T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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506.1 | 1ST AMENDMENT CLARIFICATION | FATBOY::BENSON | | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:44 | 26 |
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Insight on the first amendment from one closer to the source:
Joseph Story (1779-1845), Associate Justice of the United States Supreme
Court.
"The real object of the First Amendment was not to countenance, much less to
advance, Mahomedanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity;
but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to prevent any national
ecclesiastical establishment which should give to a hierarchy the exclusive
patronage of the national government. It thus cut off the means of religious
persecution (the vice and pest of former ages), and of the subversion of the
rights of conscience in matters of religion which had been trampled upon almost
from the days of the Apostles to the present age...."
"Probably at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, and of the first
amendment to it...the general, if not the universal, sentiment in America was
that *Christianity ought to receive encouragement from the State*, so far as
was not incompatible with the previous rights of conscience and the freedom
of religious worship. *An attempt to level all religions and to make it a
matter of state policy to hold all in utter indifference would have created
universal disapprobation, if not universal indignation*".
*emphasis mine*
jeff
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506.2 | MAYFLOWER COMPACT | FATBOY::BENSON | | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:51 | 40 |
|
Christian colonization of the various colonies:
The Pilgrims who landed at Plymouth established a form of govt. that has come
to be named the Mayflower Compact. B.F.Morris in his monumental
work, THE CHRISTIAN LIFE AND CHARACTER OF THE CIVIL INSTITUIONS OF THE
UNITED STATES (1863), writes, "The form of govt. was instituted in the cabin
of the Mayflower, before they landed on Plymouth Rock, and signed and ratified
under the solemnity of prayer and the most sacred sanctions of the Christian
religion: 'In the name of God, Amen. We whose names are underwritten,...having
undertaken [this task], for the glory of God, and advancement of the Christian
faith...'" "This Constitution invokes a religious sanction and the authority
of God on their civil obligations; for it was no doctrine of the Puritans
that civil obedience is a mere matter of expediency."
The Mayflower Compact, from William Bradford's HISTORY OF PLYMOUTH PLANTATION:
"In the name of God, Amen. We, whose names are underwritten, the loyal
subjects of our dread sovereign lord King James, by the grace of God, of
Great Britain, France, and Ireland, king, defender of the faith, etc., having
undertaken *for the glory of God and advancement of the Christian faith*, and
the honor of our king and country, a voyage to plant the first colony in
the northern parts of Virginia; do by these presents, solemnly and mutually
in the presence of God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together
into a civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation and
furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by virtue hereof do enact, constitue
and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts, constitutions and
offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for
the general good of the colony; unto which we promise all due submission and
obedience. In witness whereof we have hereunto subscribed our names at Cape
Cod the eleventh of November, in the reign of our sovereign lord King James
of England, France and Ireland, the eighteenth and of Scotland, the fifty-
fourth. Anno Domini, 1620."
* emphasis mine *
What is the first reason for their voyage?
jeff
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506.3 | COLONIES SPREADING THE GOSPEL | FATBOY::BENSON | | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:53 | 42 |
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Christian colonization of the various colonies:
New England
In 1643, a confederation between the colonies of Massachusetts, New Plymouth,
Connecticut, and New Haven was formed, in which it is affirmed that "we all
came into these parts of America with the same end and aim, namely, to
advance the kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ, and to enjoy the liberties
thereof with purity and peace, and for preserving and propagating the truth and
liberties of the gospel."
The synod of the New England churches met at Cambridge, Massachusetts,
September 30, 1648, and defined the nature of civil government, the functions
of the civil magistrate, and the duties of the citizens, as follows:
"I. God, the Supreme Lord and King of all the world, hath ordained civil
magistrates to be under him, over the people, and for his own glory and the
public good; and to this end hath armed them with the power of the sword for
the defense and encouragement of them that do well, and for the punishment of
evil-doers.
II. It is lawful for Christians to accept and execute the office of magistrate
when called thereunto. In the management whereof, as they ought especially to
maintain piety, justice, and peace, according to the wholesome laws of the
Commonwealth, so for that end they may lawfully now, under the New Testament,
wage war upon just and necessary occasions.
III. They who, upon pretence of Christian liberty, shall oppose any lawful
power, or the lawful exercies of it, resist the ordinances of God,...may be
called to account and proceeded against by the censure of the church and by
the power of the civil magistrate.
IV. It is the duty of the people to pray for magistrates, to honor their
persons, to pay them tribute and other dues, to obey their lawful commands, and
to be subject to their authority for conscience's sake."
Who empowered and motivated these men?
jeff
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506.4 | MASS AND CONNECTICUT COLONIZATION | FATBOY::BENSON | | Mon Aug 17 1992 13:03 | 52 |
| Christian Colonization of Massachusetts and Connecticut
Massachusetts
In the charter granted to Massachusetts, in 1640, by Charles I., the Colonies
are enjoined by "their good life and orderly conversation to win and invite
the natives of the country to a knowledge of the only true God and Savior
of mankind, and the Christian faith which , in our royal intention and
adventurer's free possession, *is the principal end of this plantation*."
* emphasis mine
Connecticut
In Conneticut the first organization of civil society and government was made,
in 1639, in Quinipiack, now New Haven. A constitution was formed, which was
characterized as "the first example of a written constitution; as a distinct
organic act, constituting a government and defining its powers." Below are
some of the articles which made up the constitution of Connecticut:
"I. That the Scriptures hold forth a perfect rule for the direction and
government of all men in all duties which they are to perform to God and men,
as well in families and commonwealths as in matters of the church.
II. That as in matters which concerned the gathering and ordering of a church,
so likewise in all public offices which concern civil order, - as the choice
of magistrates and officers, making and repealing laws, dividing allotments of
inheritance, and all things of like nature, - they would all be governed by
those rules which the Scripture held forth to them.
III. That all those who had desired to be received free planters had settled
in the plantation with a purpose, resolution, and desire that they might be
admitted into church fellowship according to Christ.
IV. That all the free planters held themselves bound to establish such civil
orders as might best conduce to the securing of the purity and peace of the
ordinance themselves, and their posterity according to God."
The governor was then charged by the Rev. Mr. Davenport, in the most solemn
manner, as to his duties, from Dueteronomy: - "And I charged your judges at
that time saying, Hear the causes between your brethern, and judge righteously
between every man and his brother, and the stranger that is with him. Ye
shall not respect persons in judgment, but ye shall hear the small as well as
the great; ye shall not be afraid of the face of man; for the judgment is
God's: and the cause that is too hard for you, bring it unto me, and I will
hear it".
The General Court, established under this constitution, ordered, - "That
God's word shoul be the only rule for ordering the affairs of government in
this commonwealth."
jeff
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506.5 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | movers and shakers | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:25 | 30 |
| I've always been curious as to exactly what and how the Spanish
proclaimed their political and religious sovereinty over the
indigenous peoples and lands as they arrived in the "New World," but
like many other things I'm curious about, I'd not yet found the time
to research it.
The other day, however, while reading _The elder brothers: a lost South
American people and their message about the fate of the earth_, I
came across this information and felt it germain to this topic and
perhaps would be of interest to others.
A note about the book: _The elder brothers_ was written in
conjunction with what the Kogi people wished to reveal of themselves
to the outside world, as they have chosen to live totally isolated
for over the last 400 years. As such, it can be considered a rich
anthropological exploration of a deeply spiritual and ascetic people.
The author, being an historian, spends some time offering the reader
an historical account of events, particularly of the cultural clash
between the Christian conquistadors and colonizers and the Columbian
indigenous people, which directly resulted in the Kogi's retreat and
total isolation high into the Sierra mountain of Columbia in the
early 1500's.
The following note will be an excerpt from _The elder brothers_,
citing information from a log and book by Valdes y Oviedo, who was
there among the Spanish the day they "discovered" Columbia and
delivered their prolamation of good news to the native peoples
of that land in 1514.
Karen
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506.6 | The Spanish arrive in Columbia... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | movers and shakers | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:26 | 58 |
| Regarding the following proclamation, the footnote states: "This
document, edited by Dr Palacios Rubios and approved by a committee of
Spanish theologians and prelates, had to be carried and read out by
all expeditions of conquest. Oviedo was himself responsible for
proclaiming it on this expedition." Excerpted from Oviedo's log:
On 12 June 1514, a Spanish galleon arrived to start the process of
colonisation. The Indians came down to the shore to look. They
had dressed lightly, and covered themselves in the red juice which
acts as a mosquito repellent. The commander sent a small party to
land, but the Indians ran up to the landing boats "and with their
bows and arrows and with a courteous manner, showed us that they
would have to resist our landing. " A lengthy document had been
prepared to read to the assembled crowd. It began:
On the part of the most high and most mighty and most catholic
defender of the church, always conqueror and never conquered,
the great King Don Fernando, King of the Sicilies and of
Jerusalem, and of the Indies, islands and dry land of the Ocean
Sea...dominator of barbarous peoples...notify and would have you
know that God our Father, the one and the trinity, created the
skies and the earth, and a man and a woman, of whom you and we
and all the men of this world are descendants and offspring...
It went on to explain the fundamental doctrines of Christianity,
including the doctrine of the Trinity and the position of the Pope,
which led on in a natural and interesting way to the theory of
European political structures and the Divine Right of Kings. The
logical and obvious conclusion was that the listening Indians were
now to consider themselves subjects of the Spanish crown and should
begin taking instruction for baptism....The Spanish proclamation
ended fearsomely. If the native people did not submit,
I assure you that with the help of God I will enter powerfully
against you, and I will make war on you in every place and in
every way that I can, and I will subject you to the yoke and
obedience of the church and their highnesses, and I will take
your persons and your women and your children, and I will make
them slaves, and as such I will sell them, and dispose of them
as their highnessess command: I will take your goods, and I
will do you all the evils and harms which I can, just as to
vassals who do not obey and do not want to receive their lord,
resist him and contradict him. And I declare that the deaths
and harms which arise from this will be *your* fault, and not
that of their highnesses, nor mine, nor of the gentlemen who
have come with me here.
* * emphasis mine.
This proclamation was presented in Spanish, then also in the Carib
language; however, the Columbian natives understood neither. At
this point the Indians attempted to explain something to the Spanish;
a skirmish ensued. When the Spaniards scribe (Oviedo) protested
saying that the Indians did not understand a word which had been
spoken to them, Oveido records that the soldiers laughed at him.
Karen
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506.7 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Tue Aug 18 1992 20:58 | 17 |
| The ascendent Aztecs had conquered other peoples of Central America,
who conquered others before them, before them...
War was common before the Spanish.
In fact, the Spanish followed the ancient proverb of divide and rule,
and had the same "right" of conquest that has always existed in
history.
Because we examine one side of the struggle, the Spanish, and pronounce
them barbarians, we don't go further and examine the Aztecs and other
other "social groupings".
The Spanish conquered the meek and warrior nations of Central America
alike. Ritual human sacrifice in Tenochititlan has stopped.
That's history.
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506.8 | Lets Really Look at History | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Aug 19 1992 08:56 | 12 |
| Re: .7
Maybe the Ritual killings stopped......plenty of "regular" killings
continued, though.....helped along by the Spanish.
You are correct that the native people were not totally innocent,
history should indeed be studied. My "complaint" is that we try to
make the conquest, torture, and runination of the local people into
some kind of "holy" quest by saying that the Spanish and others
were on a religious quest.
Marc H.
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506.9 | | MAGEE::FRETTS | Have you faced a fear today? | Wed Aug 19 1992 09:49 | 12 |
|
What makes me uncomfortable about the glorification of these
conquests of native peoples, in addition to the atrocities and
injustices that were done to them, is that there is still a
Christian mindset that says - go out and convert those who
haven't heard the "good word". Some Christians continue to
try and force their religious beliefs on people who are not
interested. Some extreme fundamentalists might do rather
bizarre things to achieve that goal.
Carole
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506.10 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:35 | 16 |
| No one is "glorifying" the conquest of native Americans by the Spanish,
at least not in this conference.
Of course there is a "Christian mindset" to teach and baptize. It was
commanded by Jesus. I will repeat the Great Commission in this
conference every time it is suggested that it doesn't exist or doesn't
apply.
"force" was not the instrument of the conversion of Mexico. The bishops
and priests of New Spain were writing of their despair in converting
the native people of America as the Spanish most native people had
contact with were cruel. After the miraculous appearance of the
Blessed Virgin Mary at Guadalupe, there was a radical change in the
whole of Mexico, and native people were converted by their own free
will in the hundreds of thousands to belief in Jesus Christ and peace
came to Mexico.
|
506.11 | ponderings... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | movers and shakers | Wed Aug 19 1992 18:10 | 41 |
| Patrick,
I agree with many of your points.
> In fact, the Spanish followed the ancient proverb of divide and rule,
> and had the same "right" of conquest that has always existed in
> history.
> Because we examine one side of the struggle, the Spanish, and pronounce
> them barbarians, we don't go further and examine the Aztecs and other
> other "social groupings".
Yes, Aztecs and other "social groupings" were also "barbaric," according
to western standards. Can it be generally said that the Spanish were
equally barbaric as some of the other native social groupings in the New
World?
If so, would you think that the fact that the Spanish were Christians
would or should have made a difference in their behavior towards the
people of the New World? (Rhetorical questions, I realize, but I've
found myself contemplating them a great deal lately, particularly with
the 500 year anniversary of Columbus' voyage upon us.)
For by the time the conquistadors reached the shores of the New World,
delivering and enforcing the church's proclamation, they had the advantage
of over a thousand years of stringent Christian teaching, faith, worship
and witnessing. They had well over a millenium to grow in the
understanding of the life, death and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Is it enigmatic that the Spanish, as a homogenously Christ-centered
people, did not approach the peoples of the New World with more civil,
compassionate and moral behavior than other "barbaric" social groupings
who were not only not Christians, but had never even heard of Jesus
Christ? It is to me.
> That's history.
Yes, indeed; and when we don't learn from history, it has this queer
tendancy to repeat itself.
Karen
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506.12 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Aug 19 1992 18:35 | 9 |
| Actually, the Spanish were the most experienced people in Europe in the
science of warfare at that time. The "Spanish", in fact, had just
spent about 700 years expelling Arabs from Spain, and united the
kingdoms of Aragon and Castile. They were the rising European power at
the time. Italy was in decline. Real peace wouldn't come until the
defeat of Napoleon centuries later.
The point is the Spanish seem uncivilized to us but they were the
product of their time.
|
506.13 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Thu Aug 20 1992 10:18 | 6 |
| Besides, conversion of the local "savages" was not exactly at the top
of the list of priorties for the Spanish explorers and conquistadors.
They were more interested in obaining wealth and personal
aggrandizement. Conversion was merely a secondary enterprise.
Mike
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506.14 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | movers and shakers | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:15 | 17 |
| Patrick .12,
> Actually, the Spanish were the most experienced people in Europe in
the science of warfare at that time....The point is the Spanish seem
uncivilized to us but they were the product of their time. <
I see brilliant shades of today's U.S.A. in this. We too enjoy a
generally enviable position of warfare expertise, in much the same
fashion as the Spanish did several hundred years ago. It is doubtful
they considered themselves uncivilized, as we too, generally consider
ourselves among the most civilized and greatest of all contemporary
peoples on earth.
If we survive, I wonder how "civilized" our contemporary society will be
viewed a few hundred years hence.
Karen
|
506.15 | Killed not for gold, but sodomy...? | CARTUN::BERGGREN | movers and shakers | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:39 | 94 |
| In Columbia, at least, according to Alan Ereira the historian author
of _The Elder brothers_, it was not so much the pursuit of gold or
Christian conversion that raised conflict between the Spanish and
indigenous peoples to crisis proportions. Rather it was finally the
Spaniard's revulsion of the native's "bodily shamelessness" and their
"sexual licentiousness" which eventually led to the slaughter of the
native population.
It appears that between 1514 and 1599 the Spanish and natives
coexisted in a somewhat awkward and restless peace with a minimal
amount of bloodshed. In a visit around 1525 to Taybo, one of the
early cities commanded by the Spanish, Oveida reports in his log:
"In this place Taybo it seemed that there was much gold, and the
governor commanded the Christians, with the threat of heavy
penalties, that they should not take it from the Indians, because
he said that from the start he wanted to pacify the land. They
should understand that this was in their own interest; but the
soldiers had other ideas, and become restive under this
restraint...."
Tensions would continue to mount however. For the Spanish, as well
as being devout Christians, were accustomed to being surrounded and
embraced by an all-male authoritarian society. Women were totally
submissive. The native socieites, on the other hand, were primarily
egalitarian: both men and women held high positions of leadership
and authority. This was incomprehensible to the Spanish.
In addition, Spanish society was also devoutly sexually repressed and
"totally immersed in a crusade for moral purity." Who else then,
other than a wickedly sinful and ignorant people, would dress so
scantily and not realize the gross immodesty of this practice? For
totally unlike Columbian society, "it was not uncommon in Madrid for
a husband to stab his wife if she was immodest enough to show a
glimpse of her feet in public." One can only imagine the Spaniard's
shock in viewing happily and carefree bare-breasted native women
going about their daily routines without shame or admonishment from
either native men or women for their exposed skin.
The author asserts that Spanish society was a homophobic one.
Spaniards went to great lengths to stress masculine traits and
virtues. No man was a man unless he sported a beard and bodily hair.
Upon arriving in Columbia and observing the natives for a time, the
Spanish believed them to be primarily homosexual, evidenced not only
by egalitarian form of law and order and authority, but also by the
men's lack of body hair, and in the eyes of the Spaniards, men who
grew no beards or moustaches were blatently effeminate.
But ultimately it was the native's acceptance and enjoyment of their
own bodies, and of their sexual expressiveness, particularly the act
of sodomy which both sexes enjoyed, that precipitated the slaughter
of thousands of natives beginning in 1599. In this year, Juan Gural
Velon, then governor of Santa Marta, called a meeting of the native
chieftans and informed them that he intended to put a stop to their
"wicked sinfulness:"
"And if any other Indian is found to have committed or to
practise the wicked and unnatural sin of sodomy he is condemned so
that in the part and place that I shall specify he shall be
garrotted in the customary manner and next he shall be burned alive
and utterly consumed to dust so that he shall have no memorial and
it is to be understood by the Indians that this punishment shall be
extended to all who commit this offence.
And they shall be condemned, any and each of the, and their
houses shall be demolished and burned in which they lived when they
committed the crime, and no person whatsoever of whatever estate or
condition shall dare to return to rebuild of populate it without
permission of the magistrates under sentence of death."
It is not clear whether they understood in detail what the governor
meant, but they fully understood the implications. The Spanish
intended to destroy the natives and their way of life by imposing
their own laws backed by the threat of death. The awkward and uneasy
coexistence between the Spanish and indigenous peoples now came to an
abrupt end. The Spaniard's crusade for moral purity expanded with a
vengeance in Columbia.
War broke out. The native's envenomed arrows were no match for the
armored soldiers and their guns. Over the next several months
thousand of natives lost their lives - all of their towns were taken
over and sacked as the soldiers desired. Thousands of refugees fled
up into the Sierra mountain where most died of starvation or
pestilence.
The Sierra which used to be home to an estimated 250,000 - 300,000
natives, saw their numbers decimated within a few years to less than
40,000, the result, (as this author infers from eye-witness accounts)
not of a lust for gold, but for the lust of imposing one society's
view of "moral purity" onto another.
Karen
|
506.16 | I see | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Aug 25 1992 10:37 | 8 |
| re Note 506.15 by CARTUN::BERGGREN:
Karen,
So you are saying that a campaign based on "family values" is
nothing new?
Bob
|
506.17 | ! | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Keep on loving boldly! | Tue Aug 25 1992 17:37 | 6 |
| Bob .16,
You know, your wit is even drier than mine.
Richard
|