2 days ago5 points(+0/-0/+5Score on mirror)1 child
Historical Christians wanted to forcefully convert jews. The patriarch of Rome [refused and forced Christians to financially compensate them](https://www.ccjr.us/dialogika-resources/primary-texts-from-the-history-of-the-relationship/gregory-i). Judaism was permitted survival for over a millennia while native European religions and customs were forcefully wiped out.
Perhaps the Catholics have no one to blame but their own leadership.
The Revolution already eliminated France's sort of Aristotelianized Catholicism as the dominant religion. The Revolutionaries initially pushed atheism; Robespierre's rule then pushed non-Christian theism.
Napoleon's era actually restored Catholicism's dominance to some degree. Were it not for Napoleon's partial reversal of the Revolution, Catholicism would have been even weaker in the French Republic.
Bonaparte was beginning to look into openly anti-Jew reforms when he was conveniently overthrown by the ~~Rothschild~~ Sixth Coalition.
Furthermore, Napoleon had already eliminated Jewish (Religious) Schools and outlawed the speaking of Yiddish, in addition to several financial reforms which stripped the Rothschild banking cartel of most of its power in French lands. Bonaparte was a true reformer, and he believed (falsely, but who can blame him?) that if the kikes could be forced to integrate by tearing down their self-segregated ghettos and religious schools and such, then they would essentially cut the shit and fly right. Sadly, he never got the chance before it all fell apart.
Perhaps the Catholics have no one to blame but their own leadership.
He attempted to save jws from judaism, but it was always willingly.
Jesus once converted 3,000 kikes in one day, but only if the rodents chose to be saved.
It's fun to be edgy, but the theology of forced conversion is a complex topic.
Perhaps forced conversions is moral given the impact it has on a culture and future generations of children?
Perhaps the ends justifying the means goes against everything Jesus wanted us to be?