Lionking wrote:Let's get something clarified here. The crusades were not a Christian undertaking. The crusades were begun under various Popes and are a Catholic doing. Christianity and Catholicism ARE NOT THE SAME THING.
What was the first Christian Religion, ie the first organized religion to follow the teachings of Jesus Christ? Saying that modern day Catholicism is responsible for transgressions of the past is the same as saying modern Christianity is responsible because you are laying responsibility based not on current actions and ideals, but in what it has grown out of. Perhaps you aren't blaming modern day Catholicism for mistakes made in the past, but you post seemed like you might be.
Frankly in the context of this threads discussion, an attempt to say that what you call true Christians are not hypocritical to condemn pervers actions done in the name of Islam due to their condemnation of the Crusades misses the real fallacy of the argument. The fallacy is that any modern day Christian is hypocritical in condemning actions taken by radical Islamist, due to various past transgressions done in the name of Christianity. It is just as much an error to lay blame for radical perversions of the Christian faith at feet of all Christians as it is to blame radical perversions of Islam on all Muslims.
Lionking wrote:IMHO, Catholicism is not Christianty because it distorts the basic gospel message and adds a works-based salvation along with a bunch of other BS that isn't biblical.
Fair enough to an extent, this is the same opinion behind the protestant reformations, however it is just that, an opinion. Catholicism is a Christian religion, that it does not hold to what you feel is the proper way to follow Jesus Christ doesn't change the fact that it is not only a religion that teaches a following of Christ but indeed the first one.
Lionking wrote:Some Christians of that day would have nothing to do with the Crusades. They were opposed to them. Don't lump them in with the evils wrought by the Popes.
Would be more correct. Incidentally I don't think you'd find many modern day Catholics that would condone the actions taken by the Popes in the Crusades either. Despite the misinformation spread by many other Christian religions, the idea of Papal infallibility applies only in regards to the dogma of Church teaching and faith, not to political actions taken by Popes (ie when it comes to matters of doctrine and faith the Pope is considered to be infallible, but when it comes to matters of political and social actions infallibility is not a mandate).
IMHO the biggest internal problem with Christianity as a whole in modern day is an inability for variations of the faith to recognize the various differences as inconsequential to the common core beliefs. This to me is ironic because those common core beliefs should as a matter of natural process bring those religions together, but instead differences about how faith should be practiced, not faith it's self push them apart.