B
brakelite
Guest
Has the Catholic church changed regarding religious freedom? Various pronouncements by recent popes suggest she has changed since the days of the dark ages, and if true, that can only be a good thing. What concerns me though is the fact that persecution by Catholics against those who disagreed with papal authority and doctrine, was not just the incidental practice of a few bad apples.
Described as one of Catholicisms greatest theologians, a 'doctor' of the church, Thomas Aquinas, dubbed a saint, wrote the following which suggests strongly that persecution against heretics, rather than the rare occasion, was in fact church policy, and remained so for a very long time.
“With regard to heretics two elements are to be considered, one element on their side, and the other on the part of the church. On their side is the sin whereby they have deserved, not only to be separated from the church by excommunication, but also to be banished from the world by death. For it is a much heavier offense to corrupt the faith, whereby the life of the soul is sustained, than to tamper with the coinage, which is an aid to temporal life. Hence if coiners or other malefactors are at once handed over by the secular princes to a just death, much more may heretics, immediately they are convicted of heresy, be not only excommunicated, but also justly done to die. But on the part of the church is mercy in view of the conversion of them that err; and therefore she does not condemn at once, but ‘after the first and second admonition,’ as the apostle teaches. After that, however, if the man is still found pertinacious, the church, having no hope of his conversion, provides for the safety of others, cutting him off from the church by the sentence of excommunication; and further she leaves him to the secular tribunal to be exterminated from the world by death.”
Described as one of Catholicisms greatest theologians, a 'doctor' of the church, Thomas Aquinas, dubbed a saint, wrote the following which suggests strongly that persecution against heretics, rather than the rare occasion, was in fact church policy, and remained so for a very long time.
“With regard to heretics two elements are to be considered, one element on their side, and the other on the part of the church. On their side is the sin whereby they have deserved, not only to be separated from the church by excommunication, but also to be banished from the world by death. For it is a much heavier offense to corrupt the faith, whereby the life of the soul is sustained, than to tamper with the coinage, which is an aid to temporal life. Hence if coiners or other malefactors are at once handed over by the secular princes to a just death, much more may heretics, immediately they are convicted of heresy, be not only excommunicated, but also justly done to die. But on the part of the church is mercy in view of the conversion of them that err; and therefore she does not condemn at once, but ‘after the first and second admonition,’ as the apostle teaches. After that, however, if the man is still found pertinacious, the church, having no hope of his conversion, provides for the safety of others, cutting him off from the church by the sentence of excommunication; and further she leaves him to the secular tribunal to be exterminated from the world by death.”