B
Black_Rose
Guest
Ok, so do you agree with that thinking then since it is rather consistent with a conservative mindset?Christian morality does not demand that anyone has a right to vote. The question of who has a right to vote is a legal matter for the culture or society to decide. American culture was initially English,very mercantile,and very patriarchal. There’s a connection between the ownership of property and social standing,rights and priveleges. Property owners naturally are considered more important and have a higher social status than those who don’t own property.
But my own remarks were directed against the notion that Christianity significantly increased the status of women in society relative to their baseline position in society.
So far, no one has answered my challenge:
Of course, one who has a thorough knowledge of the culture of Late Antiquity can either provide evidence for against the proposition that the social status of women improved (never mind causation for now) after the Diocletian Persecution.You do have to remember that there was a strong confluence of government and religion before the Enlightenment. Of course, you statements can be formulated to yield testable hypotheses. During the reign of Theodosius I (347-395), Trinitarian Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire while it officially became tolerated after Constantine I (272-337) Edict of Milan in 313. Do you know any primary sources that highlight the contrast of the perception, treatment, and status of women before and after the reigns of Theodosius and Constantine ?
I am not accusing the Church of being a repressive force serving the elite of society or something similar since I would have to assume of burden of proof in order to take that stance. Instead, I merely wanted historical evidence in support of this assertion:
In addition, that proposition also implies that those traits cannot occur independently without the Catholic Church. I provide the example of the Tang Dynasty as a falsification of notion. I also tried narrow the focus to the Catholic Church’s influence on woman’s rights and discussing topics such as woman’s suffrage is certainly germane.If it wasn’t for the Catholic Church and it’s teachings there would be no hospitals, universities, schools of any kind, no true judical system, no science, no women rights, etc., etc., etc. All of these things and more would not have happen without the Catholic Church. Read history from unbias history books and stop reading the proproganda you have been reading and studying.