Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
11-12-2005, 01:15 AM | #31 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
Quote:
So I think your proposition doomed to fail anyway. Sorry and all that. All the best, Roger Pearse |
||
11-12-2005, 08:29 AM | #32 | ||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In the torture chambers of Pinochet's Chile
Posts: 2,112
|
Quote:
Quote:
As for the gladiatorial games, they continued well past the reign of Theodosius, as we saw with Antiochus, perhaps into the 6th century, whenever one of those darned pagans was found worthy of the arena. The games seem to have collapsed when there was no money in them any longer, similar to the collapse of the slave market in wake of Alaric's sack of Rome. The Stoics had long opposed infanticide as well as the gladiatorial games. I would be interested, what exactly are your sources on the Christians ending the games and infanticide? I am also glad to see that our previous thread on the place of women in Christendom had gotten rid of your somewhat over-egalitarian view of the early church. If you would like to discuss any of these issues further, I would be glad to continue this on another thread. Perhaps we could also compile a list of Christians persecuted under the pagans? Maybe we could clear up the myriad myths surrounding that phenomenon. Edit: Quote:
Quote:
|
||||
11-12-2005, 11:22 AM | #33 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
All the best, Roger Pearse |
|||||
11-12-2005, 12:27 PM | #34 | |||||
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Christianity was illegal and punished by death in the pagan empire for about three hundred years. But through most of that time, no one bothered hunt down Christians who were just harmless eccentrics. Kill 'em if you find 'em but don't go out of your way was the policy. Why? Because Christianity was not a threat. How did pagan Rome deal with anything they thought was a threat? With extreme prejudice and brutality as you will know from reading MacMullen's Enemies of the Roman Order. Or reading up on the Jewish revolts. Or third century Alexandria. Or any other rebellion. Once Christianity came to be seen as a threat then it was hammered by Diocletian. Why were the pagans hounded by the Christian state. Because they were seen as a threat. Why? Because they had just persecuted Christians had had made the religion illegal for three hundred years. Suddenly Christians had the whip hand and they were not going to let the pagans persecute them again. The Northern Crusades were wars of conquest by Germany against the tribes to its east. They could be called crusades because the tribes were pagan but that was the only reason. Good for moral perhaps but irrelevant. You might as well call Julius Caesar's conquest of Gaul a sign of his intolerence. Quote:
Best wishes Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
|||||
11-12-2005, 02:50 PM | #35 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: N/A
Posts: 4,370
|
Quote:
Theophanes has been translated into English twice (Harry Turtledove, 1982, and Cyril Mango/Roger Scott, 1997), but both will be in copyright still so offline when all of us are dead. But it occurs to me that one might write to Sci-Fi author Harry Turtledove and ask him to release a version onto the net, if one could find an address for him. It might be worth a punt. Anyone know how to contact him? All the best, Roger Pearse |
|
11-12-2005, 05:40 PM | #36 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In the torture chambers of Pinochet's Chile
Posts: 2,112
|
Quote:
Now as for what you said that was on topic, "Why were the pagans hounded by the Christian state. Because they were seen as a threat. Why? Because they had just persecuted Christians had had made the religion illegal for three hundred years. Suddenly Christians had the whip hand and they were not going to let the pagans persecute them again.", I cannot help but be struck by the ignorance of the literature of the times that this statement exacts. Fox suggests that the torture and killing of the oracle of Apollo was a revenge killing, this is only an educated guess, and indeed the evidence we have seems to go against this. When Bishop Marcellus of Apamae, according to Theodoret the "first [but definitely not last] among the bishops to use the law as a weapon, and to destroy temples", attacked a particularly venerated shrine to Zeus in a quite suburb, he was grabbed by the local pagans while he was watching from the sidelines, and burned alive. Afterwards, a local council decreed that his sons were not to seek revenge, but should instead consider themselves blessed to have a martyr for a father. In 391, following the riots in Alexandria and a mass of pagan-Christian violence, the pagans hold up in the temple of Serapis were told that they would be allowed to come out unharmed, for those that had been killed by them were martyrs, but that Serapeum must go. The message was clear: martyrs were blessed, not to be avenged. In a turn of theology that would seem rather familiar to Usama bin Laden today, martyrs were said to go straight to heaven, were they would receive great reward. I challenge you to find a single reference where the Christians said "we are destroying such and such temple or killing such and such pagan to avenge such and such martyr." It just did not happen. The object was not revenge: it was eradication of all non-Christian (particularly polytheistic) belief. |
|
11-12-2005, 05:49 PM | #37 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In the torture chambers of Pinochet's Chile
Posts: 2,112
|
Quote:
Quote:
And if you have any questions on the country's religious make-up, see here: http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/...k/geos/pp.html |
||
11-13-2005, 01:51 AM | #38 |
Guest
Posts: n/a
|
CJ,
On second thoughts, it seems Roger is right. All you want to do is make Christians look bad. You have no interest in history which is all about contexts, causes and reasons. Nor did you seem to understand my post. Where did I say revenge (except the very specific case of Didyma)? You actually take facts and draw the completely wrong conclusions from them. Why? Because you are a hopelessly biased anti-Christian. Two points before I bow out that demonstrate this. First, the lesson of the lull after the Decian persecution was that even if Christians seem to be accepted by pagans, they can expect that sometime the policy will change. Christians simply will not be safe while paganism has power. The Diocletian persecution proved this. Second, it was not about revenge - a most unChristian emotion - but about the need to get rid of paganism because it had already proved that it was always a threat. Nor was it about trying to kill pagans. The aim was to render them harmless. The best way was to convert them (which happened in the end) but destroying their temple powerbases was an important first step. Thus, you are simply feeding your biases to say Christians were more intolerent than pagans. That was not the case. They were rational operators seeking to neutralise a threat that had twice tried to destroy them. When we get to Justinian's reign, paganism was associated with rebellion and treated exactly the same as all other rebellion against the Roman order by pagan and Christian alike. With that, I'm signing off. Best wishes Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
11-13-2005, 09:11 AM | #39 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In the torture chambers of Pinochet's Chile
Posts: 2,112
|
Quote:
Again, what you have said is merely post hoc rationalization. Where did any Christian ever say "we are crucifying those silly pagans at Baalbek and breaking down their temples in Africa so that no Christian will ever again suffer persecution"? You whole thesis is absurd anyway. By the time the persecution of the pagans began in earnest, after and during the reign of Theodosius, the chance that the pagans would make a sudden come back and start murdering the poor Christians once again was slim to nil. By the middle of the fifth century, I find the idea of a pagan anti-Christian revolution sweeping the empire to be just stupid. No Christian ever voiced such fears, they exist only in your head Bede. The point was the eradication of non- Orthodox Christian belief, not to defend Christendom from the evil Pagan Conspiracy. If it was as you say, Bede, why were the Christians attacking Samaritans and heretics? When had the heretics ever persecuted the Orthodox in the 3 preceding centuries? Your rationalization is brutal anyway. Even during the Persecution under Diocletian, non-Christian magistrates had sometimes hid and helped Christians. Many people before Constantine had never even heard of Christianity. They had nothing to do with the persecution. What's more, it had been certain Roman Emperors, who happened to be pagan, that had persecuted Christians, not paganism itself. Paganism was not the church, it was not a unified system of doctrines and a command structure of clergy like the church. Even when the oracle of Apollo had complained about Christians, it is hard to know whether or not he had wanted them killed. With the exception of that case at Didyma, when did the pagan religion itself ever contribute to the persecution? If I recall, pagan priests did not get up in temple and give sermons whipping pagans up into an anti-Christian flurry. The emperors were the ones calling the shots; by your logic, the Christians should have wanted the destruction of the Roman government, not the pagan religion (and to some point you would be right: more Christians died for their beliefs under the Christian emperors than under Decius or Diocletian). Anyway, by that same logic, shouldn't Christians in your country, Bede, which boasts a considerable Muslim population, be going out into the streets, tearing down mosques and crucifying Muslims? After all, eastern Christendom has been reduced to almost nothing in the preceding decades of dhimmitude. The Armenian genocide and the persecution of Christians in Sudan speak volumes of what happens to Christians under Muslims rule. Should not they be destroyed, to Bede, so as to protect future Christian generations? Atheists, too, persecuted Christians in places during the twentieth century; should Pearse drop by my house and forcibly convert or kill me? What's more, more Christians have been killed by other Christians than by paganism. Should the Protestants in your country, Bede, tear down your church and lynch you to prevent another reign of bloody Mary? |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|