I am merely pointing out that the heresy probably included an aspect of morality, that I have no right to judge enactments (I only pointed out a case but your response is reactory). That the situation was far more complex than we know. I am not interested in this us vs them mentality.
I’m not sure what this “us vs them mentality” is of which you seem to be accusing me. You seem to be suggesting that the Cathars must have done something worthy of being killed. I see no evidence that they did.
I agree that the situation was complex, but I have no reason to assume that all the complexities, if known, would justify the Church’s actions.
But one thing I take exception to is the policy that Catholic was a rampant killing machine, and anyone opposed to them were innocent (if you excuse the direction).
That’s a straw man (in the context of this thread–I know that many people do talk that way and I acknowledge that you’re responding to those unfair attacks).
It wasn’t like that the underlying motivation of the Catholic Church in this Council was self defense as the overview states.
Defense of a religious monopoly against the terrifying possibility that there might be several ways of being Christian in the same territory, yes.
And that was wrong. They ought not to have been so afraid of giving people freedom. They put on the Ring, and we are living in the world that resulted from that terrible choice–a world where people don’t trust the Church and associate it with violence. Yes, people exaggerate and slander the Church. I know that. In fact, that’s why I’m so suspicious of what medieval Catholics said about the Cathars–I assume that they were probably just as unfair to the Cathars as people are to Catholics in our society. But you need to stop assuming that anyone who brings up the violent history of the Church is just doing so out of prejudice. This is a reality that has to be confronted honestly, without whitewash.
Note that this thread began as an attack on Protestantism for supposedly ignoring or denying history.
Perhaps a more fruitful direction to take the thread would be a comparison of how Catholics and Protestants deal with the difficulties posed by history. Protestants, especially the free-church ones, have an easy out: “we weren’t there and those people weren’t real Christians anyway.” (This argument is used by far more Protestants than the relatively small minority who think that all Catholics are “not real Christians.” Many evangelical Protestants are happy to acknowledge “good” Catholics of the Middle Ages to be real Christians, but they still assume that the people who did the violent stuff weren’t.) I came to the conclusion that that’s a dishonest and destructive path. And, of course, if “we” aren’t responsible for what the medieval Church did, it’s because “we” have renounced all continuity with the historic Church. (Some radical Protestants try to get round this by claiming continuity through heretical groups, sometimes even the Cathars, in defiance of everything we know about the Cathars.) I think it’s better to embrace all of church history as something that belongs to me, even though that means in some sense accepting collective responsibility for the many evil deeds of institutional Christianity. The modern trend is to scoff at “organized religion” and exalt individual spirituality. So Catholics have a tough row to hoe, and I understand why it’s tempting to deny or play down the bad stuff (especially since the bad stuff is often distorted and exaggerated and it’s hard to be sure when one is whitewashing and when one is just correcting the record!). But in the long run Catholics have the stronger case precisely because they
have a long history, warts and all.
And practically speaking, I’m pretty confident that the Church would know better, if it were in that position again (though perhaps I’m naive). I have no such confidence about conservative Protestants. Because they refuse to acknowledge the Church’s dark history as theirs, they have no collective memory to warn them. Fundamentalists in particular really seem to think that Catholics persecuted because they “weren’t really Christians” and that “real Christians” wouldn’t do it. So they are blind to their own intolerance and violence.
Edwin