If the early
medieval church had spent most of its efforts telling the Romans they needed
to have "reconciliation" with the Gauls, and the Gauls needed to
reject "colonialism", modern French culture never would have come
about, and nor would have one of the most powerful nations in history, France.
Though a large portion of France owes its heritage to the Franks, a Germanic
tribe from northern Europe, it also owes much of its heritage to the Gauls, a
Celtic tribe native to France. And both of these peoples learned much of how
they structured their civilisation from the Romans (who got it from others,
originally, as well), and especially the Roman Church.
Rather than
waste their time on such unbiblical applications of biblical words, the
medieval Church focused on infusing the Gauls and Franks with a combined
national identity, taught them to learn everything they could from the Romans,
and created one of the most successful nations in history. Rather than
continually lament the past, they looked to the greater peoples who had come
before them and built on the gifts that Roman Colonialism had given them. France
may not have reached the heights of the dominance of Rome (though it took a few
shots at it), but it built a civilisation that the Romans would have been impressed
with.
A lot of the
modern Church’s focus on "reconciliation" with conquered peoples is in
actuality paganism, because it is really just perpetual guilt, dressed up with
Christian language, and a continual throwing of the sins of the colonial powers
in their face, and the perpetual victimhood of the colonized. It is fake
Christianity, and it will not serve those who are being offered it. It will simply
stunt their civilisations. The Church should learn the great lessons from
history, not modern progressive academics that forge their ideas in an
anti-Christian and anti-Philosophical academic culture, that is void of much of the wisdom of the Church of eons past which built those very same
universities originally.
How did the
Church in the past think through such issues? Well, I discussed that in part here.
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