M
malphono
Guest
I often wonder whether there was much in the way of legitimate “religious motives” involved, particularly on the part of the Iberians. It’s certainly true that the French brought Catholicism too, but they were far less rabid in their approach.None of this is to say that every act committed by conquistadors is to be laid at the feet of the RCC itself, but a realistic appraisal of history of European conquest can’t leave religious motives out.
This is an excellent observation. It’s true of the Brits as well, particularly in parts of Africa. And it even manifests itself in the very existence of the Marthomite Church in Kerala: Anglican Protestantism with a Syrian façade. It’s also true of the Russians in Alaska and, to a lesser extent, in other regions of the Pacific Northwest.Again, none of this is an indictment against the RCC as an institution, but it is the reality of how RCism spread all over the world. It is a colonial religion everywhere outside of Europe not because it was designed to be so, but because at that time it was the religion of the majority of the colonizing European powers that managed to carve up the largest chunks of the world for themselves: The Spaniards, the Portuguese, and the French. In other places, other forms of Christianity are the traditional colonial form. Lutheranism is not the dominant form of Christianity in Namibia by accident, for instance; it is, of course, the state church of the Germans who originally colonized that country.