“In a now-familiar paradox of punishment it was explained again and again that all these physical attacks were a kindness. The Church persecutes, Augustine said, in the spirit of love. Jerome, the biblical scholar and saint, concurred: it was not cruel to defend God’s honour – in the Bible sinners suffer punishments up to and including death. Chrysostom agreed: if he were to punish your earthly body, he reassured his listeners, it was only to protect your eternal one so that ‘you may be saved, and we may rejoice, and God may be glorified now and always, for ever and ever without end. Amen.’ Those receiving such salvation might, not unreasonably, have felt otherwise. One monk in Shenoute’s care was saved with beatings so savage that he died of his injuries. And what if people, disinclined to rejoice, became frightened by the fact that their neighbours were spying on them, reporting on them, hounding them in their homes? Well, fear too had its benefits. Better to be scared than to sin. ‘Where there is terror,’ said Augustine, ‘there is salvation . . . Oh, merciful savagery!’ The intellectual foundations for a thousand years of theocratic oppression were being laid.”
Quote by Catherine Nixey
Work
The Darkening Age: The Christian Destruction of the Classical World
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
“The ripples of the kind heart are the highest blessings of the Universe.”
Source: Yoga and Vipassana: An Integrated Life Style
“Nothing can make our life, or the lives of other people, more beautiful than perpetual kindness.”
Source: A Prince on Paper
“People remember us, think of us, and speak of us for how we make them feel.”
Source: Walking the Path of Compassion
Source: Walking the Path of Compassion
Source: Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem
“The little things you do can be very significant to others.”
Source: Mary Barton