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steve_b
Guest
From what I’ve read, catholiceducation.org/en/religion-and-philosophy/other-religions/islam.html and other (links that follow) from its inception,** Islam and Jihad**, were together. NOT seperate. (can they even be seperated if one is Muslim?)Today, there are preconceptions that Islam is spreading by use of force. Not always true but the news drives perception especially in the West.
Therefore, from it’s origin / beginning, it was NOT a religion of peace, spread by love of God with one’s whole heart soul, mind, and strength, and love of neighbor as themselves, but was a religion spread by the sword. Mohammed and Mohammedanism
808:
By “rest of the Christian Church” do you mean those Eastern Catholic Christians who ultimately seperated from the Catholic Church and called themselves the Orthodox? Before that split happened, their populations that usually split along ethnic lines, had already suffered descimation among their populations by Islam’s advance. The Crusades were also designed to liberate THEM from that persecution as well.Some people believe the same of the Crusaders in the Middle Ages but they forget the rest of the Christian church did NOT go to war with the Saracens, Moors, or Ottomans.
808:
After 400+ years of Islamic Jihad, the writing was on the wall. Pope Urban II called for the Crusades. It’s clear to me, the crusades were a defensive move not an offensive one. From conception, Islam grew by the sword NOT by peaceful means. Neither Christians nor any non Muslim were safe nor had a right to exist as Christian, Jew, etc etc. Even today, many Muslims not cut from a certain brand of Muslim, aren’t safe among their own either. It needs to be said though, that in the beginning of Islam, the choice was either convert to Islam, be a slave, or die. After 400+ years of that carnage and exodus of Christians from their lands & particularly holy sites in Christendom, the first crusade was called for by Pope Urban. I say that again. AFTER 400+ years of persecution and brutality against Christians, THEN the pope acted against the persecuters…Again, the “crusaders” were sent by their kings in defense of the church not directly by the church.
808:
It’s also the case where people fear MOST what they** DO understand**.It’s been my opinion people fear most what they don’t understand.
catholiceducation.org/en/controversy/the-crusades/the-real-history-of-the-crusades.html
A fool otoh, is a person who lacks good sense or judgment in the information that is there for them to see.
Unfortunately there are too many people IMV, that fall into the last category.
808:
There’s also the problem that there are too many people who don’t read history. Those folks will surely repeat the mistakes of the past because they don’t know the past… But let’s say even if one knows nothing of the past, they can look at this subject first hand from what is in the here & now… When certain muslims get control of a country, and their law is now the only one that exists. How does that go for the survival of any other religion in **that **country? The answer is, it is disasterous. Looking back at history, that’s NOT new to Islam in general, nor just with any certain brand of Islam today. Even though to be fair, Islam has factions within itself today, and within these brands, there is intollerance with each other as well.I believe all 3 monotheistic religions have common beliefs that we could one day build a health understanding.
To do this, we have to WANT to understand then take actions to understand. This is very difficult to do when there are people of a specific religious faith who commit atrocities in their name of their religion; misguided or not.
Let’s pray that the Holy Spirit guide us all to desire better understanding so that we may work to true and lasting peace.![]()
But that only raises the questions. Out of 1.5 billion members,
- which Muslim country today displays peace and tollerance for other religions? Which do NOT?
- how big is the Islam that wants to convert the world by jihad?
catholiceducation.org/en/religion-and-philosophy/other-religions/islam.html