In these notes on the Crusades I am
not attempting to defend the indefensible. Rather, I am attempting to place the
Crusades in context, to correct simplistic explanations for the crusades such
as one I recently heard: “The Crusades were nothing but a land-grab.” Some historians have said there was no reason
for Europeans to feel threatened but these critics are usually not specialists
in the period. Some crusade-bashers
might even be playing the currently popular game, “Blame the West.” To such
historians, eleventh-century Europeans might respond, “Maybe you had to be
there.”
Even a more balanced view of the
Crusades as an inappropriate response by adherents of one religion
(Christianity) to the inappropriate actions by the adherents of another
religion (Islam) concerning which of these two religions would control
Jerusalem misses important matters.
Understanding
the Crusades:
Even before Christianity became the
official religion of the Roman Empire, the pilgrimages to holy places (Bethlehem,
Jerusalem, etc.) had become popular, though some prominent Christian writers—Augustine,
Chrysostom, and Gregory of Nyssa, for example—would variously mock the practice
or question its Biblical justification. By
the eleventh century taking an arduous and sometimes dangerous trek to a sacred
site was believed to procure spiritual benefit, even a reduction of time in
Purgatory. During the centuries following the fall of Jerusalem, the city’s
Muslim rulers allowed pilgrimages to continue.
In time, however, the journey to the Holy Land became more difficult,
especially after the Seljuk Turks captured the Levant. Recapturing Jerusalem
would once again open the channel of blessing.
So, on one level, to understand the
Crusades we must begin by acknowledging the heart of every Christian who
eagerly packs to head off to a small middle-eastern nation to “walk where Jesus
walked” harbors impulses distantly-related to those giving birth to the
Crusades.
Getting Jerusalem back into
Christian hands was an important goal but the Crusades also were inspired by
perceived threats to European civilization
Had we been in Western Europe,
during the five centuries prior to the crusades, we would have heard accounts
of what Christians in the East were experiencing.
The Byzantine Empire had been a
place of cultural wonder; Constantinople’s Hagia Sophia was widely acclaimed as
the most beautiful church in the world.
All seemed well until the beginning of the seventh century. Lars
Brownworth sketches how the events of that pivotal century hit the Eastern
Christians like an emotional and spiritual Taser. The Byzantine Empire
… had been the
dominant power of the Mediterranean, stretching from Spain to the Black Sea,
the proud and confident repository of Christian culture and civilization. ….
Then, in the blink of an eye, everything had changed. A bewildering enemy had
erupted from the desert sands and carried all before them. Two-thirds of the
empire’s territories had vanished in the flood, and half its population had
disappeared. Arab raiders plundered the remaining countryside, and the cities
were mere shells of what they had been in happier times. Whole populations fled
the uncertainty of urban life and retreated to the more defensible safety of
mountaintops, islands, or otherwise inaccessible places. Refugees impoverished
and ruined by Muslim attacks roamed Constantinople’s streets, and prosperity
dried up. The once-powerful empire had shrunk to Asia Minor, and was now
poorer, less populated, and far weaker than the neighboring caliphate.
The Byzantine world was left deeply
traumatized. The armies of [Mohammed] had clashed with the Christian empire
whose ruler was the sword arm of God, and yet it was the banner of Christ that
had fallen back. In only eight years, the Muslims had conquered three of the
five great patriarchates of the Christian Church—Alexandria, Antioch, and
Jerusalem—and neither prayers, nor icons, nor steel had been able to stop them.
An arrogant caliph had seized Christendom’s holiest city and built the Dome of the
Rock, boasting that Islam had superseded Christianity. (https://erenow.com/ancient/lost-to-the-west-the-forgotten-byzantine-empire-that-rescued-western-civilization/15.html.
Accessed 30 August 2018.)
The new enemy seemed relentless. In
the year 800 there were more Christians east of Damascus than west of the
ancient city. By the end of the eleventh
century many of those Christian communities had disappeared and the remaining
Christians had little influence; until the late twentieth century the West
would be the stronghold of Christianity.
From 1000 to 1027, Turkish Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni invaded India
seventeen times. Although his goal was
primarily to seize the subcontinent’s wealth, his invasions gave Islam a
foothold in the primarily Hindu nation. Muslim advances toward the east seemed
unstoppable.
To the north, Armenia, the first
nation to officially adopt Christianity (301), faced continuing warfare with
Islamic forces until it finally fell to the Seljuks in 1064. With the help of
the Byzantine emperor, Armenian leaders set up a government-in-exile in
Cilicia; the area became a staging ground for some Crusader activity.
Scarcely thirty years before the call
for the first crusade, the Byzantine armies fell to Muslim forces,
foreshadowing the end of Christian rule in Asia Minor. Constantinople was a
prize waiting to be taken; though the city had repelled Islamic forces
repeatedly, the task of defending the city was becoming increasingly difficult.
The Byzantine ruler’s appeal to the west
for help in defeating the Seljuk Turks helped inspire the Crusades.
In short, many Europeans believed it
would only be a matter of time before Muslim conquerors turned their eyes further
westward. Indeed, the Moors had been
ruling most of the Iberian Peninsula for nearly 400 years when Urban called for
the first crusade; although Spanish Christians were beginning to push back against
the Mooris, the last of the Moors would not be expelled from Spain until 1492.
St Louis University historian and
crusades scholar Thomas F. Madden wrote:
So what is the
truth about the Crusades? Scholars are still working some of that out. But much
can already be said with certainty. For starters, the Crusades to the East were
in every way defensive wars. They were a direct response to
Muslim aggression—an attempt to turn back or defend against Muslim conquests of
Christian lands.
Christians in the
eleventh century were not paranoid fanatics. Muslims really were gunning for
them. (https://www.crisismagazine.com/2002/the-real-history-of-the-crusades-2)
Not only were the crusaders
motivated by concern over perceived threats to their own homelands, they also
were motivated by the perceived plight of fellow Christians in far-off lands.
Christians in Western Europe believed Christians in lands under Muslim control
were being subjected to horrendous atrocities. In his speech calling for a
crusade, Urban spoke of how Christians were being forcibly circumcised, used as
target practice by Muslim archers, and beheaded in a game to see who could
behead an infidel with a single stroke. He
spoke of Christian women being raped and Christian men being disemboweled in
ways that would make an abattoir seem compassionate. That these stories may
have been untrue or exaggerated is unimportant; those who heard the stories
believed them. After all, the reports
came from the pope (who likely believed them) and shouldn’t you believe the
pope?
Just over a century ago, in the
days prior to England’s entry into the First World War, reports of atrocities
committed by conquering German soldiers were widespread. The most heinous accounts concerned the rape
of dozens of nuns in Belgium. While
post-war research showed these reports to have been false, in 1914 the rumors were
believed, fanning the desire to defeat “the Hun” and restore Christian
civilization.
In the same way, reports of
outrages against Christians in the Middle East impelled the first crusaders to
act. Even if some reports were untrue, there is little doubt others were.
According to Schmidt, a massacre of Armenian Christians in 1096 provided
evidence to justify the First Crusade.
(That massacre was the first of several targeting Armenian Christians
over the next millennium, the best known being the 1915 “Armenian genocide.”)
If modern Britons—in the age of
telegraph and telephone—could be persuaded to believe the worst about Germans
only a few miles across the North Sea, surely we can understand how eleventh
century Christians in France, Germany, Italy, and England might have believed
the worst about Muslims thousands of miles away.
Of course, they knew Christians
under Islamic ruler were treated as second-class citizens. Severely taxed and allowed to practice only
a limited form of their faith, these Christians lived under pressure. Sometimes conversion to Islam seemed the only
way to relief. So, again, a swift and
sure rescue mounted by Christians with greater resources seemed to be the
Christian thing to do. Philip Jenkins in The
Lost History of Christianity explains how constant, unrelenting pressure
led many Christians to give up their faith and embrace the comparatively easy
way of Islam, challenging those Western Christians—who’ve never known
persecution—who cavalierly claim the church benefits from persecution. This may
not perpetuate the notion of the blood of the martyrs being the seed of the
church but it does reflect reality.
So, in addition to national
self-interest we may add compassionate outrage to the motives of the crusaders.
The crusaders sought to change
their spiritual destiny. Fighting for
the freedom of the holy land became a means of grace. Taking the cross—becoming a crusader—brought
absolution for sin; any who might die on a crusade was assured a place in heaven. The promise of plenary indulgence or
remission of their sins was important to the crusaders since many were guilty
of the grave sin of murder. Killing
another, even in battle, was considered a violation of the sixth commandment, such
a terrible sin there was almost no hope of forgiveness; many of those taking
the cross had bloodied their swords fighting other Christians, making their
actions even more damning. Becoming a
crusader could expunge that guilt. The special situation allowing this was explained,
in part, by revisiting the theory of “the just war,” a concept largely
neglected since Augustine.
If we who have benefited from the
promulgation of evangelical theology with its emphasis on grace should wonder
how our eleventh-century forebears could have believed this, we need to
remember many who took the cross were illiterate. Those who could read probably
had little access to the Bible. All belonged
to a church claiming the absolute right to interpret the Bible. That right
would not be seriously challenged until at least two centuries later. So,
when these desperate souls were told God willed the crusades and fighting in a
crusade might be their best hope for salvation they believed.
The
course of the crusades. Any good
general text on church history will give a useful overview of the crusades,
there number, goals, and accomplishments.
Therefore, I won’t attempt to discuss each of the seven or
eight—depending on who is counting—crusades extending from 1095 to 1271. The first was the most successful, though
that success did not last; the fourth crusade didn’t even reach the Holy Land
but saw the crusaders turn their fury on fellow Christians. The crusaders knew some victories but more
defeats; of greater significance were the acts of inhumanity and utter folly done
in the name of Christ, actions that did more to discredit Christianity than
promote it. Today, we recall these
actions far more often than we recall “many of the crusaders had the sincere
desire to win people to Christ.” (Robert Tuttle, The Story of Evangelism: A
History of the Witness to the Gospel, Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2006, p.
206.) Sadly, in pursuing this goal the
crusaders were more often led by the spirit of the age than by the Spirit of
Christ.
To acknowledge this is not
necessarily to agree the Crusades were a concerted effort to colonize the
Middle East. While so-called “Crusader
Kingdoms” were formed they were not colonies in the modern sense (“modern” as
in post-sixteenth century): they were not subject to the authority of London,
Paris, or any other European capital.
These kingdoms would be gone long before Portugal claimed Brazil, Spain
claimed Mexico (and a lot more), or Britain and France squabbled over what
would become Canada. They functioned as
independent venues. True, under the
Crusaders the Augustinians turned the Dome of the Rock into a church and the
Knights Templar turned the Al-Aqsa Mosque into the headquarters for the order
but this is not quite the same as Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr True, under the Crusaders
the Augustinians turned the Dome of the Rock into a church and the Knights
Templar turned the Al-Aqsa Mosque into the headquarters for the order but this
is not quite the same as Caliph Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah destroying the Church of
the Holy Sepulcher, one of the events precipitating the Crusades in the first
place.
The following observations put the
reprehensible aspects of the crusades into context. Though they do not excuse
them.
·
The nature of medieval warfare was brutal. Look
at the period’s tapestries and murals, such as the Bayeux Tapestry showing the
Norman Conquest. Dead soldiers litter the battleground, many of them
beheaded. An axman attacking a mounted
knight seems to be targeting the horse, perhaps so he might be able to dispatch
the knight once he had been thrown from his mount. At the same time, a depiction of the Battle
of Qadisiyya between Muslim Arabs
and the Persian forces shows just as much brutality on the part of the
conquering Muslims. The battle gave the Islamic forces control of Persia. Bloodthirstiness was not the sole province of
“Christian” soldiers. Even Saladin, whom
Hollywood presents as more enlightened than his Christian counterparts, was
once entertained by the public execution of captured crusaders.
·
Some accounts of “Christian” barbarity are
questionable. Hyperbole filled the
victors’ reports. Without doubt some
victorious crusaders displayed almost unbridled violence when they captured
Jerusalem in June/July 1099. Yet,
historian Rodney Stark says “no sensible person” will believe the reports of
the blood around the temple mount being so deep it reached the horses’ knees. (God’s
Battalion’s: The Case for the Crusades, Harper, p. 159) Moreover, the often
repeated charge that the crusaders burned a synagogue filled with frightened
Jews is questionable: a letter from a Jewish eyewitness (discovered in the
1950s) written only two weeks after the city’s fall confirms the burning of the
synagogue but does not mention anyone dying in the fire. Since Jews fought alongside the Muslims
there’s no doubt many died but it seems most Jews were allowed to leave the
city. Elsewhere, in lands now ruled by
the occupying forces, some Arab peasants seemed to have preferred their
Christian rulers to Muslim rulers—taxes under the Christians appear to have
been lower.
·
Not all European Christians endorsed the
crusades. In 1219, a weak and sickly
Francis of Assisi visited Sultan al-Kamil during the Fifth Crusade in an
attempt to obtain peace or martyrdom; he failed at both. While he did not
overtly reject the concept of the Crusades, Francis believed the best solution
to the conflict would involve the Muslim’s turning to Christ, so his strategy
included presenting the gospel to the sultan. Taking the example of his order’s founder, Ramon
Llull (c. 1232-c. 1315), a Franciscan, became a vocal critic of the Crusades;
Llull devoted himself to evangelizing the Muslims and the Jews, believing the
two groups could best be reached by love and reasoned argument. Although accounts of his death lack solid evidence,
Franciscan tradition says Llull was martyred by a crowd angered by his
preaching. Again, while they were not
effective in opposing the Crusades, they attempted to show a better way to deal
with the conflict between the Cross and the Crescent.
·
Perspectives on the Crusades are complex and
varied, something to keep in mind when Christian apologists answer questions
about what the church was up to in the Middle East from the late eleventh to
the late thirteenth century (when the Crusaders’ control of Jerusalem ended). To
some historians, the Crusades were elements of “a defensive war” protecting Western Europe
from Islamic incursion. To others, the
Crusades were “a land grab” conducted by the greedy rulers of France, Germany,
and England. To still others, the
Crusades represented an opportunity to reestablish Christian hegemony in the
land where Christ was born and where many of the Faith’s most influential
thinkers had lived. And, to some, the
Crusades were a humanitarian effort to relieve fellow Christians living under a
repressive regime. It is possible to
marshal evidence supporting each of these interpretations, though the first and
last have the support of specialists in the field.
As a Christian, I regret the Crusades;
the crusaders’ behavior too often failed to demonstrate Christian love. Yet, I’m not sure how much weight my
apologizing for them carries. I cannot confess and seek absolution for the sins
of another, certainly not those of another generation. As an amateur historian, I know circumstances
existed making the Crusades seem an appropriate response to the situation in
the Levant. So, unless I am willing to
take the position of total pacifism, the best I can say is that the Crusaders
often failed to act as Christ’s people should act. On this matter, Warren Larson says:
I think an
apology [for the Crusades] is in
order. But having said that, I think we
have to hold Muslims accountable too.
They might forget or not be aware that, starting in 1915, Turks killed
more than a million and a half Armenian Christians. There have been unsuccessful encounters
between Muslims and Christians for nearly the last 1,500 years, but [this
history is] not all the fault of the West and Christians. Muslims have also done wrong. (“Waging Peace
on Islam,” Christianity Today, June 2005, Vol. 49, No. 6, in which Stan
Guthrie interviews Warren Larson.)
Larson goes on to caution
Christians who might apologize to Muslims for the Crusades: the Muslim belief
in jihad, that notion of holy war which justifies violence against the enemies
of Islam, and the Muslim resistance to asking for forgiveness make receiving an
apology for Muslim violence unlikely.
Of course whatever wrongdoing might
be ascribed to the Muslims is a matter for their religious leaders to
acknowledge and reckon with; it is the misbehavior of Christians that the
apologist must address.
The Crusades and Apologetics
Men and women who dozed through
their world history classes often believe they know enough to offer the
Crusades as evidence sufficient to deny the claims of Christianity. Though the only Urban they may know coaches OSU’s
Buckeyes, they have made the Crusades an apologetics issue.
Some attempt to diffuse the issue
by saying the Crusaders were not Christians, so—by implication—you can’t blame
us real Christians. Beyond the fact such
judgment is beyond the our remit and the charge smells of the old Protestant
claim that anything done by the church from the early second century to the
sixteenth is suspect, the defense is hazardous.
Chiefly, we often are faced with those who were clearly Christians yet
held views or engaged in behavior inconsistent with that claim.
A look back at slavery in America
illustrates this problem.
Consider Robert E. Lee, whose statues
have attracted so much attention in recent days. Though he fought for the south, defending a
civilization built on the institution, his attitude toward slavery is unclear. His
lands were worked by slaves but, it is claimed, these slaves belonged to his
wife. Clearer, however, is the almost universal remembrance of the general as a
devout Christian.
More problematic for evangelicals,
a century before Lee, Jonathan Edwards owned slaves and George Whitefield
celebrated when his orphanage in Georgia was prosperous enough to buy slaves.
Several of the Princeton
theologians who helped shape the evangelical view of Scripture defended slavery
as an institution sanctioned by the Bible.
This included Charles Hodge (1797 – 1878) who was described by W. A.
Hoffecker as “the most prominent American Presbyterian theologian of the
nineteenth century.” (Dictionary of Christianity in America, IVP 1990,
p. 538.) In fairness, Hodge seems to have changed his mind about slavery somewhere
around 1850, though some biographers claim he condemned the American system of
slavery not the institution itself. But
the damage was already done; despite any new opinion he may have embraced,
Hodge had to witness his writings being used by both abolitionists and
defenders of slavery.
By appealing to a technicality we
might claim the Southern Baptist Convention (the American denomination with
which I am most familiar) was not born to defend slavery; still, slave-holding
deacons found the SBC a comfortable niche.
Baptist leaders in antebellum Texas, like other Southern Baptists across
the south, urged keeping slaves illiterate and teaching slaves “that slavery is
biblical, that masters are the slaves’ natural protectors, and that they are
better off in slavery than in freedom.” (H. L. McBeth, Texas Baptists: A Sesquicentennial History, p. 54.) In post-war
years, those same leaders were puzzled when former slaves failed to respond to
evangelistic appeals.
Is this not an appalling stain on
the testimony of these American Christians?
Certainly. Yet, isn’t it possible
some of these flawed Christians led ancestors of ours to faith in Christ, all
the while influencing their social attitudes?
If so, they passed on a tainted blessing. But wouldn’t most of us hesitate to thumb
through the Book of Life, eraser in hand, looking for our sexist, racist,
slave-holding ancestors’ names?
Dinesh D’Souza, Alvin J. Schmidt,
and others have attempted to demonstrate the benefits Christianity has brought
to civilization. I believe we can argue
Christians have accomplished so much good in the world that events like the
Crusades must be seen as anomalies.
More important, while historical apologetics is a useful tool, it cannot
be the foundation of the Christian truth claim.
The truth of Christianity rests on the life, death, and resurrection of
Jesus. Indeed, the person who invokes the Crusades as a reason to reject
Christianity may be trying to evade the challenge of what to do with Jesus
Christ. Any prolonged apologetic
dialogue, especially one with an evangelistic aim, must either begin with Jesus
or end with Jesus.
Nevertheless, you probably won’t be
able to ignore or long evade questions about Christians behaving badly.
How, then, do we meet the
challenges?
Certainly honesty is the starting
point. Christians often fail to live
Christlike lives; even those who do a better job of it than most other
Christians will fail at some point. A
corollary truth to the one saying, “Christians sin” is one saying, “No one
should be surprised.” John was writing
to Christians when he said, “If we acknowledge our sins, he is faithful and
just and will forgive our sins.” (I John 1:9) After decades of following Jesus,
sharing the good news of his love, and building churches in tough places, the
apostle knew the church was not the place to look for “perfect” people. In fact, he offered his promise with this
caveat: “If we claim that we’re free of sin, we’re only fooling ourselves. A
claim like that is errant nonsense.” (I John 1:8 The Message)
In the centuries after John wrote
those words some Christians forgot them.
They began to teach that a single sin following baptism invalidated your
salvation; this prompted some to postpone baptism because they knew how weak
they were, how susceptible to temptation they were. That error generated a false picture of God
and denigrated the salvation he offers.
Years before John wrote, James had
instructed Christians, “ confess your sins to one another and pray for one
another….” (James 5:16) The words imply
an open and honest admission of failure; we may also infer from them that the
ideal Christian community should be one of support and encouragement, a place
where people get better.
And, of course, Jesus taught his
disciples to pray, “Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our
trespasses.” Did you get that? Just as surely as we need “daily” bread to
sustain us, we need regular forgiveness to maintain our spiritual health.
Fortunately the holy God of heaven invites sinners to ask for forgiveness.
We all have failed—and continue to
fail—to give God his due; we are debtors before heaven. We owe a debt we cannot
ever hope to pay. Who would ever claim to have lived up to God's demands? None
of us; we all fall short. Traditionally, we have put it this way: We have done
those things we ought not to have done and left undone those things we ought to
have done.
Into this situation the gospel
brings a message of grace and restoration.
Just as acknowledging our
propensity to sin does not permit us to ignore the Biblical calls to holiness
and sanctification, neither does it demand we retreat before the critics charge
that Christians sin. Those who resist
Christ’s call to repent and believe because Christians aren’t perfect fail to
understand they are expecting more than Jesus expected.
Sometimes we Christians fall prey
to the inertia pull of our culture.
Sometimes we’re not even aware it’s happening. Sometimes we imagine this struggle to be new.
But it has been happening since the beginning.
In Romans 12, Paul delineates the counter-cultural lifestyle of the
Christian, a lifestyle of grateful response to the salvation God has graciously
given us, a lifestyle demanding thoughtful diligence whatever shape our culture
may take. I have always liked J. B.
Phillips’s rendering of 12:2, “Don’t let the world [culture] around you squeeze
you into its own mould (sic), but let God re-mould your minds from within….” It
is a goal so difficult to attain. The
best of us sometimes fail to resist the culture’s molding process. The pastor who served the church where I
spent my childhood and youth was widely known as a denominational leader and a
Bible scholar; he took time for the youth of the church when many other pastors
would have relegated them to volunteers; he offered compassionate counsel to
the troubled; yet, a son of the South, he held clearly racist notions. He supported the status quo of segregation in
schools and opposed interracial marriage, basing those positions, as many
others did, on erroneous interpretations of obscure scriptures. Doubtless, he had learned those
interpretations from his mentors and believed the long-standing social
structures he had grown-up with were the way things should be, the way God
wanted them to be. The culture had
squeezed him into its mold. But before
my pastor was born (1896) some Christians realized those Scriptures were being
misinterpreted and misapplied; they began the slow move toward rejecting
racism.
To resist the culture means we
thoughtfully ask if our interpretation of scripture and moral positions are
informed by accepted canons of interpretation or by cherished cultural
norms. John Wesley, founder of the
Methodist church and leader of the eighteenth-century Evangelical Awakening,
was a lifelong Tory: So it is legitimate to ask if his passionate condemnation
the American Revolution was based on his understanding of scripture or on his
political philosophy.
I recently had dinner with an old
friend who has been a pastor and denominational leader for nearly four decades.
Raised as a Baptist, he had been taught from childhood the evils of “drink,”
enjoined by pastors, Sunday school teachers, and parents to eschew
alcohol. All three of his adult children
are involved in ministry at their Baptist churches; all three enjoy drinking
alcohol. My friend believes the majority
of Baptist young adults have abandoned the teetotalism born out of the
alcohol-related social and health crises endemic to the nineteenth-century
American frontier.
Acknowledging the propensity of
Christians to be influenced negatively by their cultures gives us the
opportunity to remind the critic that the proper foundation for our behavior is
the Bible.
Further, the Crusades illustrate
the axiom: Where the church and the
state are wed, the marriage is always dysfunctional. In the most revered writings of Islam, the
distinction between a spiritual and a secular leader is often obscured; a
“caliph” is viewed as a spiritual and political successor to Mohammed. Most Muslim nations brook no vigorous rivals
to Islam. The Christian Bible, however,
advocates a division between that which is “Caesar’s” and that which is
“God’s.” Christians, both Catholic and
Protestant, have sometimes yielded to the temptation to make the church an
agent of the state or, more often, to use the state as an agent of the church. This never works well,
neither for the church nor for the state.
Schmidt insists the earliest
Crusades were just, defensive wars but believes they “ . . . should have been
launched by the appropriate head of state, not the head of the Christian church
in the West.” (The Great Divide: The
Failure of Islam and the Triumph of the West, p. 154.) Because the pope called for the Crusades,
these wars have forever been stamped as a Christian action. Though that cannot
be undone, we also need to consider other important aspects in the papacy’s
involvement in the Crusades. In calling
for a crusade, Urban said nothing about attempting to convert the Muslims, a
charge some modern critics make. Even in the middle ages the church understood
an army of thousands was not an effective evangelistic tool. Furthermore, the massacre of Jews associated
with the Crusades, especially the so-called “People’s Crusade,” were not
sanctioned by the church; such atrocities took place either in cities were
there were no resident bishops or where the perpetrators defied bishops’
efforts to protect the Jewish population (in some instances, marauders broke
into the local bishop’s palace to seize Jews sheltered there). During the Fourth Crusade (1201), when
Crusaders attacked Orthodox Christian centers, the Pope immediately
excommunicated the perpetrators. The
papacy tried hard, but not always successfully, to rein in the Crusaders.
The “Children’s Crusade,” which was
probably made up of teenagers (or simple peasants) rather than children, set
off in 1212. Meager references prevent
us knowing how many the fanatical Stephen of Cloyes enticed to follow him on
his unauthorized crusade; in any case most were drowned or were captured and
sold into slavery. Sometimes rulers
didn’t fare much better: Emperor
Frederick Barbarossa I drowned in a swollen stream while crusading in Cilicia; though
England’s Richard the First defeated Saladin in 1191, he was captured in
Austria on his way home and held for ransom. Back home in England, Richard’s
absence allowed his infamous brother Prince John to lead the nation into chaos.
The English, the French, the Germans, and others whose leaders went to the
Crusades often suffered from “the Saladin tithe,” taxes levied to pay the costs
of the armies. Troubadours sang bitter
songs about these taxes. Wives and mothers wrote poetry to express their grief
at what they conceived as the useless deaths of their loved ones. Even when not engaged in battle, the ordinary
crusader faced danger from scurvy, dysentery, malaria, and other diseases; in
his history of medical care during the Crusades, Medicine in the Crusades:
Warfare, Wounds and the Medieval Surgeon,
Piers D. Mitchell suggests: “thousands appear to have died
from such diseases in the Latin East.” (http://blog.targethealth.com/sickness-disease-during-the-crusades/)
Though Urban had used the plight of their fellow Christians to justify his
appeal, when the crusaders finally withdrew, life for the Christian minorities
in Muslim countries was often harder than it had been before; for example,
Egypt’s Coptic Christians were accused of collaborating with the Europeans—a
false charge—and suffered for it. Although the last vestiges of the Byzantine
Empire remained until 1453, the Crusades hastened its ultimate fall, since weary
Europeans would not come to the aid of Eastern Christians who would not submit
to the Pope. (Ironically, the empire’s fall hastened the coming of the Renaissance
as scholars from Constantinople fled westward.)
Chroniclers report how the crowd
responded to Pope Urban II’s call for a crusade by spontaneously shouting,
“Deus vult, Deus vult” (“God wills it, God wills it”). After more than two centuries of bloodshed
and death we can understand how some Europeans began to question that; eight
centuries later we understand why people still do.
In the end, I can neither totally
endorse the Crusades nor can I totally condemn the Crusades. No doubt they hurt Christianity’s reputation
and its relationship with Muslim nations, but historians insist Muslims largely
ignored the Crusades until the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries
when agitators used their specter to fan anti-colonial flames. The Crusades weren’t given much thought
because Muslims knew they had ultimately won. “From the perspective of Muslim history,”
Thomas Madden writes, “[the Crusades] were simple tiny and failed attempts to
halt the inevitable expansion of Islam.” (Madden , The New Concise History of the Crusades, Rowman and Littlefield,
2005, p. xii) As the old song goes, “It’s
Istanbul not Constantinople.”
Maybe the Crusades were
unnecessary. Maybe the Crusades were the best response to the perceived crisis
of the times. Charitably, the Crusades were a blend of faith, failure, and
folly. Though they stifled the Islamic dream
conquering Europe, they failed to make Jerusalem a completely “Christian”
city. Treaties would make Jerusalem an
open city: mosques, churches, and synagogues would exist within its confines;
Muslims, Jews, and Christians (Catholic and Orthodox) would worship within
earshot of one another, an abomination to the strictest of each group. Significantly, pilgrimages were allowed to
resume.
It’s tempting to wonder what might have
happened if there had been no Crusades. Had
there been no Crusades would 9/11 have happened? Hard to say; though Madden
believes the attack had nothing to do with events beginning ten centuries before. But I digress. Had there been no Crusades, would the majestic
St. Paul’s Cathedral in London be a mosque?
Would the so-called “Great Century” have seen missionaries sailing off
under the banner of the Crescent rather than the Cross—missionaries accompanied
by squadrons of soldiers rather than the simple faith that God would be with
them? Would you rarely see a woman
behind the wheel of a car? Would Christians live as second-class citizens? Would
you know presenting the claims of Christ to a Muslim friend might put your very
life in jeopardy? Of course, speculation
is so speculative and this particular line of speculation (inspired by Edward
Gibbon who wondered what might have happened had the Franks not defeated the
Muslims at Tours in 732) may be too imaginative.
That aside, let me end with what I
hope are two, more substantive, observations.
Though the Crusades represented
Christianity at its worst, the same era saw Christianity at its best. Three years after Urban II called for a
crusade, Anselm published his Cur Deus
Homo? (Why the God-Man?), a seminal work on the atonement; two and a half
centuries later, as the age of the crusades drew to a close, Thomas Aquinas was
producing his Summas, theological masterpieces that continue to
influence Christian thought; in fact, several of the “doctors of the church”
produced their classic works during the era. Born in 1098, Hildegard of Bingen would become
a busy abbess and prolific writer, producing hymns, devotional materials, and
theological treatises; though known for her visions and prophetic writings, she
also made practical contributions through the medical texts she wrote. About a century after the First Crusade an
Italian playboy from Assisi named Francis renounced his former lifestyle and
began urging the church to show Christlike compassion to the poor and outcasts.
The Franciscans, as his followers became known, would build hospitals, do
important academic research, and carry the message of Christianity into new
places, such as the American Southwest. Even
while the Crusades raged it wasn’t all bad.
Here is a final observation concerning
those who resist Christ’s claims because of the behavior of Christians: Those
who denounce the bad behavior of famous Christians may have been wounded by
lesser-known Christians who behaved badly.
On one level, dealing with the problems posed by the Crusades demands a
basic knowledge of history and the acumen to place the events into their
cultural context; we may, should we choose, approach the problem with cool
detachment. But dealing with the pain
and sense of betrayal felt by one hurt by someone claiming to be a Christian
(or hurt by a genuine but flawed believer) demands compassion, patience, and
commitment. That will take more time
than a simple history lesson.