"Nuns Blast Catholic Church's 'Doctrine Of Discovery' That Justified Indigenous Oppression"

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Must be like condemning the radical jehad Muslims today and people want to talk about the Inquisitions that happens in the dark ages. Yeh, right they are the same thing so lets stop talking about anything that is happening now and look the other way.
 
Clergy are humans, humans are sinners. What’s your point? One of Jesus own chosen 12 disciples was a liar and a traitor.
But the Pope is the Vicar of Christ and Pope Paul III in 1548 authorized the purchase and possession of Muslim slaves in the Papal states.
In 1488, Pope Innocent VIII accepted the gift of 100 slaves from Ferdinand II of Aragon, and distributed those slaves to his cardinals and the Roman nobility
Luis M. Bermejo, S.J. |title=Infallibility on Trial |year=1992 |publisher=Christian Classics, Inc. |isbn=0-87061-190-9 |page=315}}
 
Must be like condemning the radical jehad Muslims today and people want to talk about the Inquisitions that happens in the dark ages. Yeh, right they are the same thing so lets stop talking about anything that is happening now and look the other way.
It’d be better if you had eyes on both ways. And since you believe that all things are possible with God, I’m sure I’m not asking much from such faithful believers. 👍
 
But the Pope is the Vicar of Christ and Pope Paul III in 1548 authorized the purchase and possession of Muslim slaves in the Papal states.
In 1488, Pope Innocent VIII accepted the gift of 100 slaves from Ferdinand II of Aragon, and distributed those slaves to his cardinals and the Roman nobility
Luis M. Bermejo, S.J. |title=Infallibility on Trial |year=1992 |publisher=Christian Classics, Inc. |isbn=0-87061-190-9 |page=315}}
does that bok tell you about the treatment of those slaves?
 
But the Pope is the Vicar of Christ and Pope Paul III in 1548 authorized the purchase and possession of Muslim slaves in the Papal states.
In 1488, Pope Innocent VIII accepted the gift of 100 slaves from Ferdinand II of Aragon, and distributed those slaves to his cardinals and the Roman nobility
Luis M. Bermejo, S.J. |title=Infallibility on Trial |year=1992 |publisher=Christian Classics, Inc. |isbn=0-87061-190-9 |page=315}}
Your homework assignment today is to learn the difference between “impeccable” and “infallible” For extra credit read the Papal Bull Sublimus Dei
 
Right. Meanwhile the saints of today are labelled as socialists, terrorists, and New Age gurus because well, they live in 21st century. (And apparently, the most sinful era of humanity.)
Please provide some names so we’ll know who you’re talking about.
 
But the Pope is the Vicar of Christ and Pope Paul III in 1548 authorized the purchase and possession of Muslim slaves in the Papal states.
In 1488, Pope Innocent VIII accepted the gift of 100 slaves from Ferdinand II of Aragon, and distributed those slaves to his cardinals and the Roman nobility
Luis M. Bermejo, S.J. |title=Infallibility on Trial |year=1992 |publisher=Christian Classics, Inc. |isbn=0-87061-190-9 |page=315}}
Yes, and Peter was the first pope and denied Jesus three times! Again I ask you what is your point? The pope is human too. Believe me there have been some bad popes throughout history that have acted totally contrary to Church doctrine.
 
Yes, and Peter was the first pope and denied Jesus three times! Again I ask you what is your point? The pope is human too. Believe me there have been some bad popes throughout history that have acted totally contrary to Church doctrine.
I believe the point is the usual “I found something bad a Pope did in the past therefore the Church teaching on abortion, homosexuality , contraception etc. is wrong”

I am somewhat surprised we have not yet heard about the Crusades, the inquisition and Galileo.
 
No. I think that there are passages in the Bible which condone slavery. … Leviticus 25:44-46…[and] Exodus 21:2-6.
Do you think that something can be forbidden by Old Testament moral codes and yet tolerated under the Mosaic law? Because I think treating slaves as inferiors is an example of that. What do you think of that idea?
I guess that secular humanists might believe that values have their source in human experience and culture.
If human value comes from culture, doesn’t it logically follow that people aren’t valuable if their culture doesn’t think they are?
 
Hello Lost.
It’s not about the labels… I’ve met more than a handful of Catholics who worship the age of exploration as a Christian era. To say that the philosophical spirit of that age is superior…These people are desensitized to the idea of actual, racially charged slavery!..
Um, excuse me, but I think you’re labeling all Catholics with these few words of yours after claiming it is us who are guilty of labeling you! You’ve personally met “more than an handful of Catholics,” so now you can speak for all of us? NOT! I worship God and God alone. Sorry no “age of exploration” is worshiped by any Catholic. All ages are Christ’s for He created everything and everyone, whether or not those who tell the tales of man’s endeavors in the history books ever give Him credit for it. He holds all of creation in the palm of His hand.

As for your charge of racial slavery, take a good look at the news and see who is enslaving who these days. Slavery is part and parcel of conquest. It is a nasty outcome after wars. It is a turn of man’s mind against his neighbor. If you are so incensed against, take it on in some meaningful way because it is happening wherever the Muslims are warring against the peoples in their way. Those who don’t die become slaves and are forced to convert. Why beat on the Catholics who look bad in the past and blame all Catholics for what a few did?

Glenda
 
Here is some food for thought: if the whole world were suddenly Catholic, everything bad done by men would be done by a Catholic! What then would our detractors blame for the ills of the world?

Glenda
 
If human value comes from culture, doesn’t it logically follow that people aren’t valuable if their culture doesn’t think they are?
Were people such as Joan of Arc who were burned alive at the stake valuable or not? If she was valuable, why did the Church authorities want to burn her alive at the stake? A secular humanist would be opposed to that.
 
I am somewhat surprised we have not yet heard about the Crusades, the inquisition and Galileo.
That is a good point you are bringing up about the Crusades and the Inquisition. Was it right for the Church authorities to support the burning of people, such as Joan of Arc, at the stake? As far as the Crusades go, the fourth Crusade was a real disaster with Bishops from Venice praying for the destruction of the Greek Orthodox. I suppose we could go into the many horror stories associated with that Crusade, such as the brutal rape of Greek Orthodox nuns who had dedicated their lives to Christ. And the fact that much of the incredibly valuable loot stolen from the Greek Orthodox Churches found its way into Roman Catholic Churches in the west and was never returned.
 
Were people such as Joan of Arc who were burned alive at the stake valuable or not? If she was valuable, why did the Church authorities want to burn her alive at the stake? A secular humanist would be opposed to that.
The Church didn’t burn her at the stake.
 
Were people such as Joan of Arc who were burned alive at the stake valuable or not?
Yes, people who were burned at the stake were very valuable because they were created in the image of God.
If she was valuable, why did the Church authorities want to burn her alive at the stake?
Because they weren’t following Catholic doctrine.
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Tomdstone:
She was put on trial by Roman Catholic Bishop of Beauvais Pierre Cauchon. Bishop Cauchon declared her guilty and turned her over to the state to be burned at the stake on 30 May 1431. I think that he was present at her execution and did not object, but in fact supported it.
If he was present at her execution, then I think that is an example of his not following Church doctrine, because I believe the Canon Law of the time forbade clerics from recommending heretics for execution or being present at their executions.
A secular humanist would be opposed to that.
A minute ago I thought you said that secular humanists assign value based on human experience and culture. If a culture devalues certain people, like Joan of Arc for example, then it would seem to logically follow that they are not valuable by secular humanist standards (at least, not in that culture). Am I making a mistake here?
 
The Church didn’t burn her at the stake.
She was put on trial by Roman Catholic Bishop of Beauvais Pierre Cauchon. Bishop Cauchon declared her guilty and turned her over to the state to be burned at the stake on 30 May 1431. I think that he was present at her execution and did not object, but in fact supported it.
 
She was put on trial by Roman Catholic Bishop of Beauvais Pierre Cauchon. Bishop Cauchon declared her guilty and turned her over to the state to be burned at the stake on 30 May 1431. I think that he was present at her execution and did not object, but in fact supported it.
As I said the Church did not burn her at the stake-in fact the Canonized her!
 
“They have deprived the natives of their property or turned it to their own use, and have subjected some of the inhabitants of said islands to perpetual slavery (subdiderunt perpetuae servituti), sold them to other persons and committed other various illicit and evil deeds against them… Therefore We … exhort, through the sprinkling of the Blood of Jesus Christ shed for their sins, one and all, temporal princes, lords, captains, armed men, barons, soldiers, nobles, communities and all others of every kind among the Christian faithful of whatever state, grade or condition, that they themselves desist from the aforementioned deeds, cause those subject to them to desist from them, and restrain them rigorously. And no less do We order and command all and each of the faithful of each sex that, within the space of fifteen days of the publication of these letters in the place where they live, that they restore to their pristine liberty all and each person of either sex who were once residents of said Canary Islands … who have been made subject to slavery (servituti subicere). These people are to be totally and perpetually free and are to be let go without the exaction or reception of any money.”

Pope Eugene IV: Sicut Dudum, 1435
 
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