• Spacegrass@artemis.camp
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    1 year ago

    Fully agree. As an ex-Christian, the crusades used to be unimaginable to me. Now I see them as an easy trend line from current events.

    • Hegar@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      We already did two crusades this century.

      Our correct and just way to live means that when we invade other countries, kill their civilians and take their stuff, it’s for their own good because we’re bringing the light of christ freedom and democracy. That’s totally a crusade.

      I’m quite a fan of freedom and democracy - I wish we had some in the US - but using our noblest ideals to justify bloody wars of plunder is the most christian thing I can imagine.

    • HuddaBudda@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      One of the most eye opening historical events for me as a christian was the Children’s Crusade

      Happened right before the 5th crusade. Basically a bunch of kids and teens got together and believed that God would part the dead sea for them, like Moses did, and allow them to take Jerusalem. Which at the time was considered a reasonable idea.

      They believed in the cause so much, they only sent them with enough supplies to make it there, not a return trip.

      Some of the kids made it to the dead sea, and the sea did not part.

      It is said out of the thousands of kids they sent, only a few returned. With the rest suffering starvation, thirst, drowning, disease, and slavery.

      I still believe in God, and I do have some faith in him, if at the very least like the idea of a Good God being in control of everything.

      Kind of like Santa.

      Not in the sense that I would drink a vat of Kool-aid for him. Warning: Not Safe For Work

      But that I will question my religion and see what I got wrong first, before I challenge the scientific proof. Because if the moral of the story is anything, it’s that God works in mysterious ways, but he doesn’t part the dead sea anymore.