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Essay on Middle Ages- Catholic Church

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The Middle Ages was a time of rebirth for the Church. The Church had a growing amount of power, and used this power to get messages sent to its followers. One important message created an ever-growing distance between believes and nonbelievers of the Church. Throughout the Middle Ages there have been inconsistencies with the doctrines and actions of the Church. There is one constant within the Church, throughout the Middle Ages the Church has opposed outsiders and has mistreated those outsiders from the Church. St. Augustine, a Christian, observed the chaos around him as the Vandals sacked Rome in 410. The sack of Rome is the marker of the end of the old Roman Empire. The people of Rome felt their old gods were punishing them for …show more content…

This unhappy being had long lived in the land of monsters since the creator cast them out as kindred of Cain. For that killing of Abel The eternal lord took vengeance. (Beowulf, 54)

The Biblical reference to the Story of Cain and Abel gives insight to the idea that Grendel was intended to represent sinners, specifically pagans. Further than the antagonist being described as a monster and a descendant of Cain, Grendel is also killed by Beowulf who is praised for his actions. This illustrates Beowulf was doing a good deed by killing a sinner. Though not a direct acceptance of violence toward non believers, this can lend an argument to the feelings of non Christians at the time. In the middle ages, the idea of the chivalrous knight became more present, and this image led to the idea of battle in the name of God. One account of this is from The Song of Roland which accounts the events of a French army before going into battle with pagan forces. “‘I saw the Saracens, no man on earth ever saw more of them one hundred thousand, with their shields, up in front, helmets laced on, hauberks blazing on them, the shafts straight up, the iron heads like flames—you'll get a battle, nothing like it before. My lords, my French, may God give you the strength. Hold your ground now! Let them not defeat us!’ And the French say: ‘God hate the man who runs! We may die here, but no man will fail you’” (Song of Roland, 1). This

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