TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
Sapper Redux said:TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
Did they ever excommunicate the people who massacred Jews in Germany, sold the children of the Children's Crusade into slavery, or butchered everyone in Jerusalem?
TeddyAg0422 said:Sapper Redux said:TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
Did they ever excommunicate the people who massacred Jews in Germany, sold the children of the Children's Crusade into slavery, or butchered everyone in Jerusalem?
Were the people in Germany butchering Jews largely Catholic or acting on behalf of the Church? Is it known that people dealing with children in the Children's crusade were Catholics?
And why would the Pope excommunicate the crusaders participating in taking back Jerusalem? He sent them there as a defense for Eastern Christians being attacked and denied worship/pilgrimage.
TeddyAg0422 said:
Gotcha. Sorry I misunderstood. Based on my limited google search it looks like the priest's bishop and the Catholic Church hierarchy disapproved and condemned the actions taken by Christian mobs in forced conversion
TeddyAg0422 said:
I'm not sure what the Church did to the guys after. It could've been handed privately… I'd assume so if the bishop ever dealt with these guys after the matter, but publicly the Church as an institution and its saints and clergyman have consistently expressed support for the Jewish people and their freedom to practice their religion. Popes and saints before and after this massacre echo this. The actions of the few don't reflect the feeling of the Church.
Sapper Redux said:TeddyAg0422 said:Sapper Redux said:Did they ever excommunicate the people who massacred Jews in Germany, sold the children of the Children's Crusade into slavery, or butchered everyone in Jerusalem?TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
Were the people in Germany butchering Jews largely Catholic or acting on behalf of the Church? Is it known that people dealing with children in the Children's crusade were Catholics?
And why would the Pope excommunicate the crusaders participating in taking back Jerusalem? He sent them there as a defense for Eastern Christians being attacked and denied worship/pilgrimage.
How many non Catholics do you think there were in Mainz in 1096? A priest named Folkmar was one of the leaders of the massacres. And the children sold into slavery were shipped from Marseilles by French merchants. As for the massacre in 1099, are you saying the Church wanted every man, woman, and child in Jerusalem to be brutally butchered? That was God's demand?
CrackerJackAg said:
The only one that worked?
The Fourth Crusade was overkill and an evil Satanic act by Western Catholics & the RCC.
It's been a minute and I'm still not over it.
Silent For Too Long said:Sapper Redux said:TeddyAg0422 said:Sapper Redux said:Did they ever excommunicate the people who massacred Jews in Germany, sold the children of the Children's Crusade into slavery, or butchered everyone in Jerusalem?TeddyAg0422 said:
Pope Innocent III excommunicated good amounts of crusaders for attacking Zara and Constantinople. He had outlawed the attack on Zara and didn't approve of the Constantinople sacking. Blaming the whole for the actions of some that were already frowned upon is not a fair representation
Were the people in Germany butchering Jews largely Catholic or acting on behalf of the Church? Is it known that people dealing with children in the Children's crusade were Catholics?
And why would the Pope excommunicate the crusaders participating in taking back Jerusalem? He sent them there as a defense for Eastern Christians being attacked and denied worship/pilgrimage.
How many non Catholics do you think there were in Mainz in 1096? A priest named Folkmar was one of the leaders of the massacres. And the children sold into slavery were shipped from Marseilles by French merchants. As for the massacre in 1099, are you saying the Church wanted every man, woman, and child in Jerusalem to be brutally butchered? That was God's demand?
While there is considerable debate about the exact number, it was almost certainly not every man, woman, and child. No question it was a bad event. However, it has been polemcized by both Muslims and Protestants to make it sound much, much worse.
As a trained academic yourself you should really hold yourself to higher standard then to repeat obvious propaganda as fact.
PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
nortex97 said:
Europe was largely consumed by anti-Semitism throughout the Middle Ages, including reformers such as Luther, so I don't think it's 'fair' to pin this on the RCC. Gospel of Matthew, and writings of Paul were often taken to their extreme, by a substantially illiterate public.
Mohammedans, as with Nazi's took up that torch and then some, later on.
Sapper Redux said:nortex97 said:
Europe was largely consumed by anti-Semitism throughout the Middle Ages, including reformers such as Luther, so I don't think it's 'fair' to pin this on the RCC. Gospel of Matthew, and writings of Paul were often taken to their extreme, by a substantially illiterate public.
Mohammedans, as with Nazi's took up that torch and then some, later on.
It's always telling what things people want to credit the Church with and what they want to say, "oh, but the Church was just part of the bigger milieu." There's no real reason for pervasive and violent antisemitism throughout Europe in the absence of Christian dogma. However much people want to work to contextualize the writings of people like Chrysostum, the antisemitism was baked into the theology and emphasized by a number of local figures and events such as Passion plays.
nortex97 said:
Europe was largely consumed by anti-Semitism throughout the Middle Ages, including reformers such as Luther, so I don't think it's 'fair' to pin this on the RCC. Gospel of Matthew, and writings of Paul were often taken to their extreme, by a substantially illiterate public.
Mohammedans, as with Nazi's took up that torch and then some, later on.
Quote:
But since the RCC is the oldest and largest denomination of Christianity, it's the historical source of Christian antisemitism that other denominations simply copied.
BonfireNerd04 said:nortex97 said:
Europe was largely consumed by anti-Semitism throughout the Middle Ages, including reformers such as Luther, so I don't think it's 'fair' to pin this on the RCC. Gospel of Matthew, and writings of Paul were often taken to their extreme, by a substantially illiterate public.
Mohammedans, as with Nazi's took up that torch and then some, later on.
Don't misunderstand; I never claimed that all antisemites are Catholic. But since the RCC is the oldest and largest denomination of Christianity, it's the historical source of Christian antisemitism that other denominations simply copied.
Of course, the fact that many of the Third Reich's leaders were raised Catholic (even if some of them turned their back on organized religion), including Adolf Hitler himself, as well as Eichmann, Goebbels, Heydrich, Himler, and Hss; became a huge embarrassment for the RCC after WW2.
747Ag said:lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
BonfireNerd04 said:747Ag said:lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
Like the "pro perfidis Judaeis" (for the traitorous Jews) prayer being part of the Good Friday liturgy.
Quo Vadis? said:BonfireNerd04 said:747Ag said:lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
Like the "pro perfidis Judaeis" (for the traitorous Jews) prayer being part of the Good Friday liturgy.
What do you call it when God himself is sent personally as the fulfillment of a certain people's entire identity, and is put to death?
Secondly, we're praying for them. On our holiest and most sacred day of the year.
Do the Jews have any prayers for Catholics, in any of their liturgies?
Sapper Redux said:Quo Vadis? said:BonfireNerd04 said:747Ag said:lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
Like the "pro perfidis Judaeis" (for the traitorous Jews) prayer being part of the Good Friday liturgy.
What do you call it when God himself is sent personally as the fulfillment of a certain people's entire identity, and is put to death?
Secondly, we're praying for them. On our holiest and most sacred day of the year.
Do the Jews have any prayers for Catholics, in any of their liturgies?
Jews don't believe they have to convert the world and don't believe non-Jews are eternally damned.
BonfireNerd04 said:747Ag said:lololol... ROFL even.BonfireNerd04 said:Sapper Redux said:PabloSerna said:
Are you confusing the actions by certain people who are also Catholic with Papal directives to all Catholics?
No. I am pointing out that the Church had tools in 1096 to limit the violence and punish the perpetrators. They didn't use them. There were individual bishops who attempted to protect local Jews, which is noble of them, but they seemed completely unwilling to actually stop the mobs.
Because antisemitism was an official part of Catholic dogma until 1965.
Like the "pro perfidis Judaeis" (for the traitorous Jews) prayer being part of the Good Friday liturgy.