of the Empire. He issued the Edict of Milan which merely made Christianity legal (as in we’re not going to throw you to the lions anymore). And while Emperor Theodosius did make Christianity the official religion of the Empire in 380, you would note that the Empire was losing its foothold, especially in the West. Even at that time the capitol of the Empire was Constantinople (modern day Istanbul), and its influence in the West was waning. Very soon after that, the barbarian hordes - such as the Vandals - were pillaging and cutting off the West from the East. Within a few hundred years the West would be under the domain of the Franks.