Sometimes
thrift stores are a source of valuable information. Not long ago I found a
religion text book for the Junior year of high school copyrighted in 1945 by
Mentzer, Bush & Company in Chicago. It’s called The Ark and the Dove…as in “the Dove guides the Ark through the
ages.”
Below is the entire
excerpt on Islam (pp 290-292), which in 1945 was called Mohammedanism. There
was no smarmy political correctness in Catholic religion classes in 1945.
Mohammedanism Threatens the Church
Still farther to the East, gigantic
forces were gathering for another and a prolonged assault on Christ’s Church.
In the year 610 a man named Mohammed began preaching in Mecca, a city in
Arabia. He claimed he was called to preach by the angel Gabriel. He opposed
polytheism and taught a strange mixture of paganism, Judaism, and Christianity.
In 622 he was forced to flee from Mecca to Medina. This flight is known as the Hegira.
In Medina Mohammed’s conduct became scandalous, his creed militant. The new religion came to be called Islam, meaning submission to the will of God. Its key book, the Koran, was compiled by Mohammed himself. It preached prayer, fasting, almsgiving, and at least one pilgrimage to Mecca during a lifetime. But it also preached fatalism–Kismet, “What is to be, must be.” It promised a heavenly reward of most extravagant and sensual pleasures and finally it added this doctrine: “The sword is the key to heaven. To die on the battlefield fighting against the ‘unbelievers’ is the surest way to this heaven of delights.”
Followers
flocked to Mohammed and before his death in 632 most of Arabia was in his
power. His last injunction to his followers was to propagate Islam by the
sword. They obeyed, cutting a swath of death through Christian lands for a
thousand years.
The
Caliphs, successors and representatives of Mohammed, continued his work. Their
religious followers were variously known as Moslems, followers of Islam; Arabs
when of the West, Saracens when of the East; Moors when from Morocco, and later
Turks, when of Turkestan. Wild religious fanatics they were, filled with zeal
and love of plunder. Going on a rampage of conquest, with Constantinople and
Rome as their goals, the followers of Islam spread like wild-fire in the last
quarter of the seventh century. They rolled to the gates of Constantinople
where, being checked, they turned south, and then west across North Africa to
Gibraltar which was reached in the year 700.
Thus,
while the Church was succeeding in her mission of converting the barbarians in
the West, she was losing all of Asia Minor and the near east, as well as
Africa. Nor was the end yet.
Eighth
Century: St Boniface and Charlemagne
Surging across the Straits of Gibraltar the Moors and Arabs overcame the Christian Gothic
Kingdom of Spain and rushed on over the Pyrenees into Southern France. Here on
the plains of Tours in 732 they encountered the Frankish army of Charles
Martel, that is, the “Little Hammer.” The fate of the Christian West was
hanging in the balance. From dawn til dusk the battle raged, indecisively,
scimitar against battleax. Charles was everywhere. The Moslem leader fell.
Darkness put an end to the bloody conflict and when morning came the Moslems
had fled. Christendom had been saved. The Battle of Tours was over.
In the East also the Mohammedan
invaders were checked before the city of the Eastern Caesars by the terrifying
and mysterious “Greek fire,” 717-718. Constantinople thus became the eastern
bastion, holding off the destroying forces of Mohammedanism and protecting a
Europe ill-prepared to meet the dreaded foe.
In today's religion textbooks, the Battle of Tours and Charles Martel are probably described like this.
The 732 AD Battle of Tours, described by the political left in 2016 |
In today's religion textbooks, the Battle of Tours and Charles Martel are probably described like this.
There is this part of me that desires the not p.c. Donald Trump to win the election, burn the current crop of lies, and return education to clarity and most of all truth.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this buried treasure! Homeschoolers should consider this compare and contrast writing assignment, with each child submitting their writings to their Bishop asking for his input.
God bless you, and the family!
This four-part theology text can still be purchased at Our Lady Of Victory/ Lepanto Press. My children love these books. After comparing them to the "religion" books used in local Catholic high schools, these texts are a big impetus for me to continue homeschooling the souls entrusted to my care.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for your excellent article. I definitely will be sharing it with others. :D
ReplyDelete