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Pope's speech at University of Regensburg (full text)
Catholic World News ^ | 9/12/06 | Pope Benedict XVI

Posted on 09/16/2006 9:55:59 PM PDT by dervish

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To: USNBandit
Today Islam is party that rejects reason just like its rejected on the Left. But you won't hear that from the Drive By Media.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus

21 posted on 09/17/2006 1:49:18 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: dervish

bump for later read


22 posted on 09/17/2006 2:05:40 AM PDT by Captain Beyond (The Hammer of the gods! (Just a cool line from a Led Zep song))
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To: Paradox
This is the very word used by the emperor: God acts with logos

Big smile, here: His mysteries to reveal.

23 posted on 09/17/2006 5:36:54 AM PDT by Alia
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To: Paradox
I recently read an Islamic forum to see what what the Muslims were 'writing' about concerning this topic. One Muslim asked everyone to be reasonable and gave her logic. She was hit back that she was in blasphemy for even speaking about Islam when she doesn't know what she is talking about and will be doomed. She said the Pope doesn't understand that Jihad means internal struggle. The other people wrote back with alot of venom that it means 'physical struggle'.
Bottom line is that these extremists obviously do not want to be reasonable.
24 posted on 09/17/2006 6:45:35 AM PDT by sasha123 (Pray for the peace of Jerusalem)
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To: dervish
There is something further about Islam's depraved moral state that comes from the greatest Catholic theologian, St. Thomas Aquinas in Contra Summa Gentiles:

He seduced the people by promises of carnal pleasures … His teachings also contained precepts that were in conformity with [such] promises … the truths that he taught were mingled with many fables and with doctrines of the greatest falsity… he perverts almost all the testimonies of the Old and New Testaments by making them fabrications of his own, as can be seen by anyone who examines his law. It was, therefore, a shrewd decision on his part to forbid his followers to read the Old and New Testaments, lest these books convict him of falsity.

Aquinas knew well the Koran and points out Muslims are forbidden from reading the biblical books. They would reveal in fact that Mohammed was a false prophet who added and detracted to what is contained in the revealed Scriptures when he invented his own religion. The Pope knows that Islam is at odds with Western religion but is constrained for reasons of political correctness from stating so openly. Imagine the degree of Muslim rage had the Pope taken the time to quote as here, from Aquinas. Who incidentally is a Doctor Of The Church as well one of its saints.

"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus

25 posted on 09/17/2006 7:34:41 AM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: AFPhys

"The reference the Pope made "...of Christianity and Islam, and the truth of both..." and much later the inclusiveness of his statement "...the world's profoundly religious cultures..." makes it clear that he supported Islam's inclusion in this exhortation that theology be considered part of the academic culture"

No way. This is your misreading of the opening discussion of the differences between Christianity and Islam and equating them with zealous Christian belief. The Pope is clearly negatively referencing and tying the concept of Jihad to Islam's discard of the logos that is central to Christianity.

I read in an allusion to those anti-religious (fundamentalist atheists) who disparage all religious belief by pointing to the excesses of Islam. To them the Pope says, no, we are not like them. Our beliefs are grounded in logic and tempered by reason.


26 posted on 09/17/2006 8:06:44 AM PDT by dervish (RIP Oriana Fallaci)
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To: goldstategop

"He seduced the people by promises of carnal pleasures"

The virgins that are central to the Jihadist's reward.

Pierre Rehov just made a documentary (Suicide Killers) which describes the abnormal sexual norms at the heart of Islam.


27 posted on 09/17/2006 8:16:49 AM PDT by dervish (RIP Oriana Fallaci)
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To: dervish

bookmk ping-a-ling


28 posted on 09/17/2006 8:19:40 AM PDT by Dad yer funny (BinScentie Pox , BinLadin , 2 tall enemies)
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To: dervish

I guess that the Pope's official spokesman has no idea what he was saying.

Here is what an official spokesman for the Vatican said:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1702933/posts

I'm sorry. You are wrong about this, as sufficient study of the POPE'S OWN WORDS would reveal to you if you were so inclined, or if not, if you were to depend on what the official spokesman said. It is simply folly to take a small rhetorical section of the address totally out of context and then spend time "reading between the lines", and then "reading between those lines", etc... instead of studying the address the Pope actually gave and the context within which he gave it.

I'll spend more time demonstrating that this evening, but now I have some work to do with my daughter.


29 posted on 09/17/2006 11:41:49 AM PDT by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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To: goldstategop
Actually, Muslims aren't discouraged from reading the bible. In fact, some of their greatest scholars happen to study Hebrew and the bible in great detail. If you would happen to watch any of the great Christian/Muslim debates, you would know that. In fact, many Muslims are openly invited to read and learn about the Bible, and if you spoke to some, you would find it only increases their faith.

Also, the supposed western superiority is laughable. I know as an educated American. Very few American Christians actually follow their religion, or even know much about it, yet they feel free to condemn others quickly. In fact, popes and other religious leaders from past centuries were very prone to avarice and sexual freedoms; even in recent years we discover how the church struggled to hide its pedophilia scandal.

That's not to say Christianity is immoral or "heathenistic." Many people seem unable to separate the religion from the practicer. From the standpoint of many people in Africa, India and the Middle East who have been colonized, mistreated, enslaved, as well as are currently being invaded and killed by the West, that would be condemning and hating all Westerners.

Oh wait, they do. Maybe for good reason. But they're no different from ignorant Westerners who have probably have had more education and more opportunity to learn about different religions - and NOT from foreign invaders who decide they want to own the world.

The fact that there are such hateful Muslims as well as Christians disgust me. Speak in favor of your religion, but to go so far as to call other ones names just shows insecurity and closed-mindedness.
30 posted on 09/18/2006 12:59:38 PM PDT by Gsterob
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To: Gsterob

"The fact that there are such hateful Muslims as well as Christians disgust me. "

The fact that some equate present day Christians and Muslims disgusts me. Equating the past with present practitioners, equating aberrant and notorious but limited Catholic practitioners of pedophilia which was condemned by the Church with the widespread and Koranic call for jihad coming from Mosques, equating the repression of the present day Muslim countries with the present day freedoms of Western or Christian countries, equating the ignorance and illiteracy of Muslim countries with the supposed ignorance of their religion of Christian countries, ALL disgusts me.

Accusing the West and saying Africa, India and the Middle East are "currently being invaded and killed by the West" disgusts me too.

Stop trashing Westerners and Christians.


31 posted on 09/18/2006 7:34:30 PM PDT by dervish (RIP Oriana Fallaci)
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To: dervish

The pope’s comments:
In quoting the 14th century emperor, Manuel II Paleologus, the Pope uses a particular quote in which the emperor asks the following rhetorical question to his interlocutor:
“Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.”

All around me I see my fellow Muslims getting upset at the assertion made over 600 years ago by a man long dead. In it, they perhaps see the Pope reviving the long discredited belief that Islam was largely spread by the sword, and more importantly that the prophet commanded the Muslims to forcibly convert non-believers. Without having to question the motives of the Pope, or for that matter, the motives of those who are demanding apologies from the Pope and all Christians in general, we should answer the basic question asked by the emperor: “Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new?” We should also examine the Pope’s larger point on use of reason in religion as well as the assertion that God cannot be capricious.

To answer the first point, one must remember that the teaching of the Quran claims to simply remind the people of the same message brought down by many prophets and messengers before Mohammed. Technically, there was nothing new in what he taught, that had not already been taught before. However, it would have been new to the inhabitants of that era through out the Arabian Peninsula as well as the Persian and Byzantine empires since the normative practice was not all that different from one region to the next. One must remember the time when Mohammed was alive and started preaching his message to inhabitants of Makah and later on to the inhabitants of Yatrib (Medina). The year was roughly 612 CE, and Makah was inhabited by the Quraish tribe. Among, the practices of the time included: burying young girls alive as they were seen more as a burden on their parents than bringing honor to them; the status of the person was determined by their linage rather than their deeds; debts of the father became the debts of the son; a weaker member of the tribe could be forcibly made to atone for the crime committed by a powerful member of the tribe; Women’s property could be taken from them by their husband; Property could be seized by the ruler with or without cause; the law permitted punishment even if the person committing the crime was acting under compulsion; usury made generation serve under the yoke of indentured servitude. While this is not an exhaustive list, it should convey the general conditions of the community in which Mohammed lived. In addition, these and other abhorrent practices were considered normative and proper not just in Makah, but also throughout the rest of Christian lands. Let’s not forget, that Women had no property rights, or the right to choose their husband, or the right to divorce anywhere in the Christian lands sanctioned by the Pope of that time.

Mohammed (conveying the word of God) forbade the killing of infants (girl or boys); He taught us that God judged us by our deeds and our piety and not who our forefathers were; All debts were retired when a person died through the sale of his property. He taught us that no person can atone for another’s sins; That men could not forcibly take the property of their wives as their own; the ruler could not seize the property of Muslims with or without cause, something Europe would not discover for another 1200 years; he taught us that there was no crime or sin when one was made to act under compulsion; he forbade usury as a means of forcing people to enter into one sided contracts. All these were new concepts to a people that had long forgotten the message taught by Abraham, Solomon, Moses, and Jesus to name just a few of the leaders of the Judeo-Christian tradition.

In the Quran, Mohammed taught many other concepts that we take for granted today. He taught us that we need no intermediary when praying to God. He also taught us that we could ask for forgiveness for our sins directly from God and needed none to intervene. It took Martin Luther some 1000 years to assert this right to Christians. I find nothing evil in these teachings. As for the forced conversions or spreading the faith by the sword, in all the years I have read the Quran or the Hadith (sayings of the Mohammed), I have not found much that can be directly attributed to him or the Quran that clearly asserts this notion. However, it would be disingenuous for Muslims to assert that Muslim rulers never created hostile conditions for those who did not convert. It would also be disingenuous to assert that these practices were not justified and gained normative power by interpreting the Quran to suite the needs of the rulers (Just as the bible was used in the United States to sanction Slavery). It was rare to carry out whole sale executions of conquered people. Only the Mongols, carried out such acts, and who later became Muslims. Their descendants did continue the practice of wholesale murder of a people who chose to resist the raiding party. The only exception made by the Mongol dynasties was for those who chose to convert. However, this practice occurs some 650 years after Mohammed’s death. Blaming this practice on Mohammed is like blaming Jesus for the atrocities committed by the Popes through the dark ages in Christian lands. Surly the Pope is not asserting that all Popes were sinless, and did not sanction similar acts. Remember the conquest of Jerusalem by the first crusades where ALL inhabitants were slaughtered, and the counter example of Saladin’s re-conquest of Jerusalem some 100 years later where every man, woman and child was given the option to leave with all that they could carry.

To the larger point the Pope makes the use of reason in religion, many prominent Muslim thinkers throughout history would agree with this notion, while some other Muslim thinkers denied the use of ANY reason in religion. Surly the Pope is familiar with the works of Ibn Sina (Avencia) and Ibn Rushud (Averros). Muslim thinkers were utilizing the works of the Greeks to delineate the large corpus of material attributed to Mohammed starting around 800 CE. They used reason to determine the veracity of quotes from Mohammed.

As for the notion whether God cannot be capricious, this argument was waged within the Muslim history for over 300 years. Many rationalists argued that God would not be whimsical. The technical point made by Ibn Hazm quoted by the Pope is taken out of context. In addition, the Pope does not point out the reason based argument that Ibn Hazm wages, but simply states the conclusion derived by Ibn Hazm. One might say that the Pope did not choose to argue through reason, but simply chooses to argue reasonably.

I would like to refute Ibn Hazm through a well reasoned argument. Ibn Hazm is asserting that God cannot be restrained by Human notions of right and wrong. There are two problems which he sees with notion that God must be consistent. First, in order for God to be restrained by Human notions of right and wrong, Humans would need to have a perfect understanding of what is right and what is wrong. Surly, even today we cannot make such an assertion. Second, God’s action cannot be bound by Human understanding, since that would limit the power of God to simply that of Human understanding. However, Ibn Hazm falls short if we look at the presupposition in both arguments. The first argument presupposes a temporal and totality nature of Humans. The assertion that no Human can know all that is right and all that is wrong at a particular moment in time does not preclude a collective notion of what is right and wrong over a long period of time. Ibn Hazm does not allow for this possibility. In the second argument, he presupposes that there exists some knowledge that only God can understand and further that such knowledge can NEVER be understood by Humans. Surly such an argument it self is limiting the power of God who is quite capable of making Humans understand any knowledge he chooses for us to understand.

I hope all those who read this find the kind of dialogue the Pope invites in his lecture. As a Muslim I welcome the opportunity to set the record straight. I would also ask my fellow Christians to not Judge the totality of Muslims by a small number of fanatics. Imagine being a European in the 1930 and being judged by what Hitler said. He was a head of the state, but did NOT represent all people of Europe. However, he did represent a significant plurality of people. We Muslims face similar challenges in our times and have the very hard task of defeating this ideology of Hatred.


32 posted on 09/18/2006 11:47:57 PM PDT by FreeThinker62
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To: dervish

I don't understand how you can deny the fact that Americans are going around the world, doing just as bad things as muslims supposedly are. In fact, BBC published an article today reporting on a claim that modern-day abuses in Iraq are worse now than under Saddam's control, and Americans play no little role in that, for sure.

And only a few days ago, an innocent Muslim with distant ties through friends-of-friends was abducted to Syria and held in a coffin-like cage for 8 months.

Although the numbers vary, about 50,000 Iraqi civilians have died since the beginning of the war.

But besides all that, you're right. Only Muslims are trying to attack Christians, not the other way around.

I would think the level of xenophobia in this country couldn't get any higher. And I honestly didn't think the pope's comments were such a big deal, until I saw not only Muslims attacking him but conservatives on this website attacking Muslims. Apparently statements like that increase racism on both sides of the globe.

Believe it or not, it's not a one-sided battle "good-vs-evil." At least if we can get both sides to admit prejudices and racist beliefs - I have seen racist Muslims, and I definately see many racists on this website. As a non-white Catholic-raised American, I'm sorry, but I'm going to stay disgusted. Especially with Western superiority. Please, dervish, but your email just exemplifies that sort of "We are so much better" false attitude that so many people hold.


33 posted on 09/21/2006 1:41:34 PM PDT by Gsterob
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Comment #34 Removed by Moderator


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