A
Axion
Guest
Vox Borealis:
Even afterwards, we must be wary of accepting the view that somehow Christianity was “forced” on the peoples of Europe. The vast number of conversions came from missionary activity with missionaries going into pagan areas unarmed and unprotected. Think of St Patrick, St Columba, St Aidan, St Augustine, Sts cyril and methodius, the evangelisers of the Goths, and the norsemen. There were occasions when the King converted and others followed but is this much different from conversions today in Africa and Asia, where mass conversions are certainly not forced.
The key concepts that all people are basically equal, that evryone deserves to be treated as we would like to be treated, and that we must not undervalue the weak, are **Christian ** concepts - unknown to classical Greece and Rome. These principles gave birth to the concept of human rights, long before the enlightenment. Magna Carta was drawn up in 1212, largely by churchmen, parliaments and trial by Jury come from the same period. The arbitrary power of rulers was always limited by Christian principles, upheld by the Church.
Things like this went on within the latter Roman Empire, but we also know that for the first 300 years, Christianity grew strongly in spite of persecution.Not exactly. From the time of Constantine forward (with the exception of Julian) non-Christians were subjected to the same kind of pressures to convert as were Christians under Muslim “toleration”–their worship (sacrifice) was increasingly banned, Christians (especially clergy) were given finacial benefits, pagans were subjected to periodic outbreaks of mob violence to which Christian imperial authorities turned a blind eye, unofficially Christians were favored for lucrative administrative positions, and so forth. Likewise, other coversions–such as the conversion under Clovis of the Franks–while not the product of conquest, were certainly compelled from the top down.
Even afterwards, we must be wary of accepting the view that somehow Christianity was “forced” on the peoples of Europe. The vast number of conversions came from missionary activity with missionaries going into pagan areas unarmed and unprotected. Think of St Patrick, St Columba, St Aidan, St Augustine, Sts cyril and methodius, the evangelisers of the Goths, and the norsemen. There were occasions when the King converted and others followed but is this much different from conversions today in Africa and Asia, where mass conversions are certainly not forced.
Not very much. But in Spain, Muslim populations represented a security threat of major proportions.How much did Christians tolerate Muslims in Spain, when Christians slowly reconquered the Iberian peninsula?
Again, I would say this widely-held view is in part a symptom of the re-writing of history to deny a Christian contribution to anything good. But is modern liberal-democratic society really copying Greece and Rome? Greek democracy was very limited, and excluded women, helots and slaves. Rome became an absolutist tyranny very early on.One could argue that modern liberalism grew out of an Enlightenment that was often (though not always) pretty hostile to Christianity (especially Catholicism). Many enlightenment thinkers looked, in fact, to the pagan past (republican Rome and democratic Athens) for thir political models, not to Christian precedents.
The key concepts that all people are basically equal, that evryone deserves to be treated as we would like to be treated, and that we must not undervalue the weak, are **Christian ** concepts - unknown to classical Greece and Rome. These principles gave birth to the concept of human rights, long before the enlightenment. Magna Carta was drawn up in 1212, largely by churchmen, parliaments and trial by Jury come from the same period. The arbitrary power of rulers was always limited by Christian principles, upheld by the Church.
Full democracies in nation states are fairly recent, but there were republics in city states in Italy and Germany in the Middle Ages. Even in unitary States like England and France, individual towns established some form of elective rule to cover local affairs. Nearly every western state had some form of parliament that presented people’s views directly to the ruler. The principles of Christianity and its moral teachings meant that individual rights were built into the system.Moreover, modern pluralistic democracies have really only established themselves in the last century or two in the west. The fact this has occured in the West MAY be because of Christianity, or because the west also experienced other profound changes, such as scientific and industrial revolutions. Maybe pluralistic societies emerged in the west in spite of rather than because of Christianity. I’m not saying that is the case, but I do questions the logic that because pluralism came about in the west, it must be linked specifically to Christianity.