L
Lost_Wanderer
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Really? I know a thread here I can redirect you to.After 50 years of western academic anti Christian propaganda its hard to find such bars.
Really? I know a thread here I can redirect you to.After 50 years of western academic anti Christian propaganda its hard to find such bars.
Sure, i’ll peruse it when I come back from Ayala Lost Wanderer.Really? I know a thread here I can redirect you to.
When I think about it, the thread seems quite related to this report.Sure, i’ll peruse it when I come back from Ayala Lost Wanderer.
It’s pretty easy given that the legacy of corruption traces its way back to the frailocracy. Then again, that’s not really the problem I’m talking about here. What I’m talking about is the fact that there are still Catholics with a rose-tinted view of the time period.You’re going to have to work very hard to convince me how you are suffering under the colonial past of monarchal Spain.
That’s not the topic of this discussion. The issue is that many pro-medieval Catholics are treating monarchial periods as if the crimes of monarchs, colonizers, and corrupt clergy are less guilty than today’s pro-contraceptive dissenters.If you don’t like monarchies that’s fine. I don’t much like them myself. But don’t make historical monarchies an excuse for the failures of the Philippines.
So the good excuses the bad?And don’t by extension use that to attack the church unless you want to put it into context how much good the church does in the Philippines.
The sister in the beginning link had a similar narrow expression of Catholic historicity.
Against this background, we report that it is claimed that in 1454 Pope Nicholas V gave permission to Alfonso V of Portugal to enslave Saracens, and other “enemies of Christ.”
First, we have yet to see any documentation for this claim. Even if it be so, it as not a doctrinal teaching, but a practical action. Such an action could indeed imply a teaching in the mind of the one who acted, but it did not express any teaching. So we need to recall what was said above about divine Brinkmanship. Volume III, of Warren Carroll’s church history chronicles so many serious abuses of Popes in the middle ages. And we all know that Alexander VI had illegitimate children, and even officiated at marriage for them and even appointed an illegitimate son, Caesar, as a Cardinal! None of these abuses amounts to a teaching, but only to a very regrettable action.
Further we note that the alleged document allows slavery for Saracens. We need to remember also what was said above, that slavery is a bit less a penalty than life in a prison. And it may be earned by grave sin. Now the Saracens had been murdering all sorts of persons. Their religion was literally spread by the sword. Their sacred book, the Koran, says (cited from Bernard Palmer, Understanding the Islamic Explosion, Horizon House, 1980, pp. 36-37): “When ye encounter unbelievers, strike off their heads until ye have made a great slaughter among them, and bind them in bonds. . . .” They also believed that to fight in such a “Holy War” ensures immediate salvation, going to a sex paradise. Islamic people held Spain and Portugal for centuries, and got control of the area at first precisely by killing the “infidels”.
ewtn.com/library/ANSWERS/SLAVERY.HTMSo since—if indeed the claim is true—Pope Nicholas V granted such an approval, it is evident he must have thought something substantially changed the case. For there was the much earlier prohibition of slavery by Pope John VIII in 873, in which he called it a grave sin. And Pope Paul III not long after 1454 (in 1537) ordered under automatic excommunication that slavery stop.
I think what’s more problematic was that these clarifications didn’t stop the Spanish and Portuguese from enslaving and oppressing regardless. And yet, there are Catholics even on this forum who still persist in glorifying this so-called ‘Christian’ era. Now that is something the Church needs to be more apologetic about.
I, for one, have labelled the Spanish and Portuguese enslavers as dissenters, or equivalent titles. I teach a Church History series at my local parish in which the Conquistadors were discussed. And I based my treatment of them on the 19th century Church History books by Joseph Epiphane Darras, which books have the personal approval of Pope Pius IX. Volume 4 Period 7 Chapter 7 Section 5 of these books contain these words: “The Spanish conquerors of the New World had reduced the natives to slavery, and doomed them to toil in the mines. In vain did the clergy, both regular and secular, protest against an abuse as impolitic as it was barbarous. Their complaints were unheeded. There yet remained at the foot of the Cordilleras, in the plain that looks toward the Atlantic, between the Orinoco and the Rio de la Plata, a country filled with savages, where the Spaniards had not yet carried their baneful conquests. It was in the shades of these forests that the missionaries undertook to form a Christian republic, and to bestow, at least, upon a few of the natives the happiness which they were not allowed to bring to all.” sourceIt doesn’t help when conservative Catholics look longingly to these historical periods and deliberately ignore the underhanded disobedience of the supposedly religious colonizers.
These people are no better than modern cafeteria Catholics like me. And yet, why aren’t the likes of Mr. Conquistador being given the label? Why must it only be the liberal crowd that gets marked with the scarlet D of dissident?
I personally don’t care to push for any political agenda just to highlight these documents. It’s just that when the religious are going to go around accusing others of dissent, then they should at least shamefully admit that they’ve should’ve started before Cortez, Magellan, or Columbus ever set foot in their ships!
It wouldn’t be the Spanish brand, at the very least. We already had a civilization long before those invaders came. Yet alas, the fact is we’re still racing to discover what life was like before them. Now not even you can truly say this because we’re still struggling to piece a comparison together.Really, no corruption before that you think?
It’s something that is very much needed in these forums and should be paraded in the faces of those who want human civilization to return to those times.What do you think of the quote I provided?
I thought that there were clergy who held slaves, so not all clergy protested against slavery.I, for one, have labelled the Spanish and Portuguese enslavers as dissenters, or equivalent titles. I teach a Church History series at my local parish in which the Conquistadors were discussed. And I based my treatment of them on the 19th century Church History books by Joseph Epiphane Darras, which books have the personal approval of Pope Pius IX. Volume 4 Period 7 Chapter 7 Section 5 of these books contain these words: “The Spanish conquerors of the New World had reduced the natives to slavery, and doomed them to toil in the mines. In vain did the clergy, both regular and secular, protest against an abuse as impolitic as it was barbarous. Their complaints were unheeded. There yet remained at the foot of the Cordilleras, in the plain that looks toward the Atlantic, between the Orinoco and the Rio de la Plata, a country filled with savages, where the Spaniards had not yet carried their baneful conquests. It was in the shades of these forests that the missionaries undertook to form a Christian republic, and to bestow, at least, upon a few of the natives the happiness which they were not allowed to bring to all.” source
Thus, it seems to me, it is a part of classic Catholicism to describe the Spanish and Portuguese enslavers as abusers, while defending those who defended the Indians. Traditional Catholics therefore don’t give the label of “dissident” to modern Cafeteria Catholics alone. We apply it to the Conquistadors, though even among them there are exceptions. (I think Cortes can be at least partially defended, for example.)
What do you think of the quote I provided?
Sure there are nuts in any trail mix, what’s your point? One does NOT have to demonstrate the perfection of a past period to establish that the dominant philosophical and theological worldview of that period was superior to that dominant today. Claiming this to be true is hardly ‘rose-tinted.’It’s pretty easy given that the legacy of corruption traces its way back to the frailocracy. Then again, that’s not really the problem I’m talking about here. What I’m talking about is the fact that there are still Catholics with a rose-tinted view of the time period.
Good point.I thought that there were clergy who held slaves, so not all clergy protested against slavery.
This is not the case and is misleading.The Doctrine of Discovery is a series of papal bulls, or decrees, that gave Christian explorers the right to lay claim to any land that was not inhabited by Christians and was available to be “discovered.” If its inhabitants could be converted, they might be spared. If not, they could be enslaved or killed.
Do you have a citation for this? According to this article from Columbia Magazine, there is evidence that Columbus forbade mistreatment of the Indians.Columbus himself imprisoned missionaries when they protested his treatment of indigenous people, on his subsequent voyages to the new world.
Atheists justify morality in different ways.Tomdstone, on a somewhat related note, do you think you can have morality without God?
Have you ever investigated any of those ways to see if they have a rational foundation?Atheists justify morality in different ways.
An atheist would not believe that morality requires religion as a guide, but would base his morality on ideas such as utilitarianism and/or secular humanism. See:Have you ever investigated any of those ways to see if they have a rational foundation?
Can morality be reduced to a set of axioms?An atheist would not believe that morality requires religion as a guide, but would base his morality on ideas such as utilitarianism and/or secular humanism. See:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality_without_religion
I have browsed that wikipedia article before. But what I am wondering is this: do you think it is reasonable that you should be morally required to obey utilitarianism or secular humanism? Where does the moral obligation come from?An atheist would not believe that morality requires religion as a guide, but would base his morality on ideas such as utilitarianism and/or secular humanism. See:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morality_without_religion
Peter Kreeft said:[W]
here did [morality] get such an absolute authority?] There are only four possibilities.
*]From something less than me (nature)
*]From me (individual)
*]From others equal to me (society)
*]From something above me (God)
Let’s consider each of these possibilities in order.
*]How can I be absolutely obligated by something less than me—for example, by animal instinct or practical need for material survival?
*]How can I obligate myself absolutely? Am I absolute? Do I have the right to demand absolute obedience from anyone, even myself? And if I am the one who locked myself in this prison of obligation, I can also let myself out, thus destroying the absoluteness of the obligation which we admitted as our premise.
*]How can society obligate me? What right do my equals have to impose their values on me? Does quantity make quality? Do a million human beings make a relative into an absolute? Is “society” God?
source
Interesting.I, for one, have labelled the Spanish and Portuguese enslavers as dissenters, or equivalent titles. I teach a Church History series at my local parish in which the Conquistadors were discussed. And I based my treatment of them on the 19th century Church History books by Joseph Epiphane Darras, which books have the personal approval of Pope Pius IX. Volume 4 Period 7 Chapter 7 Section 5 of these books contain these words: “The Spanish conquerors of the New World had reduced the natives to slavery, and doomed them to toil in the mines. In vain did the clergy, both regular and secular, protest against an abuse as impolitic as it was barbarous. Their complaints were unheeded. There yet remained at the foot of the Cordilleras, in the plain that looks toward the Atlantic, between the Orinoco and the Rio de la Plata, a country filled with savages, where the Spaniards had not yet carried their baneful conquests. It was in the shades of these forests that the missionaries undertook to form a Christian republic, and to bestow, at least, upon a few of the natives the happiness which they were not allowed to bring to all.” source
Thus, it seems to me, it is a part of classic Catholicism to describe the Spanish and Portuguese enslavers as abusers, while defending those who defended the Indians. Traditional Catholics therefore don’t give the label of “dissident” to modern Cafeteria Catholics alone. We apply it to the Conquistadors, though even among them there are exceptions. (I think Cortes can be at least partially defended, for example.)
What do you think of the quote I provided?