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Christianity and violence have been associated when religious violence is carried out by persons, organizations, or institutions in furtherance of Christian dogma, or in support of those who share their beliefs.[1]

There have been numerous cases throughout history of groups and individuals committing violence and justifying their actions with Christian beliefs. In Letter to a Christian Nation, critic of religion Sam Harris writes that "...faith inspires violence in at least two ways. First, people often kill other human beings because they believe that the creator of the universe wants them to do it... Second, far greater numbers of people fall into conflict with one another because they define their moral community on the basis of their religious affiliation..."[2]

There is also a strong doctrinal and historical imperative within Christianity against violence,[3] and Christianity includes prominent traditions of nonviolence.

Theological justification of Christian violence[edit]

Christian ethics ostensibly professes pacifism, and in fact some early Christian philosophers explicitly disavowed violence. Origen, for instance, stated: "Christians could never slay their enemies. For the more that kings, rulers, and peoples have persecuted them everywhere, the more Christians have increased in number and grown in strength."[4] Clement of Alexandria wrote: "Above all, Christians are not allowed to correct with violence."[5]

However, religious scholar Mark Juergensmeyer notes,

"It is good to remember, however, that despite its central tenets of love and peace, Christianity—like most traditions—has always had a violent side. The bloody history of the tradition has provided images as disturbing as those provided by Islam or Sikhism, and violent conflict is vividly portrayed in the Bible. This history and these biblical images have provided the raw material for theologically justifying the violence of contemporary Christian groups. Attacks on abortion clinics, for instance, have been viewed not only as assaults on a practice that Christians regard as immoral, but also as skirmishes in a grand confrontation between forces of evil and good that has social and political implications."[6]: 19–20  The statement attributed to Jesus "I come not to bring peace, but to bring a sword" has been interpreted by some as a call to arms to Christians.[6]

Holy War[edit]

Murphy examined the Christian concept of Holy War. He questioned "how a culture formally dedicated to fulfilling the injunction to 'love thy neighbor as thyself' could move to a point where it sanctioned the use of violence against the alien both outside and inside society". The religious sanctioning of the concept of "holy war" was a turning point in Christian attitudes towards violence; "Pope Gregory VII made the Holy War possible by drastically altering the attitude of the church towards war... Hitherto a knight could obtain remission of sins only by giving up arms, but Urban invited him to gain forgiveness 'in and through the exercise of his martial skills'". A Holy War was defined by the Roman Catholic Church as "war that is not only just, but justifying; that is, a war that confers positive spiritual merit on those who fight in it".[7][8]

Genocide[edit]

Daniel Chirot said that the Biblical account of Joshua and the Battle of Jericho was used to justify the genocide of Catholics during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland:[9]: 3 

Chirot went on to quote the First Book of Samuel:

Chirot interprets this passage as "the sentiment, so clearly expressed, that because a historical wrong was committed, justice demands genocidal retribution."[9]: 7–8 

Dr Ian Guthridge cited many instances of genocide in the Bible:[10]: 319–320 

Acts of violence by Christians[edit]

Anti-abortion[edit]

Abortion clinics have been high-profile targets of violence. Christian anti-abortion terrorists and terrorist organizations include the Army of God, The Lambs of Christ, Clayton Waagner, Mike Bray, James Kopp, Paul Jennings Hill and Eric Robert Rudolph.

Transnational groups[edit]

Christian Identity[edit]

Christian Identity is a loosely affiliated global group of churches and individuals devoted to a racializedtheology that asserts North European whites are the direct descendants of the lost tribes of Israel, God'schosen people.[11][12] Christian Identity includes such Christian terrorist groups as The Covenant, The Sword, and the Arm of the Lord (CSA), Phineas Priesthood and the Oklahoma Constitutional Militia, also known as the Universal Church of God. Christian Identity is also related to other groups such asAryan Nations, Aryan Republican Army (ARA) and the Patriots Council.[citation needed]

Christian Identity has been associated with terrorist Eric Robert Rudolph, who carried out a series of bombings across thesouthern United States, which killed three people and injured at least 150 others, because he violently opposed abortionand homosexuality as contrary to Christian doctrine. His mother spent time with Nord Davis, a Christian Identity ideologue who wrote propaganda claiming that the world was controlled by Jews, and which advocated killing gays and those who engaged in mixed-race relationships.[11] Rudolph's sister-in-law claimed that he was a member of the sect, but Rudolph himself claims to have only been a member of a Christian Identity church for six months because he was dating the daughter of Identity Pastor Dan Gayman, and wrote "I was born a Catholic, and with forgiveness I hope to die one."[13] Idaho State University sociology professor James A. Aho said, "I would prefer to say that Rudolph is a religiously inspired terrorist, because most mainstream Christians consider Christian Identity to be a heresy."[12]

Christian Identity has been associated with Peter Kevin McGregor Langan and Richard "Wild Bill" Guthrie, founders of the Aryan Republican Army (ARA), a paramilitary gang which has been connected to hate fueled terrorist attacks involving train derailments, assassinations, bombings and a string of professionally executed armed bank robberies planned to finance an overthrow of the US Federal government.[12][14] Similar social, cultural, and personal motivations have linked the ARA to a loose network of extreme radical right paramilitary cells including the White Supremacy movement and Christian Identity.[14]

South African branches of Christian Identity have been accused of involvement in terrorist activity, including the 2002 Soweto bombings.[15]

Groups in the United States[edit]

Army of God[edit]

The Army of God is an anti-abortion terrorist organization which holds that their activity is lawful and theologically justified: using deadly force to end abortion in the United States.[16] Their ultimate goal is to establish a Christian theocracy through violence, and the group claims that the murder of abortion doctors is "justifiable homicide,” exemplifying the group’s evolving philosophy from violence against property to violence against individuals.[17] The group utilize leaderless resistance, a tactic of irregular warfare used against the American government by some members of the radical right - the group "is not so much an organization” but more of “a shared set of ideas and enemies.”[18][19] According to its manual, it is "not really an army, humanly speaking...God is the General and Commander-in-Chief."[20]: 150  The Army of God dates back more than 20 years and is linked to an underground movement whose members are trained to evade surveillance and to use violence as a method of protest including opposition to abortion.[19][21] Army of God members have records associated with numerous acts of violence including bombings, shootings, and killings.[22]The Army of God is considered a violent offshoot of Christian Identity[citation needed], a white supremacist religion considered anti-gay, anti- Semitic and anti-foreigner.

In 1985, Rev. Mike Bray, the "chaplain" of the Army of God,[23] was convicted of destroying seven abortion facilities in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia, causing damages of over $1 million. Rev. Paul Hill, an associate of the Army of God, shot and killed Dr. John Britton in Pensacola, Florida in 1994.[6]: 11  James Kopp, a member of the Army of God, shot and killed Dr. Barnett Slepian in 1998.[24]

In 1998, letters were sent to news organizations and law enforcement claiming the Army of God carried out several of the attacks attributed to Eric Rudolph.

In 2001, at the height of the United States anthrax attacks, more than 170 abortion clinics and doctors offices in 14 states received letters containing white powder and the message "You have been exposed to anthrax. We are going to kill all of you. Army of God, Virginia DARE Chapter."[25] In December 2003 Clayton Waagner was convicted for these attacks.[23] Waagner had entered the home of antiabortion militant Neal Horsley, tied him up and held him at gunpoint, and then made a taped confession. Ann Glazier, director of clinic security at the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said that during the trial Waagner had "repeatedly bragged that he had been the most wanted man in America and that he was a terrorist. It was unbelievable."[23] Salon magazine reported that whilst the press had generally called Waagner a terrorist, they "studiously avoid use of the word 'Christian'".[23] Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political Research Associates, said "If Waagner had been a self-identified Muslim terrorist instead of a Christian terrorist, he'd have been lynched by now...But if it's fair to say if we can see the religious motivations in theTaliban, we ought to be able to see them in Waagner or Eric Rudolph."[23]

An Army of God manual found buried in the yard of Rochelle "Shelly" Shannon, an Oregon activist convicted of shooting Wichita doctor George Tiller, provides detailed and explicit instructions for home-brewing plastic explosives, fashioning detonators, deactivating alarm systems, cutting phone, gas, and water lines, and includes the statement: "Annihilating abortuaries is our purest form of worship." However, according to records compiled over a period of twelve years by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) and besieged clinics which included 123 cases of arson, 37 bombings in 33 states, and more than 1,500 cases of stalking, assault, sabotage and burglary, a large portion of staff time was devoted to routine women's reproductive health care -pap smears, teaching and supplying birth control methods, and treating sexually transmitted diseases – not to abortions. Some of the clinics targeted did not provide abortion services but were subjected to violence nonetheless.[26]

Aryan Nations[edit]

Aryan Nations is a white supremacist group founded by Richard Girnt Butler as an arm of the Christian Identity groupChurch of Jesus Christ-Christian, with headquarters listed as a Lexington, S.C. post office box. Aryan Nations followers admire Adolf Hitler and claim that minority group members are "mud people" and spawns of Satan. Aryan Nations doctrine follows that of Christian Identity which claims that Europeans are the lost tribe of Israel, Jews are satanic, blacks are subhuman, and the Federal Government is illegal.[27]

In August 1999 Buford O. Furrow, Jr., a Christian Identity activist and member of Aryan Nations, carried out the Los Angeles Jewish Community Center shooting, injuring three little boys and two female workers.[6]: 19  Authorities quoted Furrow as saying he wanted his act to be "a wake-up call to America to kill Jews." Less than an hour after the attack, Furrow gunned down Joseph Ileto, a Filipino-American employee of the United States Postal Service. Furrow told investigators that he considered killing the mail carrier a "good opportunity" because Ileto was non-white and worked for thefederal government.[28] Furrow received two life sentences plus 110 years in prison for the attack.[29]

Christian Patriots[edit]

The anti-federalist, extremist tax-resistance movements, seditious beliefs, religious and racial hatred of the American militia movement and other contemporary white supremacist organizations in association with the broader Christian Patriot movementactively incorporate Christian scripture and biblical liturgy to justify and support violent activities.[30]: 105–120  Timothy McVeigh who, along with his accomplice Terry Nichols, carried out the Oklahoma City bombing on April 19, 1995, has admitted to a belief in Christian Patriotism and involvement in Patriot activities.[31]

Ku Klux Klan[edit]

Ku Klux Klan with a burning cross

The original Ku Klux Klan was a proponent of a fundamentalist Christian theology strongly influenced by Christian Reconstructionism, hoping to "reconstruct" the United States along biblical (primarily Old Testament) lines and establish a white-dominated theocracy.[32][33] They have often used terrorism, violence, and acts of intimidation, such as cross burning and lynching, to oppress African Americans and other social or ethnic groups including Catholics. Hundreds of indictments for crimes of violence and terrorism have been issued against them, and many Klan members have been prosecuted.[34]

The Ku Klux Klan today consists of many subgroups (not all of which are even religious) who have individually carried out terrorist acts. One example is the Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, who in 1998 were found guilty of burning a 100-year-old black Baptist church to the ground.[35]

The noose and burning cross[edit]

The noose and cross burning of the Christian cross are two well known symbols of terror primarily associated with theKu Klux Klan, made infamous during lynching in the period of the late nineteenth century and still in use today. “A noose is a symbol of America’s oldest form of domestic terrorism.”[36] "The noose is replacing the burning cross in the mind of much of the public as the leading symbol of the Klan."[37]

Cross burnings, while not that common compared to overall crime, still take place in the US today and have a huge impact on the victim and the entire community. Cross burnings are generally covert acts performed in rural areas where there are scarce witnesses and bonds between conspirators, especially if part of an organized hate group, are strong. "They are a poisonous kind of hatred and can increase racial tension that may already exist in the area."[38]

Lambs of Christ[edit]

The Lambs of Christ is an anti-abortion terrorist organization which holds that their activity is lawful and theologically justified: using deadly force to end abortion in the United States.[39] James Kopp, who shot and killed Dr. Barnett Slepian in 1998, was a Lambs of Christ activist and a member of the Army of God.[24][39]

Groups in Indonesia[edit]

On July 26, 2007, 17 Christians from Poso, Indonesia, were convicted of religion-inspired terrorism under Indonesian law. Fourteen year sentences were given to two of the seventeen for their main roles in the killings, while ten were sentenced to twelve year terms. Five were convicted in separate hearings and received eight year sentences for their part in the "acts of terrorism by the use of violence." A Christian mob attacked, murdered, and beheaded two Muslim fishermen in September 2006, reportedly as retaliation for the execution in 2006 of three Christian farmers, who were convicted of leading a militant group which killed hundreds of Muslims in Poso in 2000, an execution that attracted a plea for clemency from the pope, and accusations from Amnesty International that the trial was unfair.[40][41]

The convictions come in the context of seven years of violence between Christian and Muslim groups in the province, including the beheading of three Christian schoolgirls on the way to school and the deaths of hundreds of Muslims and Christians, and campaigns of religious cleansing on both sides.[42]

Militant leader Benny Doro said that he decided to become a commander of a Christian group when he saw Jesus Christ hovering over his head like a bird during a battle. He claimed that, with Jesus' help, he caught a bullet in his hand.[20]: 73 

Groups in India[edit]

National Liberation Front of Tripura[edit]

The National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) is a rebel group operating in Tripura, North-East India. The NLFT were declared a terrorist organization under the Indian Prevention of Terrorism Act in 2002. The NLFT manifesto says that they want to expand what they describe as the kingdom of God and Christ in Tripura.[43] They are accused of forcing indigenous tribes to give up Hinduism and become Christian in areas under their control.[43] In 2000 the Indian government of Tripura announced that it had hard evidence that the Baptist Church of Tripura was backing the NLFT.[43] Nagmanlal Halam, secretary of the Noapara Baptist Church in Tripura, was arrested and found to be in possession of a large quantity of explosives.[43] Halam confessed to buying and supplying explosives to the NLFT for the past two years.[43] The National Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorismclassified the National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) as one of the ten most active terrorist groups in the world in 2003.[44] They wrote:[44]

The stated goals of the NLFT include the overthrow imperialism, capitalism and neo-colonialism by way of armed struggle so they can form a distinct and independent Borok civilization in Twipra.[45] They state that they have been completely marginalized by the immigration of nonnative peoples, been oppressed socio-politically, and economically exploited. They believe they are facing an identity crisis due to chauvinism and imperialism from what they call the so-called Aryan descendants of Hindustan(India).[45][46]

Nagaland Rebels[edit]

The Nagaland Rebels is a coalition of rebel groups operating in Nagaland, North-East India. The largest of these is theNational Socialist Council of Nagaland-Isak-Muivah (NSCN-IM), which is fighting for the establishment of a "Nagaland for Christ".[47][48] The NSCN-IM have carried out numerous acts of terrorism against the Indian Army, other ethnic groups, and opponents within their own ethnic group.[47] The insurgency has been waged since the 1947 Indian declaration of independence, and has resulted in tens of thousands of deaths.[47]

Baruah writes that "Christianity is an essential part of Naga identity"; the NSCN-IM estimate that 95% of Nagas are Christian.[49] According to Gordon Means "the religious issue cannot be overlooked... A great number of Nagas are Christians... the Naga Federal Government (NFG) could play upon the fear of many Nagas that within the Indian Union the religious freedom of a small Christian minority would be compromised. An independence movement that can cloak itself in the garb of both nationalism and religious righteousness has an initial advantage. And there can be no doubt that the rebel Nagas are a sincerely pious lot. By all accounts, hymn singing and prayers constitute an important part of their daily routine in their jungle hide-outs. The vice-president of the NFG, Mr. Mhiasiu, was a preacher before joining the underground. Serving as chaplains for the Home Guards are many Baptist ministers."[50]

Groups in Lebanon[edit]

Guardians of the Cedars[edit]

The Guardians of the Cedars is the paramilitary wing of the banned Lebanese Renewal Party, and one of severalChristian militias active in the Lebanese Civil War.[51] From 1973 their slogans have included "No Palestinian will remain on Lebanese soil" and "A good Palestinian is a dead Palestinian".[52] It should be noted that, the Palestinian people, like the Lebanese people, may be either Christian or Muslim. Neither Lebanese nor Palestinians are exclusively Christian or exclusively Muslim.

According to Judith Tucker, "the Guardians of the Cedars played an important role in terrorist strategy throughout the wars in Lebanon... They are best known today for the numberous attacks and cold-blooded murders of Palestinian civilians in the Sidonregion."[52] In an interview carried out by the Jerusalem Post, leader Abu Arz said that Palestinians should be ethnically cleansed from Lebanon "We shall drive them to the borders of 'brotherly' Syria and tell them to keep walking. Anyone who looks back, stops or returns will be shot on the spot. When I suggest that such harsh procedures might put the Christian world against them, he simply says: 'We are the Christian world.'"[53]

Lebanese Forces[edit]

The Lebanese Forces (also known as the Christian Phalangist Militia) was a right wing group,[54] who had support from the Maronite community, during a civil war based not on religious beliefs, but on the control of political and economic power.[55][56] The Lebanese Forces were one of several Christian militias active during the Lebanese Civil War;[57] it carried out the Sabra and Shatila massacre in which an estimated 700-3500 Palestinian refugees were massacred. The attack on the camps occurred within a few days of the assassination of the Maronite Christian president of Lebanon. The Lebanese Forces attacked the camps after being let in to them by Israeli soldiers who sealed off the two camps for three days. Attacks against Israel by Palestinian guerrillas, led Israel to invade and occupy southern Lebanon in 1982.[58]

In 2000, Asaad Shaftari, who was second in command of the Lebanese Forces during the civil war, made a public apology to his victims, admitting that the LF had carried out acts of terror, such as calling in hoax bomb threats to movie theaters and then attacking the fleeing civilians with heavy artillery, and the kidnapping and execution of random civilians, and that "he had signed many orders for captives to be executed and how, when he felt pangs of conscience, he was unburdened of them by a priest who granted him absolution to kill hundreds more.".[59] In his apology he stated "I apologize for the horror of war and what I did in this civil war in the name of `Lebanon' or `the cause' or `Christianity... I apologize because while defending what I thought was Christianity I was not practising any kind of true Christianity which is the love of others free from violence."[60][61]

Groups in Northern Ireland[edit]

Religion as a factor[edit]

Several people have stated that religion was a contributing factor to terrorism in Northern Ireland:

Mark Juergensmeyer wrote "Like residents of Belfast and London, Americans were beginning to learn to live with acts ofreligious terrorism: shocking, disturbing incidents of violence laced with the passion of religion - in these cases, Christianity"[6]: 19  and "The violence in Northern Ireland is justified by still other theological positions, Catholic and Protestant."[6]: 20  and "The ferocity of religious violence was brought home to me in 1998 when I received the news that a car bomb had exploded in a Belfast neighborhood I had visited the day before.[6]: 4 

Martin Dillon interviewed paramilitaries on both sides of the conflict, questioning how they could reconcile murder with their Christian convictions.[62] His interviewees included Kenny McClinton, a convicted murderer who once advocated beheading Roman Catholics and impaling their heads on railings, and who is now Pastor of the Ulster/American Christian Fellowship Ministry, and Billy Wright, a Born again Christian preacher who became one of the most feared paramilitary figures in Northern Ireland, and who accepts that, although his faith calls for him to defend his people, his own actions in this defense could lead to damnation (see Notable individuals).

First Minister of Northern Ireland The Revd. and Rt. Hon. Ian Paisley often cast the conflict in religious terms. He preached that the Roman Catholic Church, which he termed the "Popery", had deviated from the Bible, and therefore from true Christianity, giving rise to "revolting superstitions and idolatrous abuses". Paisley once said "The Provisional IRA is the military wing of the Roman Catholic Church"[63] and has claimed several times that the Pope is the Antichrist, most famously at the European Parliament, where he interrupted a speech byPope John Paul II, shouting "I denounce you as the Antichrist!" and holding up a red poster reading "POPE JOHN PAUL II ANTICHRIST".[64][65]

Pastor Alan Campbell has also identified the Papacy as the Antichrist, and has described the IRA as "Roman Catholic terrorists". Campbell preaches a Christian Identity theology; he is strongly against race-mixing, and supports the British Israel hypothesis, claiming that the Celto-Anglo-Saxon people of Ulster are the true "Israel of God".

Steve Bruce, a sociologist, wrote "The Northern Ireland conflict is a religious conflict. Economic and social considerations are also crucial, but it was the fact that the competing populations in Ireland adhered and still adhere to competing religious traditions which has given the conflict its enduring and intractable quality".[66]: 249  Reviewers agreed "Of course the Northern Ireland conflict is at heart religious".[67]

John Hickey wrote "Politics in the North is not politics exploiting religion. That is far too simple an explanation: it is one which trips readily off the tongue of commentators who are used to a cultural style in which the politically pragmatic is the normal way of conducting affairs and all other considerations are put to its use. In the case of Northern Ireland the relationship is much more complex. It is more a question of religion inspiring politics than of politics making use of religion. It is a situation more akin to the first half of seventeenth‑century England than to the last quarter of twentieth century Britain".[68]

Padraic Pearse was a devoted believer of the Christian faith, a writer, and one of the leaders of the Easter Rising.[69]In his writings he often identified Ireland with Jesus Christ to emphasise the suffering of the nation, and called for his readers to resurrect and redeem the nation, through self-sacrifice which would turn them into martyrs.[69] Browne states that Pearse’s "ideas of sacrifice and atonement, of the blood of martyrs that makes fruitful the seed of faith, are to be found all through [his] writings; nay, they have here even more than their religious significance, and become vitalizing factors in the struggle for Irish nationality".[69]

William Edward Hartpole Lecky, an Irish historian, wrote "If the characteristic mark of a healthy Christianity be to unite its members by a bond of fraternity and love, then there is no country where Christianity has more completely failed than Ireland".[70]

Sweeney argued that self-immolation, in the form of hunger strikes by Irish republicans, was religiously motivated and perceived.[71] He wrote "The Rising catapulted the cult of self-sacrifice to centre stage of twentieth century Irish militant politics in a strange marriage of Catholicism and republicanism. A religious and a sacrificial motif can be detected in the writings of those who participated in the 'bloody protest'. Brian O'Higgins, who helped in the rebel capture of Dublin's GPO in O'Connell Street, recalls how all the republications took turn reciting the Rosary every half hour during the rebellion. He writes that there 'was hardly a man in the volunteer ranks who did not prepare for death on Easter Saturday [sic][72] and there were many who felt as they knelt at the altar rails on Easter Sunday morning that they were doing no more than fulfilling their Easter duty - that they were renouncing the world and all the world held for them by making themselves worthy to appear before the Judgement Seat of God... The executions reinforced the sacrificial motif as Mass followed Mass for the dead leaders, linking them with the sacrifice of Christ, the ancient martyrs and heroes, and the honoured dead from previous revolts... These and other deaths by hungerstrike transformed not only the perceived sacrificial victims but, in the eyes of many ordinary Irish people, the cause for which they died. The martyrs and their cause became sacred."[71] Sweeney goes on to note that the culture of hunger strikes continued to be used by the Provisional IRA to great effect in the 1970s and 1980s, resulting in a revamped Sinn Fein, and mobilising huge sections of the Catholic community behind the republican cause.[71]: 13 

The Guardian newspaper attributed the murder of Martin O'Hagan, a former inmate of the Maze prison and a fearless reporter on crime and the paramilitaries, to the revival of religious fundamentalism.[73]

Organized paramilitary crime, including drugs and racketeering, have threatened civil society in Ireland as gangs with both Catholic and Protestant ties have engaged in activities such as "drug dealing, counterfeiting and forgery, money-laundering, benefits fraud, car theft, arms trading, extortion and cross-border smuggling" and influencing employment.[74]

Although often advocating nationalist policies, these groups consisted of and were supported by distinct religious groups in a religiously partitioned society. Groups on both sides advocated what they saw as armed defence of their own religious group.[75]: 134–135 

Groups in Russia[edit]

Many Russian political and paramilitary groups combine racism, nationalism, and Russian Orthodox beliefs.[76] "In Russia, on the other hand, even extreme nationalism was always coloured by Orthodoxy, and, consequently, was to be considered traditionalist".[77]

At the murder trial of Russian National Unity leader Igor Semenov, Vladimir Gusev, a Russian Orthodox priest, testified that "Judaism does not have any positive conception in the Christian sense", and he identified Hasidic and Ashkenazic Jews as members of totalitarian sects that "kill children, gather their blood, and use it to make matzah" (the Blood libel against Jews). He added that "The Jews should not celebrate Chanukah because it can insult the religious feelings of the Christians."[78]

Russian National Unity[edit]

Russian National Unity is an outlawed far right party responsible for several terrorist attacks, including murders on religious grounds, and the bombing of the US Consulate in Ekaterinburg.[76] In their manifesto "Bases of social conception of RNU" they advocate an increased role for the Russian Orthodox Church in all areas of life.[79]

Russian National Socialists[edit]

The Russian National Socialist Party bases itself on four principles: Orthodox Christianity, a strong state, aggressive Russian nationalism and non-Marxist socialism. Party leader A. Barkashov has advocated "a Hitlerite racial biology, and proclaims the need for creating an armed resistance movement against the supposed Jewish dictatorship in Russia."[77]: 7  In August 2007, a 23 year old member of the group was arrested for distributing a video on the Internet that showed two Muslims apparently being beheaded and shot by a militant wing of the RNSP.[80][81][82]

Groups in the former Yugoslavia[edit]

Michael Sells asserts that religious mythology played a crucial role in Bosnian genocide.[83]: backcover  He wrote about the religious ideology of Christoslavism:[83]: 36 

Sells asserts that the genocide in Bosnia:[83]: 89–90 

Sells asserts that these acts were seen as ethnoreligious purification:[83]: 51 

Norman Cigar asserts that, according to the world's respected fact-gathering organizations, the Christian Serbs committed over 90% of the war crimes and 100% of the genocide in Bosnia. Together, Christian Croats and Bosnian Muslims committed under 10% of the atrocities.[84]

Tsar Lazar Guard[edit]

The Tsar Lazar Guard is the paramilitary wing of the Movement of Veterans of Serbia. Its president Željko Vasiljević called it the "first uniformed Christian militia squad, comprised of war veterans from all over Serbia".[85] The group was officially formed at a swearing in ceremony at the Lazarica Church inKruševac on 5 May 2007. The group is said to have 5,000 troops.[86] The United Nations and NATO have classed Tsar Lazar's Guard as a terrorist group.[86] Tsar Lazar's Guard threatened to attack United Nations and NATO troops if Kosovo declared independence, and have stated their desire to detonate a nuclear bomb in Kosovo.[87]

White Eagles[edit]

The White Eagles were a Serbian paramilitary group which carried out a number of atrocities, massacres, and acts of terror over the non-Serb population both before and during the Yugoslav wars.[88][89] Mirko Jović, leader of the White Eagles, called for a "Christian, Orthodox Serbia with no Muslims and no unbelievers".[83]: 80 

Clarence Augustus Martin, in the book "Understanding Terrorism", classified the White Eagles as terrorists and accused them of practicing "gender-selective terrorism against men" for their deliberate targeting of Muslim civilian males.[90]: 312  Due to the widespread collusion between the Christian Serb regular forces and paramilitaries, local leaders classified acts of violence as "state terror. The Bosnian Muslims were being killed without any compunction. Those so-called Christian paramilitaries were all over, but in reality, they were an arm of the state... local Christian Serbs believed Bosnian Muslims were terrorists, while Bosnian Muslims felt terrorized by ethnic Christian Serb paramilitaries".[91]: 76 [92]

Stipe Mesić, the last president of the former Yugoslav Federation, described the violence carried out by the White Eagles as "terrorist actions" in his political memoirs.[93] The White Eagles were also described as terrorists by Elvedina Omerovic of the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Sandzak.[88]

The White Eagles were strongly anti-Semitic, stating in an official document titled The Jewish Vampire Ball that Jews are "the sons and servants of the devil... There are not enough words to describe all their deceit, deviancy, and crimes against the holy Church of Christ, that is, the Orthodox Church and its believers... [they are] killers, thieves, tricksters, wanderers and vermin".[94] The document went on to accuse Jews of inventing AIDS "in their monstrous laboratories".[94]: 129 

Other national groups[edit]

God's Army, Burma[edit]

God's Army is a Christian revolutionary group in armed rebellion against the military government of Burma. God's Army consists of around 100-200 veteran fighters, and is led by two twin brothers, who are believed by their followers to be immune to bullets.[95]

Sons of Freedom, Canada[edit]

Sons of Freedom are a sect of religious anarchists who believe man owes allegiance only to God, part of a Russian nonconformist movement called the Doukhobors (literally "spirit wrestlers") who came to Canada in 1899. Until 1962, the capital of the Sons of Freedom was a village in British Columbia, Krestova (which in Russian means "City of the Cross", to which, in 1966, the Sons of Freedom returned. The Sons of Freedom have used violence, terrorism, arson and explosives in their defiance of all "worldly" authority including the Canadian government, rebelling against laws requiring their children to attend school, government efforts to force relinquishment of their squatters' rights, and Canadian taxes. In 1961, the Freedomites' violence peaked as they bombed towns from Nelson to New Denver, blaming the government for the 1924 murder of Peter Lordly. As signs of protest the Sons of Freedom have marched nude, blown up power pylons, railroad bridges, and set fire to homes, often targeting their own property.[96]

The Lord's Resistance Army, Uganda[edit]

The Lord's Resistance Army is a guerrilla army engaged in an armed rebellion against the Ugandan government, and is accused of many acts of mutilation, torture, rape, abduction, the use of child soldiers and a number of massacres. The group aim to establish a Christian state by replacing the Ugandan constitution with the Bible's Ten Commandments.[97][98] The LRA has been known by a number of different names, including the "Lord's Army" (1987 to 1988) and the "Uganda Peoples Democratic Christian Army" (1988 to 1992).[99]

The LRA insurgency has displaced nearly two million people and more than 10,000 have been killed in massacres, while twice that number of children have been abducted by the LRA and forced to work as soldiers, porters and sex slaves.[100] LRA fighters wear rosary beads and recite passages from the Bible before battle, but some Islam is mixed into their beliefs as well.[101] The LRA uniform pips contain a white bible inside a heart.[102] Joseph Kony has justified murdering his own Acholi people with biblical references.[103][104][105]

The LRA have been noted for cutting off the hands, lips, breasts and noses of their victims. Leader Joseph Kony has claimed this is justified by the Bible, "If you pick up an arrow against us and we ended up cutting off the hand you used, who is to blame? You report us with your mouth, and we cut off your lips. Who is to blame? It is you! The Bible says that if your hand, eye or mouth is at fault, it should be cut off."[106] (referring to Ezekiel 23:25–34,Matthew 5:29–30, Matthew 18:8–9 and Mark 9:43–47)

Historical cases of Christian violence[edit]

Violence in the Holy Roman Empire[edit]

Early Christians frequently resorted to violent acts to expand and defend their religion; one famous quote attributed to this period is "There is no crime for those who have Christ".[4]

Albigensian Crusade, 1208[edit]

Jonathan Barker cited the Albigensian Crusade, launched by Pope Innocent III against followers of Catharism, as an example of Christian state terrorism.[107] The 20 year war led to an estimated 1 million casualties.[108] The Cathar teachings rejected the principles of material wealth and power as being in direct conflict with the principle of love. They worshiped in private houses rather than churches, without the sacraments or the cross, which they rejected as part of the world of matter, and sexual intercourse was considered sinful, but in other respects they followed conventional teachings, reciting the Lord's prayer and reading from Biblical scriptures.[108] They believed that the Saviour was a "heavenly being merely masquerading as human to bring salvation to the elect, who often have to conceal themselves from the world, and who are set apart by their special knowledge and personal purity".[108]

Cathars rejected the Old Testament and its God, who they named Rex Mundi (Latin for "king of the world"), who they saw as a blind usurper who demanded fearful obedience and worship and who, under the most false pretexts, tormented and murdered those whom he called "his children" They proclaimed that there was a higher God — the True God — and Jesus was his messenger. They held that the physical world was evil and created by Rex Mundi, who encompassed all that was corporeal, chaotic and powerful; the second god, the one whom they worshipped, was entirely disincarnate: a being or principle of pure spirit and completely unsullied by the taint of matter - He was the god of love, order and peace.[109] According to Barker, the Albigenses had developed a culture that "fostered tolerance of Jews and Muslims, respect for women and women priests, the appreciation of poetry, music and beauty, [had it] been allowed to survive and thrive, it is possible the Europe might have been spared its wars of religion, its witch-hunts and its holocausts of victims sacrificed in later centuries to religious and ideological bigotry".[107]: 74  When asked by his followers how to differentiate between heretics and the ordinary public, Abbe Arnaud Amalric, head of the Cistercian monastic order, simply said "Kill them all, God will recognize his own!".[108]

St. Bartholomew's Day massacre, 1572[edit]

Gilmour has cited the historical case of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre as an instance of Christian terrorism on par with modern day Islamic terrorism, and goes on to write, "That massacre, said Pope Gregory XIII, gave him more pleasure than fiftyBattles of Lepanto, and he commissioned Vasari to paint frescoes of it in the Vatican".[110]It is estimated that ten thousand to possibly one-hundred thousand Huguenots (French Protestants) were killed by Catholic mobs, and it has been called "the worst of the century's religious massacres".[111] The massacre led to the start of the fourth war of the French Wars of Religion.

Gunpowder Plot, 1605[edit]

Peter Steinfels has cited the historical case of the Gunpowder Plot, when Guy Fawkes and other Catholic revolutionaries attempted to overthrow the Protestant aristocracy of England by blowing up the Houses of Parliament, as a notable case of Christian terrorism.[112]

Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, 1649-53[edit]

Lutz and Lutz cited the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland as terrorism; "The draconian laws applied by Oliver Cromwell in Ireland were an early version of ethnic cleansing. The Catholic Irish were to be expelled to the northwestern areas of the island. Relocation rather than extermination was the goal."[113] Daniel Chirothas argued that genocide was originally the goal, inspired by the Biblical account of Joshua and the genocide following theBattle of Jericho:[9]: 3 

Southern United States, 1865-1910[edit]

In the late nineteenth century southern United States evangelical Protestants used a wide range of terror activities, including lynching, murder, attempted murder, rape, beating, tar-and-feathering, whipping, and destruction of property, to suppress competition from black Christians (who saw Christ as the saviour of the black oppressed), Mormons, Native Americans, foreign-born immigrants, Jews, and Catholics.[114]

Pogroms, 1881-1917[edit]

A series of genocidal persecutions, or pogroms, against Jews took place in Russia. These arose from a variety of motivations, not all of them related to Christian antisemitism. The primary trigger of the pogroms is considered to have been the assassination of Tsar Alexander II.[115] However the first Kishinev pogrom of 1903 was led by Eastern Orthodox priests.[116]

Iron Guard and Lăncieri, 1927-1945[edit]

The Iron Guard, also known as the Legion of the Archangel Michael, was an Orthodox Christian anti-Semitic fascist movement in Romania. It splintered from the National-Christian Defense League, and was, unlike similar European fascist movements of the time, overtly religious. According to Ioanid, the Legion "willingly inserted strong elements of Orthodox Christianity into its political doctrine to the point of becoming one of the rare modern European political movements with a religious ideological structure."[117] The Iron Guard justified their actions through claims that "Rabbinical aggression against the Christian world" was undermining society.[118] According to Tinichigiu, the Iron Guard was a terror organization, which carried out terrorist activities and political murders.[119] The Iron Guard were active participants in the Romanian Holocaust and carried out the Bucharest pogrom.

Nichifor Crainic, Professor at the Faculty of Theology, University of Bucharest, developed various theological justifications arguing "that the Old Testament was not Jewish, that Jesus had not been Jewish, and that the Talmud, which he saw as the incarnation of modern Jewry, was, first and foremost, a weapon to combat the Christian Gospel and to destroy Christians."[120]: 24  Crainic played a critical role in the formation of the National Christian Party from the National-Christian Defense League, and became its general secretary. Between 1935 and 1937 the paramilitary division of the National Christian Party, the Lăncieri, were responsible for numerous acts of brutality against Jews.[120]: 26 

The Romanian Orthodox Church had strong antisemitic leanings, both in its senior hierarchy and among local clergy.[120]: 24  Conflict was encouraged by its leaders; Patriarch Miron Cristea said "One has to be sorry for the poor Romanian people, whose very marrow is sucked out by the Jews. Not to react against the Jews means that we go open-eyed to our destruction... To defend ourselves is a national and patriotic duty"[120]: 25  and "The duty of a Christian is to love himself first and to see that his needs are satisfied. Only then can he help his neighbor... Why should we not get rid of these parasites [Jews] who suck Rumanian Christian blood? It is logical and holy to react against them."[121]

Rexists, 1940-1945[edit]

Rexism was a Belgian movement which combined Christianity and fascism during the Second World War with the aim of abolishing democracy and replacing it with a corporatist society based on the teachings of the Church. It was the proscribed ideology of the Rexist Party, which was officially known as Christus Rex (literally Christ King). Rexist followers supported the occupying Nazi forces, admired Adolf Hitler, and had similar anti-semitic leanings. The Rexist Party originally split from the ruling Catholic Party, but Rexist bishops increasingly cut ties with the Roman Catholic Church, developing financial links with, and incorporating moral support, for Nazi Germany into their teachings.

Paris theatre attack, 1988[edit]

In 1988 the film The Last Temptation of Christ was released.[122] The film controversially portrayed Jesus fantasising about sexual intercourse with Mary Magdalene, and was roundly condemned by Christians.[122][123] Following its release, the Saint Michel theater in Paris was burnt to the ground whilst showing the film, leaving 13 people hospitalised, 1 in a serious condition.[122] Following the attack, a representative of the film's distributor, Universal International Pictures, said "The opponents of the film have largely won. They have massacred the film's success, and they have scared the public". Jack Lang, France's Minister of Culture, went to the St.-Michel theater after the fire, and said, "Freedom of speech is threatened, and we must not be intimidated by such acts".[122] The Archbishop of Paris, Jean-Marie Cardinal Lustiger, said "One doesn't have the right to shock the sensibilities of millions of people for whom Jesus is more important than their father or mother."[122] However, after the fire he condemned the attack, saying "You don't behave as Christians but as enemies of Christ. From the Christian point of view, one doesn't defend Christ with arms. Christ himself forbade it."[122] The leader ofChristian Solidarity, a Roman Catholic group that had promised to stop the film from being shown, said, "We will not hesitate to go to prison if it is necessary".[122]

The attack was subsequently blamed on a Catholic fundamentalist group linked to Bernard Antony, a representative of the far-right National Front to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, and followers of ArchbishopMarcel Lefebvre, who was excommunited from the Roman Catholic Church for his fundamentalist beliefs.[124]Similar attacks against theatres included graffiti, setting off tear-gas canisters and stink bombs, and assaulting filmgoers.[124] At least nine people believed to be members of the Catholic fundamentalist group were arrested.[124] Rene Remond, a historian, said of the Catholic far-right "It is the toughest component of the National Front and it is motivated more by religion than by politics. It has a coherent political philosophy that has not changed for 200 years: it is the rejection of the revolution, of the republic and of modernism."[124]

Concerned Christians, 1999[edit]

The Concerned Christians were a group of "Apocalyptic Christians" that "planned to carry out violent and extreme acts in the streets of Jerusalem at the end of 1999" and believed that being killed by police would "lead them to heaven."[125] The group were planning to attack holy sites in Jerusalem; some fundamentalist Christians believe that the Al-Aqsa mosque, one of Islam's holiest shrines in Jerusalem, must be destroyed and the Temple in Jerusalem restored in its place, before Jesus can return to Earth.[126] The group were deported from Israel and are said to currently reside in Greece.

Radical Christian Activists, 2007[edit]

In 2007 three teenagers from Burleson, Texas were charged with attempting to destroy a church with an explosive device.[127][128] Police Commander Chris Haven said that the group believes that society has become too focused on self improvement and self gratification and has lost focus on the glorification of God.[128] On July 4, police in Burleson, TX received reports of suspicious activity at a church and of a fire in a nearby field. Three men were subsequently arrested and charged with arson at a place of worship, a first-degree felony. A fourth suspect, a juvenile, who reportedly was not involved in the attempted arson, was not charged. Two of the suspects admitted to being involved in at least one other fire in a recycling bin at a different church during 2007 according to a police report.[129]

Notable incidents[edit]

Pat Robertson[edit]

In August 2005, U.S. television evangelist Pat Robertson was branded a terrorist by Venezuelan officials aftercalling for the assassination of President Hugo Chávez.[130] In response to Robertson's statements, Chávez said, "To call for the assassination of a head of state is an act of terrorism," and suggested that Venezuela would request the extradition of Robertson from the United States.[131] Vice President José Vicente Rangel said, "This is a huge hypocrisy to maintain an antiterrorist line and at the same time have such terrorist statements as these made by Christian preacher Pat Robertson coming from the same country."[132] TheBush administration distanced itself from Robertson's remarks, while Rev. Jesse Jackson said that the remarks were illegal and urged U.S. authorities to take action, and Rev. Rob Schenck stated that Robertson should "immediately apologize, retract his statement and clarify what the Bible and Christianity teaches about the permissibility of taking human life outside of law". Rev. Richard Cizik said, "most evangelical leaders" would disassociate themselves from such "unfortunate and particularly irresponsible" comments.[132][133] Robert Welch, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, told the Baptist Press, "The Southern Baptist Convention does not support or endorse public statements concerning assassinations of persons, even if they are despicable despots of foreign countries, and neither do I". Robertson issued an apology,[133] but in January 2006 again called for Chávez's assassination, "Not now, but one day"[134]

Evangelical Alliance[edit]

In November 2006 the Evangelical Alliance, which represents 1.2 million Christians in the United Kingdom, released a report which stated that violent revolution should be regarded as a viable response if British legislation encroaches further on Christian rights: "If, as most Christians accept, they should be politically involved in democratic processes, many believe this may, where necessary, take the form of active resistance to the state. This may encompass disobedience to law, civil disobedience, involving selective, non-violent resistance or, ultimately, violent revolution.".[135] Very Rev. Colin Slee, the Dean of Southwark, said such actions would send out a confused message, as "the fundamental themes of the gospel are love and reconciliation, not violent revolution."[135] Aversion to physical violence for the defense or propagation of the faith has been the norm for most major evangelical faiths, who take the Scripture as their supreme authority. As it was for the primitive New Testament church, which found the New Covenant disallowing such.

Christian opposition to violence[edit]

Despite the occurrence of violence by some Christians, Christianity has a long tradition of opposition to violence. Some early figures in Christian thought explicitly disavowed violence. Origen wrote: "Christians could never slay their enemies. For the more that kings, rulers, and peoples have persecuted them everywhere, the more Christians have increased in number and grown in strength."[4] Clement of Alexandria wrote: "Above all, Christians are not allowed to correct with violence."[5] Several present-day Christian churches and communities were established specifically with nonviolence, including conscientious objection to military service, as foundations of their beliefs.[136] In the twentieth century, Martin Luther King, Jr. adapted the nonviolent ideas of Gandhi to a Baptist theology and politics.[137]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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Bibliography[edit]

  • Hedges, Chris. 2007. American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America. Free Press.
  • Lea, Henry Charles. 1961. The Inquisition of the Middle Ages. Abridged. New York: Macmillan.
  • Mason, Carol. 2002. Killing for Life: The Apocalyptic Narrative of Pro-Life Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Tyerman, Christopher. 2006. God's War: A New History of the Crusades. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, Belknap.
  • Zeskind, Leonard. 1987. The ‘Christian Identity’ Movement, [booklet]. Atlanta, Georgia: Center for Democratic Renewal/Division of Church and Society, National Council of Churches.