A
Areopagite
Guest
It was because many embraced their unnatural beliefs that gave the state a viable reason to attack them. Also, just because Catholic clergy can become corrupt, does not disprove Catholicism. Do bad Christians invalidate Christianity? No. So, while it is more understandable why people went over to Albigensianism (because of bad priests) it does not justify it. And since the heresy advocated unnatural acts, the state could justly get involved.Many of the nobility and leading citizens of the area embraced their beliefs. That and the fact of “their contempt for the Catholic clergy, caused by the ignorance and the worldly, too frequently scandalous, lives of the latter”, as the CE puts it, got them into trouble with Rome.
This does not disprove that the repression of the Cathari was unjust to begin with. Just because excesses might happen in a war does not make the war an unjust one.The Church attempted to “convert” the Cathari. Per the CE, “Ecclesiastical authority, after persuasion had failed, adopted a course of severe repression, which led at times to regrettable excess.”
Now, here you might have something. On the other hand, maybe not.“The civil magistrates gave them the choice between the Cross and the stake. For the most part, they preferred death to conversion.”
As I said before, I think the state had the right to force people to convert from Albigensianism … but did they have the right to force people to convert to Catholicism. Perhaps the situation was this: they were already guilty of the crime and thus were liable to receiving punishment, even if they renounced Albigensianism. However, the state had the right to withhold just punishment under the condition of their conversion to Catholicism.
Looking at it that way, I don’t think I have a problem with that. Maybe most here would disagree.
According to CE, there is doubt that Amalric said this. But if he did, shame on him. In any case, it does not invalidate the crusade against the Albigensians.In this infamous attack led by Arnaul Amalric, a Cistercian monk, a soldier was reported to have asked how they were to distinguish the Catholics in the town from the Cathar enemies: Almaric is reputed to have said (per the CE) “the monstrous words: ‘Slay all; God will know His own.’" Cathari or Catholics, guilty of heresy or innocent, old people or babies, it didn’t matter; they killed….them….all.
Once again, this shows abuses in a crusade, but does destroy the appropriateness of the crusade.So after the “dreadful carnage” (CE), almost 20,000 people had died, according to Amalric’s own report. As the CE says: “The death penalty was, indeed, inflicted too freely on the Albigenses.” And, I would add, on Catholics and anyone else who happened to be in the way.
Just because you get rewards for doing something good does not prove that what you did wasn’t good.Was there an incentive for the attackers besides ridding the region of heretics? Sure. As reward for their efforts, they would receive the land and possessions of all those they killed. **Mercenaries for Rome! **
That quote does not imply that Innocent III thought the whole affair (the crusade?) as misguided. He recognized horrible abuses in the crusade but did not consider the crusade itself as an abuse.Even Pope Innocent III recognized the whole affair as misguided, saying that the crusaders “appropriated the holdings of men never guilty of heresy and robbed and murdered like savage buccaneers.”
I did indeed."Aeropagite" called all this “fitting” and “awesome”.
Now, let’s go back to the original question: despite the abuses by the crusaders (and the abuses of the Catholic clergy before them), was the crusade itself a good thing if, in fact, the Cathars did advocate a heresy that went against the natural law (in the ways that I stated above)? This is the question before us. What do you say, chaunceygardner?