- #71
CaptainQuasar
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mheslep said:I'm aware that Augustine wrote actively against the Donatists and eventually asked Rome to cut off their funds. I don't know that he went further than that. Do you have a source?
“Why, therefore, should not the Church use force in compelling her lost sons to return, if the lost sons compelled others to their destruction?”
“Is it not a part of the care of the shepherd, when any sheep have left the flock, even though not violently forced away, but led astray by tender words and coaxing blandishments, to bring them back to the fold of his master when he has found them, by the fear or even the pain of the whip, if they show symptoms of resistance;”
(emphasis mine) Augustine was the Bishop of Hippo at the point when Roman Catholicism was the official state religion of the Empire, at a time when Church officials had temporal power as well as spiritual. I'll leave it up to the reader whether he would have had any part in handing out the fear and pain of the whip. And whether it was his authoring of doctrine like this that led the actions of the later Church.“Is it not a part of the care of the shepherd, when any sheep have left the flock, even though not violently forced away, but led astray by tender words and coaxing blandishments, to bring them back to the fold of his master when he has found them, by the fear or even the pain of the whip, if they show symptoms of resistance;”
mheslep, I'll further ask: are you making your judgments based upon descriptions of the Donatists written by Catholics or Donatists? I have been unaware of any writings by the other party or even a neutral party.
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