P
PiousTemplar
Guest
How do I find out why alot of the Popes were corrupt during the Renaissance?
This is starting to make me get bad thoughts about Papal Infabillity. I believe it, but these things sort of make me wonder.
For example: Pope Alexander VI. There is no doubt he was corrupt. The question is, how did he even get elected into papacy in the first place? Surely they would know if he was morally impaired?
Another example: Pope Julius II. I don’t know much about this Pope but from what I have read, he had a bitter rivalry with Pope Alexander VI for the papacy, which when Alexander won he made refuge at Ostia, from Borgia’s ‘wrath’. Does this suggest that Popes sometimes abused their power to take out their opponents?
He then went to Paris, where he incited Charles VIII of France to undertake a conquest of Naples, which then, started the First Italian War.
This information is from Wikipedia, which is quite a reliable site. How did these things happen (I spose this is a stupid question) and how did the Church stop it?
This is starting to make me get bad thoughts about Papal Infabillity. I believe it, but these things sort of make me wonder.
For example: Pope Alexander VI. There is no doubt he was corrupt. The question is, how did he even get elected into papacy in the first place? Surely they would know if he was morally impaired?
Another example: Pope Julius II. I don’t know much about this Pope but from what I have read, he had a bitter rivalry with Pope Alexander VI for the papacy, which when Alexander won he made refuge at Ostia, from Borgia’s ‘wrath’. Does this suggest that Popes sometimes abused their power to take out their opponents?
He then went to Paris, where he incited Charles VIII of France to undertake a conquest of Naples, which then, started the First Italian War.
This information is from Wikipedia, which is quite a reliable site. How did these things happen (I spose this is a stupid question) and how did the Church stop it?