i generally agree but not absolutely. what is clearly wrong is killing someone on account that they don’t convert. using force to motivate people to convert does not seem wrong all the time.
Perhaps. I suppose it depends what you mean by “force.”
here’s an example of a papal sanctioned forced conversion lead by a catholic priest. job well done! no more cathars.
I might be wrong, but I don’t think this was a forced conversion … though it may have been a forced apostasy from Catharism. Catharism was one of the most unnatural heresies the Church has ever seen. The State had the authority, therefore, to prohibit both its preaching and its practice. Some of the things the Cathars believed:
- Marriage vows were evil
- Sexual reproduction was evil
- Infertile sex was okay (and hence sodomy was okay)
- To attain salvation, a Cathar would have to lay his hands on you at the moment of your death
- If that happened, and you recovered, the only way to attain salvation was starving yourself to death
And there were some other things. The government perfectly has the right to squash this nonsense. Since it profoundly intersected with the Church, a crusade could fittingly be waged. Which is awesome.
The forcing of Catholicism on populations by kings,
And I am still asking whether the Church ever said this was okay. Maybe they did. If so, I’d like to see the source. Pagans, of course, forced their pagan state religions on conquered people much more so than any Catholic King. So, paganism is much more to be scolded for this than the Catholic Church. But, no one ever scolds those silly pagans.
the horrors of the Inquisition,
The Inquisition’s purpose was to find Islamic spies who were conspiring against the Spanish government. The Muslims had invaded Spain without any cause, and the Spaniards eventually began to fight back. The Inquisition was completely called for. It was meant for finding self-proclaimed converts who had been exposed to still practicing Islam.
The Crusades were not waged simply because Muslims were a different religion from the Pope. The Muslims had been attacking the Holy Land, killing thousands of Christians. The Crusades were a just defensive action.
and the cultural devastation of missionaryism,
What are you referring to exactly? Aztecs and Mayans?
all ought to “demon”-strate the highly questionable assertion that the Church is, in practice, even remotely associated with Truth. Having a form of belief that claims validity by claiming itself sanctioned by God is, as we have seen, is little more than a power trip in the hands of men. The materialistic and exoteric form of the Church points clearly to this. It is only the Church taking advantage of the inherent goodness stemming from each man and woman as rightfully being a child of God that give the illusion that the Church has any claim to even a misguided interpretation of the actual teachings of, or more likely, about, Jesus.
Gee, what were we thinking?
What we truly need is freedom not only from religion, but from belief itself. The structure of your relationship with God is inherent in your being as a child of God, not in the contents of the acquired form of your religion, whatever its denomination, or the lack of such.
Freedom from belief itself? What does that even mean?
The “structure of your relationship with God is inherent in your being as a child of God” is a religious claim and certainly a belief, right?
Know ThySelf, and discover what the statements of Identity attributed to Jesus actual might mean in terms of your actual salvation, distinct form the story book of the Church.
For the record, I don’t object to the Oracle of Delphi’s catch phrase “Know thyself,” but doing just that isn’t going to save you.
catholic teachings on abortion, contraception and pornography should also not be forced on anyone. not in most people’s case.
These things (as you yourself later acknowledge … but I’m making this clearer for everyone) are not condemned only by divinely revealed Catholic dogmas but by natural law.
but only the catholic church recognizes that they are evil and should be therefore prohibited by the state.
I don’t know about this. I think many Protestants still condemn them. And of course there is an infinite medley of paganism … some might condemn all them as well.