C
Contarini
Guest
Darryl, I’m sorry, but again you’re showing your rather limited understanding of the period. The Cathars were not trivial. The Council was largely called to address them. The entire Dominican Order came into being originally to convert them.I think you are grossly misunderstanding what I am saying, the council made specific claims, claims which need to be regarded in their own right. Then there were the Cathars (who were actually trivial historically to that period of unrest except in the mind of the protestant)
Your error is the opposite of that of many Catholic apologists, following Belloc and Chesterton, who present them as being one of the greatest threats ever to face Catholicism. This blowing up of their importance, along with extravagant claims about their moral evil and violence and so on, is designed to justify the brutality with which they were repressed. The truth is somewhat in the middle. They were a very serious threat in southern France but were mostly localized there. However, there were similar movements in other parts of Europe, such as the Bogomils in the East. Some kind of dualist heresy does seem to have been a pretty major competitor with Catholicism during the High Middle Ages.
You want to make this all about Islam, because Islam is on your mind. Well, IV Lateran wasn’t about Islam. For one thing, Islam was in retreat at this point. It was being beaten back in Spain, and several 13th-century Crusades either invaded Egypt or attempted to do so.
It wasn’t as socially powerful (and it was persecuted–but there were no Crusades because none were needed there). There seemed to be a real likelihood that southern France would become primarily Cathar. The Crusade against the Cathars was called because local rulers were protecting them.then the history of Crusading built into French Knights, Toulouse being the origin of the leader of the First Crusade, French Crusading doing the enacting against the Cathars, Spain liberated from Islam, the same heresy in Italy as the Cathars not so burned and barely on the radar of history (dealt with don’t know),
What sacking of Rome? What year? By whom?a recent sacking of Rome
I’m not sure what you are getting at, frankly.a Mongol invasion, sacking Constantinople prior to the Council (yes wrong, by hired help and condemned), and finally people usurping yes usurping Christianity when they were nothing like it (denying the Trinity incarnation etc), all the while underneath St Francis and the Dominicans, slightly later Aquinas, because the background was ripe.
But today we sit back and invade Iraq. Think nothing of it because we all agree on the context. We look back over the last century and say it was just. And then judge history in our own little filter oblivious to 98% of the facts, when the only complex decision we make is which tie do I wear with this shirt.
Well, I for one have opposed the invasion of Iraq from the beginning and have never “thought nothing of it,” so that argument has no weight with me.All the while ignoring the fact that our own forefathers were there.
I agree entirely that people demonize the Middle Ages while not seeing how violent and imperialistic our own society is. But I’m not doing that. I want us to be honest about the violence of our own times and about the violence of our ancestors. I want us to be very critical of anyone who ever uses violence against a minority or an alien “other,” and very slow to accept the many excuses that people come up with under such circumstances. But in particular we need to do this when the violence was done by “our” side.
Edwin