P
pro_universal
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Read the document. The Pope clearly thought it was sanctioned by the Christian teaching.First, since you’re quoting a Papal Bull - which is not doctrine of the Christian faith - from the 15th century
Read the bull. It is so explicitly clear that conquest for the sake of spreading Christianity is a good thing that there is no possible way to maintain this claim.Second, the Inter Caetera was not promoting Christian expansion for the sake of Christian expansion,
They had just finished wiping out the Persian empire, and given time, would have been poised to wipe out anything good the muslims created. The fact that Byzantium was expanding constantly and brutally suppressing all religions other than its own represented a threat to anyone nearby.You didn’t answer my question. When did Byzantium attack Islamic forces and provoke a defensive war on the part of Muslims?
The issue is what the Crusaders thought, not what we think. I am saying that the pretense of defending Christian neighbors is a farce, because they had just recently declared the Eastern Church anathema.I was trying to respect the sensitivities of the Eastern Orthodox. In order to claim that the Eastern Churches are anathema you would have to believe that the Roman Church is the legitimate authority of God since they both excommunicated each other. Is that you’re position?
No, now how can you not see the same reasoning applied to muslims and islam?In some cases Christians sin, in other cases Christians do not. Does it follow, then, that Christianity promotes sin?
And as soon as Christianity had an army, it expanded to conquer the world too. The leader of the Christian faith has at least once in history explicitly stated that conquering “barbarous nations” for the purpose of spreading Christianity is divinely sanctioned.Furthermore, I never said that the Roman’s Imperialist expansion was acceptable. The fact that the moment Islam began it waged war against the world to conquer it says a lot about the religio
So does the fact that Christian empires have been making war constantly throughout history, and that Popes have sanctioned said war, make Christianity evil?
After. The Jizya tax was far lower than the taxes levied by the Romans.Lowered taxes? Is this before or after non-Muslims were subject to dhimmitude?
And the comparison would be this: As soon as Christians gained any political power, they started making war. And the places they conquered did not get the option of becomming tax-payers to keep their religion. So for most of history, there was far less religious freedom and more oppressive taxation in the lands run by Christians than muslims.When Islam says that it’s a “religion of peace,” to where do we look? The first 1000 years of Islam’s existence was mired in wars of conquest and expansion.
Does that make our Church teaching bad?