C
Contarini
Guest
Not for historic Christianity. Perhaps you are some sort of strange Tolstoyan Anabaptist OrthodoxFor Christians the teachings of Jesus is all there is.
You appear to be very ignorant of Christian history. Christians have frequently justified violence by citing the OT. St. Thomas Aquinas managed to justify executing heretics by using NT passages talking about excommunication. I am using examples that most Christians have followed–a consistent and purely non-violent stance is distinctly minority within Christian history (though that’s still a lot more than Islam can claim!).It’s not a fallacy because you’re trying to use ‘examples’ Christians don’t follow and blame Christianity for those.
You’re Eastern Orthodox, for heaven’s sake. Your spiritual ancestors marched out to battle with icons of the Blessed Virgin carried in front of the army!
There are a number of passages in the Gospels that have been interpreted otherwise: Jesus’ generally positive attitude toward Roman soldiers without any hint that their profession was incompatible with righteousness (and John the Baptist’s specific instructions to soldiers, which did not include resigning from the army); His cryptic reference to “two swords” in Luke, which was the locus for much medieval political theory; His assertion that He came not to send peace but a sword; and of course His prophecies of future judgment–all of these militate against a purely non-violent view of Jesus.No. Jesus was continually non-violent not just restricted to one lesson.
How? Do you really not know that many Christians have embraced these hermeneutical approaches?Now you state the reason you’re argument is false!
I don’t need to try again–your “most” (rather than “all”) gives me everything I need. (And it needs to be pointed out that while most Muslims historically have believed in violent, aggressive jihad, they have also embraced a code of war that appears to have been rejected wholesale by modern “fundamentalist” Muslims.)That’s what most Moslems believe; abrogation. Try again!
This is, to put it frankly, an intellectually lazy explanation. Gay Catholics make plenty of arguments to support their position–they do not simply live with contradiction. Similarly with Muslims who reject the traditional understanding of Jihad.No they don’t. Moderate Moslems ignore the calls to violence because they choose to live peacefully. It’s the same internal justification that a gay Catholic might adopt in order to justify his staying with the church.
And how does Bostom contradict what I have been saying? I have looked at Bostom (but admittedly not read him through) and take him into account in formulating my views, although with a certain caution owing to his contemptuous attitude to the people who actually study Islam professionally (I think it is far more likely that Bostom has an axe to grind than that professional scholars of Islam are blinded by their sympathy for their subject–certainly I know how wrong-headed similar works in my own field generally are).Go read Bostom’s *The Legacy of Jihad: Islamic Holy War and the Fate of Non-Muslims *where he catalogues Islamic opinion on Jihad over the four major schools, even the Sufis are cited - over the life of Islam.
Edwin