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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:19:15 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

If the Church is evil then the act of breaking down the Communist walls of the Soviet Union by JP2 was an evil act?


Exsqueeze me?! You're claiming JP2 was responsible for the fall of communism?!

Fuck a duck!

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk
That the countless lives and treasure given to help the poor in Latin America is evil?


The Catholic church has taken far, far more (by several orders of magnitude) from the poor of other nations than it has ever returned.

By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:22:37 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

So you are blaming the Church for the ills of Africa?


No. Just one of them.

Had the Catholic church used its influence to encourage the use of condoms to halt the spread of AIDS then at least several nations might have stood a chance. As it is, millions will die sooner than they needed to, and the fact that they (the Catholic church) can't even apologise for that is beyond derision.

You might want to actually watch the entire debate first, before commenting further. Researching the history and methods of the Catholic church, past and present, might also help you.

PS: Interesting that you bring up Ruanda – the Catholic church was heavily at fault there too.


< Message edited by RapierFugue -- 8/1/2011 5:23:13 AM >

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:28:38 AM   
DomYngBlk


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So the Catholic Church has kept aids drugs unaffordable for Africans? Is that is what is happening? Really?  Are you blamind rwanda on the Church and not taking responsibility for your peoples own actions? The Gov't of France and Belguim? Or the fact that Europe has raped Africa for centuries and offered nothing in return.

Is the Church without fault, no. Without reasons to change? No. Not saying that at all.

And, yes, read the history. Solidarity started the fall. Created the cracks. Who had the power to keep Lech Walesa alive. JP2. Who brokered the changes there. JP2.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:30:49 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

And, yes, read the history.


Your ignorance is simply staggering. I have no interest in trying to educate you further.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:31:21 AM   
DomYngBlk


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

If the Church is evil then the act of breaking down the Communist walls of the Soviet Union by JP2 was an evil act?


Exsqueeze me?! You're claiming JP2 was responsible for the fall of communism?!

Fuck a duck!

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk
That the countless lives and treasure given to help the poor in Latin America is evil?


The Catholic church has taken far, far more (by several orders of magnitude) from the poor of other nations than it has ever returned.

By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?



By the way , having some fucking brit talk to me about freedoms and rights is hilarious. First, your owned by the fucking queen. Second you, still today, have a standing army controlling and terrorizing the island of Ireland. When you start taking responsibility for your fucking ills...come talk to me.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:33:06 AM   
DomYngBlk


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[quote]ORIGINAL: RapierFugue


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

And, yes, read the history.


Your ignorance is simply staggering. I have no interest in trying to educate you further.


Moron. Go fuck around with someone else. Know what I am talking about. Go kiss the queens ass and blow charlie while you are there.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:34:11 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk

By the way , having some fucking brit talk to me about freedoms and rights is hilarious. First, your owned by the fucking queen. Second you, still today, have a standing army controlling and terrorizing the island of Ireland.




Whoever said "ignorance is bliss" certainly had you in mind :)

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 5:37:03 AM   
DomYngBlk


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I realize that being given the full front of the truth of your life and existence is tough. That you still owe your very life to some senile old bitch is probably disturbing. That that senile old bitch still has a standing army in the middle of a peaceful country is a bit tough to take......So go on and tell yourself you are free....that you are only helping those poor Irish to be peaceful. Its ok. you can live a lie...

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:25:32 AM   
Moonhead


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk
By the way , having some fucking brit talk to me about freedoms and rights is hilarious. First, your owned by the fucking queen. Second you, still today, have a standing army controlling and terrorizing the island of Ireland. When you start taking responsibility for your fucking ills...come talk to me.

Not wishing to sound arsey, but if you're going to give RF a hard time for (supposedly) not knowing the facts about Rwanda, coming out with nonsense like that won't help your case any.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:34:18 AM   
Anaxagoras


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?

Rapier the 1965 Vatican II council explicitely rejected slavery as "infamy" and Popes before that also spoke out. Before the modern era the Church was part of a world which embraced slavery, both Christians and Muslims did. If anything their message on slavery was mixed through those times, occasionally sanctioning it and at other times censuring it.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:39:00 AM   
DomYngBlk


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Moonhead


quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk
By the way , having some fucking brit talk to me about freedoms and rights is hilarious. First, your owned by the fucking queen. Second you, still today, have a standing army controlling and terrorizing the island of Ireland. When you start taking responsibility for your fucking ills...come talk to me.

Not wishing to sound arsey, but if you're going to give RF a hard time for (supposedly) not knowing the facts about Rwanda, coming out with nonsense like that won't help your case any.


No offense moon but doesnt the Monarchy own the very land you are standing on? Do you not have a standing army in Ireland?

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:39:25 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras

Rapier the 1965 Vatican II council explicitely rejected slavery as "infamy" and Popes before that also spoke out. Before the modern era the Church was part of a world which embraced slavery, both Christians and Muslims did. If anything their message on slavery was mixed through those times, occasionally sanctioning it and at other times censuring it.


They condoned it at the time, and for many, many years afterwards, and indeed gave a "moral" basis for its practice.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:42:08 AM   
Anaxagoras


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DomYngBlk
quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?

By the way , having some fucking brit talk to me about freedoms and rights is hilarious. First, your owned by the fucking queen. Second you, still today, have a standing army controlling and terrorizing the island of Ireland. When you start taking responsibility for your fucking ills...come talk to me.

The situation was bad in the late 1960's and 1970's, and it could be argued that the British were trying to suppress civil dissent as well as paramilitary action with incidents where they fired on protestors (a thing Cameron apologised for recently) but thankfully the situation has changed in more recent years thanks to Adams sometimes getting a hot dinner at the White House (cf. Moonhead).

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:44:09 AM   
DomYngBlk


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So, the fact that the 6 counties were stolen from the South by  the Monarchy..................isn't an issue

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:52:05 AM   
Anaxagoras


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras
Rapier the 1965 Vatican II council explicitely rejected slavery as "infamy" and Popes before that also spoke out. Before the modern era the Church was part of a world which embraced slavery, both Christians and Muslims did. If anything their message on slavery was mixed through those times, occasionally sanctioning it and at other times censuring it.

They condoned it at the time, and for many, many years afterwards, and indeed gave a "moral" basis for its practice.

Sorry but its simply not that black and white (excuse the pun). There was a strong anti-slavery trend in the Church too: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_and_slavery#20th_century

quote:

In the bull Sublimus Dei (1537), Pope Paul III forbade "unjust" kinds of enslavement relating to the indigenous peoples of the Americas (called Indians of the West and the South) and all other people. Paul characterized enslavers as allies of the devil and declared attempts to justify such slavery "null and void."


quote:

The Jesuit reductions, highly organized rural settlements where Jesuit missionaries presided over Indian communities, were begun in 1609, and lasted until the suppression of the order in Spain in 1767. The Jesuits armed the Indians, who fought pitched battles with Portuguese Bandeirantes or slave-hunters. The Holy Office of the Inquisition was asked about the morality of enslaving innocent blacks (Response of the Congregation of the Holy Office, 230, March 20, 1686). The practice was rejected, as was trading such slaves. Slaveholders, the Holy Office declared, were obliged to emancipate and even compensate blacks unjustly enslaved.


quote:

In 1839, Pope Gregory XVI issued a Bull, entitled In Supremo Apostolatus in which he condemned slavery, with particular reference to New World colonial slavery and the slave trade, calling it "inhumanum illud commercium."


quote:

In 1888 Leo III issued a letter to the Bishops of Brazil and another in 1890, Catholicae Ecclesiae (On Slavery In The Missions). In both these letters the Pope singled out for praise twelve previous Popes who had made determined efforts to abolish slavery.


quote:

In a letter to the bishops of Brazil (May 5, 1888), Pope Leo XIII recalled the Church's unceasing efforts in the course of centuries to get rid of colonial slavery and the slave trade and expressed his satisfaction that Brazil had at last abolished it. Pope Leo XIII wrote, "In the presence of so much suffering, the condition of slavery, in which a considerable part of the great human family has been sunk in squalor and affliction now for many centuries, is deeply to be deplored; for the system is one which is wholly opposed to that which was originally ordained by God and by nature"[117]


quote:

In 1917, the new Code of Canon Law promulgated by Pope Benedict XV condemned the "selling a human being into slavery or for any other evil purpose".


quote:

The Vatican II document "Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World" stated: "Whatever violates the integrity of the human person, such as mutilation, torture...whatever insults human dignity, subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery ... the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed ... they are a supreme dishonor to the Creator."[118]


quote:

Speaking in 1992 at the infamous “House of Slaves” on the Island of Gorée in Senegal, John Paul II declared: “It is fitting to confess in all truth and humility this sin of man against man, this sin of man against God.”


The anti slavery movement was also led by many devout Catholics.
quote:

Daniel O'Connell, the Roman Catholic leader of the Irish in Ireland, supported the abolition of slavery in the British Empire and in America. Garrison recruited him to the cause of American abolitionism. O'Connell, the black abolitionist Charles Lenox Remond, and the temperance priest Theobold Mayhew organized a petition with 60,000 signatures urging the Irish of the United States to support abolition.


< Message edited by Anaxagoras -- 8/1/2011 6:58:17 AM >

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 6:57:15 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras

There was a strong anti-slavery trend in the Church too:

The anti slavery movement was also led by many defout Catholics.


But the Catholic Church, which is what is under discussion, had an official, sanctioned, pro-slavery position and, furthermore, defended its position vigorously, sometimes (indeed often) by denigrating the victims of slavery.

In all honesty though, you could give them a "bye" on this topic and there'd still be enough left to hang the lot of them a hundred times over :)

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 7:02:44 AM   
Anaxagoras


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras
There was a strong anti-slavery trend in the Church too:

The anti slavery movement was also led by many defout Catholics.

But the Catholic Church, which is what is under discussion, had an official, sanctioned, pro-slavery position and, furthermore, defended its position vigorously, sometimes (indeed often) by denigrating the victims of slavery.

In all honesty though, you could give them a "bye" on this topic and there'd still be enough left to hang the lot of them a hundred times over :)

Rapier the Vatican is the very core of the Catholic Church, the Pope's word by many is seen as not subject for discussion. While a few popes accepted slavery, the majority did not and quite a number actually spoke out about it harshly. This was at a time when slavery was largely accepted socially in the Western world. Thus you can't generalise as you did.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 7:08:03 AM   
RapierFugue


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras

Rapier the Vatican is the very core of the Catholic Church, the Pope's word by many is seen as not subject for discussion. While a few popes accepted slavery, the majority did not and quite a number actually spoke out about it harshly. This was at a time when slavery was largely accepted socially in the Western world. Thus you can't generalise as you did.


I'll repeat it just one more time, since you seem to be having issues at comprehension; the Catholic Church's position on slavery at the time, and for many years afterwards, was that it condoned such actions and, furthermore, did so by denigrating those who were victims of slavery.

You feel free to get into a "number of angels on the head of a pin" defence by all means, but the facts I've stated are precisely that - facts.

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 7:14:27 AM   
farglebargle


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras

quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?

Rapier the 1965 Vatican II council explicitely rejected slavery as "infamy" and Popes before that also spoke out. Before the modern era the Church was part of a world which embraced slavery, both Christians and Muslims did. If anything their message on slavery was mixed through those times, occasionally sanctioning it and at other times censuring it.


G-d set our people free from bondage in Egypt. One reason you don't see a lot of Jewish collaborators in the slave trade. Denouncing it in 1965... Wow... Talk about going out on a limb...

_____________________________

It's not every generation that gets to watch a civilization fall. Looks like we're in for a hell of a show.

ברוך אתה, אדוני אלוקינו, ריבון העולמים, מי יוצר צמחים ריחניים

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RE: Is the Catholic Church a force for Good ? - 8/1/2011 7:15:37 AM   
Anaxagoras


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quote:

ORIGINAL: RapierFugue
quote:

ORIGINAL: Anaxagoras
Rapier the Vatican is the very core of the Catholic Church, the Pope's word by many is seen as not subject for discussion. While a few popes accepted slavery, the majority did not and quite a number actually spoke out about it harshly. This was at a time when slavery was largely accepted socially in the Western world. Thus you can't generalise as you did.

I'll repeat it just one more time, since you seem to be having issues at comprehension; the Catholic Church's position on slavery at the time, and for many years afterwards, was that it condoned such actions and, furthermore, did so by denigrating those who were victims of slavery.

You feel free to get into a "number of angels on the head of a pin" defence by all means, but the facts I've stated are precisely that - facts.

Rapier I think it is you who has issues with comprehension. You effectively stated the Church was pro-slavery and nothing else by stating "By the way, the irony of a young black man defending the Catholic church is too, too delicious. You do realise they claimed (and continued to claim, for years after the rest of the world woke up) that the slave trade was morally "right", because black African peoples were "lesser" human beings, and therefore weren't subject to any rights, privileges or protections?". I made the point repeatedly in the last three posts that the issue wasn't that clear cut and quoted extensively to back that up. Numerous popes took issue strongly with slavery. That is a fact.

< Message edited by Anaxagoras -- 8/1/2011 7:16:07 AM >

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