As the grandson of a sheep farmer, I'm starting to wonder if my Houston friend has direct experience of lambs either. ;-)We hear a lot about 'Islamophobia' today. No doubt much of it is real, and it is shamefully ignorant. But that doesn't make them innocent as lambs.
We see it happening before our very eyes. A European Union and a US which have officially turned their backs on their Christian heritage, and are host to fervently believing Muslims who in time will become the dominant demographical group simply by out-breeding the native populations. Our leadership and most of our people are blind to this historical trend. Ha! We thought it was over at Lepanto. They didn't and don't. Our memories are short. Theirs are long. They never forget, and are in no hurry their mission to fulfill - while we worship the golden calf of money and hedonistic commercialism - perhaps slightly paraphrasing how it was said, Apres nous le deluge! Our only hope is a turning back to God. We need desperately leaders with vision and we have none. Not one....to move to non=Muslim countries and try to take them over..
Technically it's a puritan heritage, and we can thank the protestant's mutual distrust for our liberty to celebrate this week's Feast of the Appropriated Saturnalia in popish fashion. I don't believe we can credit Catholicism for equality before the law in other first world countries either: the French right disgraced itself in the Dreyfus affair and only had the briefest of Pétainist interregnum after that, and for all the savagery of ISIS we've never seen an equivalent of the Inquisition.turned their backs on their Christian heritage
Savage as was the Inquisition, one might posit that ISIS is/was more than its equal in pure unalloyed savagery and hate. Still, the general thrust of your above comment is spot on....we've never seen...
There also seem to have been a long period in the 'Dark Ages' when Christendom had eliminated the savagery of Classical Roman law, and the death penalty and torture were absent, at least in theory. It was the rediscovery of Classical Rome which brought it back into judicial use. War had of course never been eliminated.Innocent IV, Bull Ad Exstirpanda (May 15, 1252)
... are to be coerced ... into confessing ... , although one must stop short of danger to life or limb"
Henry Kamen was a historian attacking the Spanish inquisition. His views changed after in 1960s he started to work on his 'Spanish Inquisition' book. Based on historical evidence he concluded that the inquisition was not made up of fanatics who rejoiced in torture and executions and that, for example, Inquisition gaols were better run and more humane than ordinary Spanish prisons.
For the period prior to 1530, Henry Kamen in 'Spanish Inquisition' estimated there were about 2,000 executions in all of Spain's tribunals.
Available source shows that the number of people executed between 1500-1700 could be reconstructed as 1303. The real death toll is probably slightly higher.
Those are numbers for Spain, in other countries the inquisition was not as powerful, so accounts saying that Inquisition killed millions could be put on the same shelf as "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion".
I couldn't possibly remember where I read this, but... it is said that when Elizabeth was told that Mary was no longer among the living she said 'it is marvelous in our eyes'. Surely that was one of the saddest days in British history....his ill-fated Catholic mother...
Canonizing is above my pay grade.
the talks of bishop Barron are more 'orthodox' than the beliefs of the majority of German catholics (and the Dutch as well)
All of these to some extent. I guess that Catholicism here would be better off if we had someone around like the maker of 'Catholicism' (our former chaplain has some potential, indeed).Praise of Bishop Barron or criticism of Dutch and German Catholics?
Chris, I am curious what exactly we know (rather than believe) in this respect!... then everyone ... is nevertheless able to be changed after that death. This is contrary to what we know to be true.
I am curious what exactly we know (rather than believe) in this respect!
JudeFor certain men are secretly entered in, (who were written of long ago unto this judgment,) ungodly men, turning the grace of our Lord God into riotousness, and denying the only sovereign Ruler, and our Lord Jesus Christ. [5] I will therefore admonish you, though ye once knew all things, that Jesus, having saved the people out of the land of Egypt, did afterwards destroy them that believed not:
[6] And the angels who kept not their principality, but forsook their own habitation, he hath reserved under darkness in everlasting chains, unto the judgment of the great day. [7] As Sodom and Gomorrha, and the neighbouring cities, in like manner, having given themselves to fornication, and going after other flesh, were made an example, suffering the punishment of eternal fire.
18 For Christ also died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive in the spirit;
19 in which he went and preached to the spirits in prison,
20 who formerly did not obey, when God's patience waited in the days of Noah, during the building of the ark, in which a few, that is, eight persons, were saved through water. (1 Pet. 3:18-20 RSV)
6 For this is why the gospel was preached even to the dead, that though judged in the flesh like men, they might live in the spirit like God. (1 Pet. 4:6 RSV)
... As Catholics, we know that Church Doctrine is true, we do not merely believe it to be true...
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.