FACT: Christianity has almost solely been spread through the sword

FUCK THE POLICE

911 EVERY DAY
Christian_world_map.png


Can anyone identify any of the above countries which, at some point in time, was not conquered by Christian jihadists and had Christianity forced down their throats? Christianity is like a plague spread through the world by raging, mad holy warriors who see no bounds in decent behavior. Christianity is a mental disease which, if not stopped, will enslave and conquer the entire world. It's already conquered like 2/3 of the world through the use of imperialism! If left unchecked, it will destroy everything. NUKE JERUSALEM! NUKE LONDON! NUKE MADRID! NUKE BERLIN! NUKE PARIS! NUKE MOSCOW! Stop Christian jihad!
 
The comparitively peaceful religion of Islam is surrounded by Christians and barely holding on for life against relentless Christian aggression and occupation:

750px-Madhhab_Map3.png


Christianity is NOT a religion of peace! It is a religion of endless holy war, until they conquer the entire world! They just can't tolerate only having 2/3! It won't stop unless eliminated and contained!
 
Christian_world_map.png


Can anyone identify any of the above countries which, at some point in time, was not conquered by Christian jihadists and had Christianity forced down their throats? Christianity is like a plague spread through the world by raging, mad holy warriors who see no bounds in decent behavior. Christianity is a mental disease which, if not stopped, will enslave and conquer the entire world. It's already conquered like 2/3 of the world through the use of imperialism! If left unchecked, it will destroy everything. NUKE JERUSALEM! NUKE LONDON! NUKE MADRID! NUKE BERLIN! NUKE PARIS! NUKE MOSCOW! Stop Christian jihad!

They don't seem to comprehend that they only reason they are different is because there were those who rejected Christianity during the Enlightenment. The separation of Church and State by the Founders and those that they copied is what saved the Western civilizations from being like the those third world countries they look their down down upon.
 
Christian_world_map.png


Can anyone identify any of the above countries which, at some point in time, was not conquered by Christian jihadists and had Christianity forced down their throats? Christianity is like a plague spread through the world by raging, mad holy warriors who see no bounds in decent behavior. Christianity is a mental disease which, if not stopped, will enslave and conquer the entire world. It's already conquered like 2/3 of the world through the use of imperialism! If left unchecked, it will destroy everything. NUKE JERUSALEM! NUKE LONDON! NUKE MADRID! NUKE BERLIN! NUKE PARIS! NUKE MOSCOW! Stop Christian jihad!

I can't wait to force you to convert and take holy communion
 
All religions kill as they attempt to force their message of peace and love on the rest of the world.
Muslims and Christians alike are guilty...
 
There's been violence in probably all religions at one time or another and a lot of that violence was horrible and unnecessary, but even the violence committed by past Christians shouldn't take away from the peaceful and important messages and actions of past and current Christians. A lot of evil has been done in Christ's name, it just has, and so we as Christians have work to do to right those past wrongs, and I believe we have and are, but we can do that through truly being Christ's example and by spreading the good news in a peaceful and genuine way and not through violence or through judgments that we shouldn't be making as sinners ourselves.
 
This ones in the running for most ridiculous thread of the day award.

Christian jihad? Are things so desperate we need to co-opt Islamic doctrine and make it 'Christian' in order to level the playing field? Apparently, yes.

Christianity was spread by preaching, and preaching alone, for centuries before it got mixed up with government, *contrary to its own principles and doctrine*. Islam, was spread by the sword, by Mohammed himself. To compound matters, Islam has been at war with itself since shortly after Mohammed died. It still is as we speak.

To further compound matters, as if they needed compounding, contrary to Christianity, it's rather difficult to separate Islam from government. As anyone with two eyes can see, even today.

In fact, many millions of Muslims across the globe see no distinction between Islam and government. There's a whole country of them in Saudi Arabia. There's a caliphate [another doctrinal term unique to Islam] in parts of Syria and Iraq.

The silly maps are misleading.
 
Spanish Inquisition
Spanish history [1478–1834]
Written by: The Rev. Edward A. Ryan, S.J. 0
READ VIEW ALL MEDIA (9) VIEW HISTORY EDIT FEEDBACK
Spanish Inquisition,
Spanish Inquisition [Credit: © Photos.com/Thinkstock](1478–1834), judicial institution ostensibly established to combat heresy in Spain. In practice, the Spanish Inquisition served to consolidate power in the monarchy of the newly unified Spanish kingdom, but it achieved that end through infamously brutal methods.

The rise of the Spanish Inquisition
The medieval inquisition had played a considerable role in Christian Spain during the 13th century, but the struggle against the Moors had kept the inhabitants of the Iberian Peninsula busy and served to strengthen their faith. When toward the end of the 15th century the Reconquista was all but complete, the desire for religious unity became more and more pronounced. Spain’s Jewish population, which was among the largest in Europe, soon became a target.

Over centuries, the Jewish community in Spain had flourished and grown in numbers and influence, though anti-Semitism had surfaced from time to time. During the reign of Henry III of Castile and Leon (1390–1406), Jews faced increased persecution and were pressured to convert to Christianity. The pogroms of 1391 were especially brutal, and the threat of violence hung over the Jewish community in Spain. Faced with the choice between baptism and death, the number of nominal converts to the Christian faith soon became very great. Many Jews were killed, and those who adopted Christian beliefs—the so-called conversos (Spanish: “converted”)—faced continued suspicion and prejudice. In addition, there remained a significant population of Jews who had professed conversion but continued to practice their faith in secret. Known as Marranos, those nominal converts from Judaism were perceived to be an even greater threat to the social order than those who had rejected forced conversion. After Aragon and Castile were united by the marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella (1469), the Marranos were denounced as a danger to the existence of Christian Spain. In 1478 Pope Sixtus IV issued a bull authorizing the Catholic Monarchs to name inquisitors who would address the issue. That did not mean that the Spanish sovereigns were turning over to the church the struggle for unity; on the contrary, they sought to use the Inquisition to support their absolute and centralizing regime and most especially to increase royal power in Aragon. The first Spanish inquisitors, operating in Seville, proved so severe that Sixtus IV attempted to intervene. The Spanish crown now had in its possession a weapon too precious to give up, however, and the efforts of the pope to limit the powers of the Inquisition were without avail. In 1483 he was induced to authorize the naming by the Spanish government of a grand inquisitor (inquisitor general) for Castile, and during that same year Aragon, Valencia, and Catalonia were placed under the power of the Inquisition.

The Inquisition at its peak
Spanish Inquisition: suspected Protestants being tortured [Credit: Three Lions/Hulton Archive/Getty Images]The grand inquisitor acted as the head of the Inquisition in Spain. The ecclesiastical jurisdiction that he had received from the Vatican empowered him to name deputies and hear appeals. In deciding appeals, the grand inquisitor was assisted by a council of five members and by consultors. All those offices were filled by agreement between the government and the grand inquisitor. The council, especially after its reorganization during the reign of Philip II (1556–98), put the effective control of the institution more and more into the hands of the civil power. After the papacy of Clement VII (1523–34), priests and bishops were at times judged by the Inquisition. In procedure the Spanish Inquisition was much like the medieval inquisition. The first grand inquisitor in Spain was the Dominican Tomás de Torquemada; his name became synonymous with the brutality and fanaticism associated with the Inquisition. Torquemada used torture and confiscation to terrorize his victims, and his methods were the product of a time when judicial procedure was cruel by design. The sentencing of the accused took place at the auto-da-fé (Portuguese: “act of faith”), an elaborate public expression of the Inquisition’s power. The condemned were presented before a large crowd that often included royalty, and the proceedings had a ritualized, almost festive, quality. The number of burnings at the stake during Torquemada’s tenure was exaggerated by Protestant critics of the Inquisition, but it is generally estimated to have been about 2,000.

Torquemada, Tomás de [Credit: Courtesy of the Biblioteca Nacional, Madrid]At Torquemada’s urging, Ferdinand and Isabella issued an edict on March 31, 1492, giving Spanish Jews the choice of exile or baptism; as a result, more than 160,000 Jews were expelled from Spain. Francisco, Cardinal Jiménez de Cisneros, promoted the suppression of Muslims with the same zeal that Torquemada had directed at Jews. In 1502 he ordered the proscription of Islam in Granada, the last of the Muslim kingdoms in Spain to fall to the Reconquista. The persecution of Muslims accelerated in 1507 when Jiménez was named grand inquisitor. Muslims in Valencia and Aragon were subjected to forced conversion in 1526, and Islam was subsequently banned in Spain. The Inquisition then devoted its attention to the Moriscos, Spanish Muslims who had previously accepted baptism. Expressions of Morisco culture were forbidden by Philip II in 1566, and within three years, persecution by the Inquisition gave way to open warfare between the Moriscos and the Spanish crown. The Moriscos were driven from Granada in 1571, and by 1614 some 300,000 had been expelled from Spain entirely.

Spanish Inquisition [Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images]When the Reformation began to penetrate into Spain, the relatively few Spanish Protestants were eliminated by the Inquisition. Foreigners suspected of promoting Protestant faiths within Spain met similarly violent ends. Having largely purged the country of Jews and Muslims—as well as many former members of those faiths who had converted to Christianity—the Spanish Inquisition turned its attention to prominent Roman Catholics. Saint Ignatius of Loyola was twice arrested on suspicion of heresy, and the archbishop of Toledo, the Dominican Bartolomé de Carranza, was imprisoned for almost 17 years. Nominally Christian groups that diverged from the Inquisition’s orthodoxy, such as the followers of the mystical Alumbrado movement and adherents of Erasmianism (a spiritualized Christian belief system influenced by the teachings of humanist Desiderius Erasmus), were subjected to intense persecution throughout the 16th and into the 17th century.
 
THE CRUSADES
The first of the Crusades began in 1095, when armies of Christians from Western Europe responded to Pope Urban II’s plea to go to war against Muslim forces in the Holy Land. After the First Crusade achieved its goal with the capture of Jerusalem in 1099, the invading Christians set up several Latin Christian states, even as Muslims in the region vowed to wage holy war (jihad) to regain control over the region. Deteriorating relations between the Crusaders and their Christian allies in the Byzantine Empire culminated in the sack of Constantinople in 1204 during the Third Crusade. Near the end of the 13th century, the rising Mamluk dynasty in Egypt provided the final reckoning for the Crusaders, toppling the coastal stronghold of Acre and driving the European invaders out of Palestine and Syria in 1291.
In 1095, Alexius sent envoys to Pope Urban II asking for mercenary troops from the West to help confront the Turkish threat. Though relations between Christians in East and West had long been fractious, Alexius’ request came at a time when the situation was improving. In November 1095, at the Council of Clermont in southern France, the pope called on Western Christians to take up arms in order to aid the Byzantines and recapture the Holy Land from Muslim control. Pope Urban’s plea met with a tremendous response, both among lower levels of the military elite (who would form a new class of knights) as well as ordinary citizens; it was determined that those who joined the armed pilgrimage would wear a cross as a symbol of the Church.
 
Last edited:
A high proportion of Christian Countries, Britain for instance, became so as the result of the conversion of Constantine, which shifted the whole Roman Empire pretty bloodlessly. Like Christian and Zoroastrian Empires, Arab rule spread by violence, but did not lead to mass conversions because Muslims paid less tax, so Muslim governments were quite happy with plenty of infidels, as long as they were People's of the Book.
 
I cannot comprehend your speech. I testify truly in the vernacular of filth. I speak your language clearly. you have toned down the witchy talk.
Oh, you know exactly what I am saying, you are just as guilty as the rest of us and the Bible says when you place yourself first, you will in fact be last! Read the parables concerning this subject, it may save your soul.
 
This ones in the running for most ridiculous thread of the day award.

Christian jihad? Are things so desperate we need to co-opt Islamic doctrine and make it 'Christian' in order to level the playing field? Apparently, yes.

Christianity was spread by preaching, and preaching alone, for centuries before it got mixed up with government, *contrary to its own principles and doctrine*. Islam, was spread by the sword, by Mohammed himself. To compound matters, Islam has been at war with itself since shortly after Mohammed died. It still is as we speak.

To further compound matters, as if they needed compounding, contrary to Christianity, it's rather difficult to separate Islam from government. As anyone with two eyes can see, even today.

In fact, many millions of Muslims across the globe see no distinction between Islam and government. There's a whole country of them in Saudi Arabia. There's a caliphate [another doctrinal term unique to Islam] in parts of Syria and Iraq.

The silly maps are misleading.

wow, talk about ignorance of history and Christianity!
 
Back
Top