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mek42
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How is judging Islam by the actions of terrorists different from someone judging the Catholic Church by the actions of the Spanish Conquistadors during the conquest of the Americas?
Koran 9:29 says fight the unbelievers until they submit.
Koran 9:29.
I won’t tell you to read the verse alone, take it in context. You’ll be hard-pressed to find that anywhere in the Bible.
The Conquistadors were condemned by the Pope, at least Columbus was. However, up until the rise of the “moderate” Muslim who disregards the rule of the Koran and Hadith, you would be just as hard-pressed to find a condemnation as you would to find a meaningful command from Christ to slaughter the infidels n
You obviously know precious little about Islam.Koran 9:29 says fight the unbelievers until they submit.
Deuteronomy 17 however says that if you find “who has gone and served other gods and worshiped them” then you “shall stone to death that man or woman with stones”
I think judging Christianity on the basis of the actions of Conquistadors is very similar to judging Islam on the basis of terrorism. The main difference is that it happened a long time ago.
However Islam really does need some reform, but that does not make it fundamentally bad.
What did the Catholic church tell the Spanish Conquistadors to do?How is judging Islam by the actions of terrorists different from someone judging the Catholic Church by the actions of the Spanish Conquistadors during the conquest of the Americas?
Excellent post;There were two major Inquisitions, the Medieval Inquisition and Spanish Inquisition. Although there are no exact numbers, scholars believe they have estimated Inquisition deaths reasonably accurately. There were not as many deaths as the popular press claims. Numbers have often been inflated to as high as 9 million by the popular press, with absolutely no scholarly research. This figure is completely erroneous. A broad range of scholars, many of whom were not Catholic, have carefully studied the Inquisitions. They looked at all the existing records and were able to extrapolate. In the Medieval Inquisition, Bernard Gui was one of the most notorious of the medieval inquisitors. (so much so that the sick modern pornography industry has turned him into a hero). He tried 930 people out of which 42 were executed (4.5%). Another famous Inquisitor was Jacques Fournier who tried 114 cases of which 5 were executed (4.3%). Using numbers that are known, scholars have been able to surmise that approximately 2,000 people died in the Medieval Inquisition. (1231-1400 AD)
According to public news reports the book’s editor, Prof. Agostino Borromeo, stated that about 125,000 persons were investigated by the Spanish Inquisition, of which 1.8% were executed (2,250 people). Most of these deaths occurred in the first decade and a half of the Inquisition’s 350 year history. In Portugal of the 13,000 tried in the 16th and early 17th century 5.7% were said to have been condemned to death. News articles did not report if Portugal’s higher percentage included those sentenced to death in effigy (i.e. an image burnt instead of the actual person). For example, historian Gustav Henningsen reported that statistical tabulations of 50,000 recorded cases tried by nineteen Spanish tribunals between 1540-1700 found 775 people (1.7%) were actually executed while another 700 (1.4%) were sentenced to death in effigy (“El ‘banco de datos’ del Santo Oficio: Las relaciones de causas de la Inquisición española, 1550-1700”, BRAH, 174, 1977). Jewish historian Steven Katz remarked on the Medieval Inquisition that “in its entirety, the thirteenth and fourteenth century Inquisition put very few people to death and sent few people to prison; 90 percent of its sentences were canonical penances” (The Holocaust in Historical Context, 1994).
During the high point of the Spanish Inquisition from 1478-1530 AD, scholars found that approximately 1,500-2,000 people were found guilty. From that point forward, there are exact records available of all “guilty” sentences which amounted to 775 executions. In the full 200 years of the Spanish Inquisition, less than 1% of the population had any contact with it, people outside of the major cities didn’t even know about it. **The Inquisition was not applied to Jews or Moslems, unless they were baptised as Christians. **
If we add the figures, we find that the entire Inquisition of 500 years, caused about 6,000 deaths. These atrocities are completely inexcusable. These numbers are however, a far cry from the those used in the popular press by people who are always looking to destroy the Church. This is about equal to the number of war related deaths that have occurred in Afghanistan and Iraq in the 2 years since the US responded to 9/11.
Another thing to note is that the Spanish Inquisition, in a wrong way, may have saved some lives. In many European countries in the 16th century, religious wars were the cause of tens of thousands of deaths. But in Spain, there was political and religious unity as a result of the Inquisition, and there was no such war.
Nevertheless, the Inquisition tortures and death were inexcusable. I echo the voice of John Paul II “Forgive us Lord, Never Again”
There is no Islamic DOCTRINE to kill the infidels Gabriel, otherwise every mosque on earth would be preaching it…Excellent post;
The underlined above reveals the difference between the Inquisitions and Islam’s doctrine to conquer the world for their prophet and Allah.
**While the inquisition addressed members of the Catholic faith only. Islam’s doctrine to “kill the infidels” addresses all non-Muslims in the world. Whether Muslims interpret this Islamic doctrine to be executed by physical force, which history proves this case to be the “norm” or by peaceful means which has not been proven to be the norm by Muslims, according to Islamic history. ** it is here were one can judge a tree by its’ fruit.
Many misunderstand the inquisition’s main focus was to clean house of false shepherds (Catholics) teaching heresy, which did not constitute a physical death sentence only excommunication of the Catholic Church. When it was the secular powers who exercised a capital punishment.
Much of the abuse of the inquisition proved political gains were used by it at the influence of secular powers, to remove rivals to their secular thrones and Church teaching positions, held by secular priest or bishops that were placed in power by secular authorities. In short the inquisition did no address non- Christians as many have falsely reported by anti-Catholic’s.
There is a difference between secular priest who did not take vows and religious priest who did take vows during the inquisition periods. Which influenced the inquisition to remove false shepherds from the flock. Yet circumstances such as secular priest and religious priest, get overlooked by non-Catholic historians, who do not understand or refuse to view and comment on the (complicated) historical internal battles, that were taking place between Church authority and secular authorities.
Peace be with you
The OP is “Judging Islam by actions of terrorists”. Because you are not a practicing Muslim and I hope you are not a practicing terrorist, we cannot agree to disagree on a subject that does not pertain to your faith doctrines.Servant19;13709817]There is no Islamic DOCTRINE to kill the infidels Gabriel, otherwise every mosque on earth would be preaching it…
Thank you GabrielThe OP is “Judging Islam by actions of terrorists”. Because you are not a practicing Muslim and I hope you are not a practicing terrorist, we cannot agree to disagree on a subject that does not pertain to your faith doctrines.
But I would be interested in learning your view of the OP.
Not true. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella funded Columbus and others who would follow to seek another shipping route to Asia. While they were battling the Muslims.mek42;13711103]My understanding is that the Catholic Conquistadors from Spain did use force to effect conversion upon pain of death to Catholicism of the natives where they landed in America.
I don’t believe you can prove that any natives fell under the category of the Inquisition. For the Inquisition sought out false shepherds teaching heresy. I don’t think any of the natives during this time reached a status of a teaching authority to fall under any Inquisition. The Church acknowledges and records the abuse’s made by the Conquistadors. Plain and simple Conquistadors were not the representatives of Christianity to convert the natives in the Americas. Religious priest were the representatives of Christianity on these voyages.And that, subsequent to this forced conversion of a people of different culture and language, the methods of the Inquisition were then applied.
I don’t think any one denies the Conquistadors were not Catholic. These secular Catholic men sought to gain wealth in these new lands. What funded and supported their adventures were Catholic Royals supported by the Church to spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Were there abuses in these circumstances, did the Royals and the Church on the other side of the world seek to protect the natives and their human dignity? Yes.Is not this act of conversion by force the very thing we are fearful of from militant Islam? If it is claimed that the actions of the Spanish colonists was not Catholic, not Christian, despite their claims at the time, why then is it so hard to consider that terrorism is not Islam when such statements are made?
Men in all ages have failed God in all creeds of faith. Catholicism has no teaching that subscribes to violence or killing in the name of Christianity. In fact Catholicism teaches to love one’s enemy. Have Christians failed at this teaching, yes. But the fact remains to love your enemy is gospel teaching in Christianity.It seems like Christians say, “When Christians are bad, it means that individuals have failed, and is not an indightment of Christianity. But the Islamic terrorists, those acts show that Islam itself is bad.”