Cubsfan:
Having read through some of the posts on this subject I would like to point out that if you applied the the Just War concept to the Crusades they would be a Just War. Christian pilgrims were being murdered on the way to the Holy Land.
As for Gottle of Geers contention that had the Crusades not happended then a number of other odious events might have been avoided. If “ifs” and “ands” were nuts and candy…:yawn:
This is an excerpt from Crusades: Truth and Black Legend by **VITTORIO MESSORI **
According to Italian Catholic writer Vittorio Messori, the Enlightenment cast a “black legend” shadow on the Crusades, and used it as a weapon in its psychological war against the Roman Catholic Church. In an article in “Corriere della Sera,” Italy’s most important newspaper, Messori wrote, “In order to complete the work of the Reformation, it was 18th century Europe that began the chain of `Roman infamies’ that have become dogma.” :clapping:
Most of the opinion used against the crusades was formulated from the “Black Legends” during the enlightenment (or shall I say the “not so enlightenment”)
There seems to be an awful lot of Catholic revisionism around
I’m as happy as any to be told that phenomena commonly deemed indefensible or shameful were quite possibly not as bad as they are said to be: but where will it end ?
Rape, pillage, and murder are evil - even if those who commit them are western Catholics raping Byzantine nuns, plundering Byzantine relics, and defiling Byzantine Churches.
Such things are nothing but war crimes. Was Christ a rapist and murderer ?

The Pope called the sack of Constantinople “a work of darkness” - but he was happy enough to profit it from it none the less, by installing a Catholic as Patriarch; which makes his denunciation and excommunication of those who did it, ring rather hollow.
When the Crusaders entered Jerusalem during the Third Crusade, they ignored their promise to spare the Muslim defenders, and massacred the lot of them. The Muslims behaved with more knightly chivalry, and in a more Christian manner, than their enemies did.
As for the First Crusade, the progress of the ill-disciplined rabble who made up the bulk of the Crusaders through the Rhineland was marked by a string of massacres of Jews. The Jews were so terrified, that they asked some of the bishops for protection against the Christian murderers - but even the bishops were not always successful in saving them.
Which atrocity is going to be prettified next ? The extermination of hundreds of thousands of Serbs in Croatia under the puppet Fascist regime of Ante Pavelic during WW2 ?
The torture and massacre of Protestants forcibly converted to Catholicism after the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 in France ?
Fortunately, such abominations never go unpunished.
Murder, treachery, lies, deceit, torture, and cruelty are utterly indefensible - and a religion able to defend them would be rotten to the core.
If the Enlightenment movements - there are at least two - have forced the Church to look her past in the face, honestly, then so much the better. A religion built on fantasy and forgery and superstition and ignorance and untruth, is certainly not Christianity: so the less we have those, the better; however much it may hurt at first to get rid of them.
Besides, “defending the ill done” is a sin anyway.
Honesty in studying historical matters, is not the same as try to justify every last action of the Church or of Catholics. Some things - mutilating boys for their singing voices, murdering Orthodox clergy, killing Protestants who will not be converted from their own faith, trafficking in relics & indulgences, and slaughtering Jews and Muslims who are not even fighting, are indefensible. The wonder is that any Jew or Muslim would
want to be Catholic, after what they have had to endure from so-called Catholics

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