Dictionary Definition
unbeliever n : someone who refuses to believe (as
in a divinity) [syn: disbeliever, nonbeliever]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Synonyms
Translations
- See translations of infidel.
Extensive Definition
catholic InfidelInfidel
(literally "one without faith") is an English
word meaning "one who doubts or rejects central tenets of a
religion or has no
religious beliefs", especially in reference to Christianity
or Islam.
The Arabic word kafir (literally the one who
"covers", in the sense of hiding) is the Muslim term for an
infidel. The term technically applies only to atheists and polytheists and to those who
subscribe to faiths other than Christianity, Judaism and
Zorastrianisms.
In common use, however, the term is also applied to Christians,
especially in English fiction and poetry.
In the Roman
Catholic Church the term was traditionally used to refer to one
who did not believe in the divinity of Jesus, knowingly held
beliefs that contradicted Catholic dogma, or one who had not been
baptized, or to by
Christians in general to describe non-Christians or those perceived
as enemies of Christianity, including Muslims. Current
English speaking ecclesiastical usage however distinguishes between
non-Christians and non-believers (persons without religious
affiliations or beliefs). The current preference for these terms
over the pejorative "infidel" reflects the modern Roman Catholic
Church's commitment to engage in dialog with persons of other, or
no faith. In recent years, Christian thought has avoided the use of
this term, especially in reference to Muslims and Jews. thus Muslim
scholars discourage its usage due to the Quran's command to use
kind words. It is even a punishable offense to use this term
against a Jew or a Christian, under Islamic law. He also
held that he had an obligation to send missionaries to infidel
lands, and that if they were prevented from entering or preaching,
then the pope was justified in dispatching Christian forces
accompanied with missionaries to invade those lands, as Innocent
stated simply "If the infidels do not obey, they ought to be
compelled by the secular arm and war may be declared upon them by
the pope, and nobody else." This was however not a reciprocal right
and non-Christian missionaries such as those of Muslims could not
be allowed to preach in Europe "because they are in error and we
are on a righteous path."
A long line of Papal hierocratic canonists, most
notably those who adhered to Alanus Anglicus's influential
arguments of the Crusading-era, denied Infidel dominium, and
asserted Rome's universal
jurisdictional authority over the earth, and the right to authorize
pagan conquests solely on the basis of non-belief because of their
rejection of the Christian god. In the extreme hierocractic
canonical discourse of the mid-twelfth century such as that
espoused by Bernard of Clairvaux, the mystic leader of the
Cisertcians, legitimized German
colonial expansion and practice of forceful Christianisation
in the Slavic
territories as a holy war against
the Wends,
arguing that infidels should be killed wherever they posed a menace
to Christians. When
Frederick the II unilaterally arrogated papal authority, he
took on the mantle to "destroy convert, and subjugate all barbarian
nations." A power in papal doctrine reserved for the pope.
Hostiensis, a student of Innocent, in accord with Alanus, also
asserted "... by law infidels should be subject to the faithful."
and the heretical quasi-Donatist John Wyclif,
regarded as the forefather of English
Reformation, also held that valid dominium rested on a state of
grace.
The Teutonic
Knights were one of the by-products of this papal hierocratic
and German discourse. After the Crusades in the
Levant, they
moved to crusading activities in the infidel Baltics. Their
crusades against the Lithuanians
and
Poles however precipitated the Lithuanian Controversy, and the
Council
of Constance, following the condemnation of Wyclif, found
Hostiensis's views no longer acceptable and ruled against the
knights. Future Church doctrine was then firmly aligned with
Innocents IV's position.
Colonization of the Americas
During the Age of discovery, the Papal Bulls such as Romanus Pontifex and more importantly inter caetera (1493), implicitly removed dominium from infidels and granted them to the Spanish Empire and Portugal with the charter of guaranteeing the safety of missionaries. Subsequent English and French rejections of the bull refuted the Popes authority to exclude other Christian princes. As independent authorities such as the Head of the Church of England, they drew up charters for their own colonial missions based on the temporal right for care of infidel souls in language echoing the inter caetera. The charters and papal bulls would form the legal basis of future negotiations and consideration of claims as title deeds in the emerging Law of nations in the European colonization of the Americas.The rights bestowed by Romanus Pontifex and inter
caetera have never fallen from use, serving as the basis for legal
arguments over the centuries. The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled in the 1823 case Johnson
v. M'Intosh that as a result of European discovery and
assumption of ultimate dominion,
Native Americans had only a right to occupancy of native lands,
not the right of title. This decision was upheld in the 1831 case
Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, giving Georgia authority to extend
state laws over Cherokees within
the state, and famously describing Native American tribes as
"domestic dependent nations." This decision was modified in
Worcester v. Georgia, which stated that the
U.S. federal government, and not individual states, had
authority in Indian affairs, but it maintained the loss of right to
title upon discovery by Europeans.
In recent years, Native American groups including
the Taíno and
Onondaga
have called on the Vatican to
revoke the bulls of 1452, 1453, and 1493.
Marriage
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the church views Marriage as forbidden and null when conducted between the faithful (Christians) and infidels, unless a dispensation has been granted. This is because marriage is a sacrament of the Catholic Church, which infidels are deemed incapable of receiving.Influence upon medieval civil law
Laws passed by the Catholic Church governed not just the laws between Christians and Infidels in matters of religious affairs, but also civil affairs. They were prohibited from participating or aiding in infidel religious rites, such as circumcisions or wearing images of acknowledge non-Christian religious significance.In the Early
Middle Ages, based on the idea of the superiority of Christians
to infidels, regulations came into place such as those against
forbidding Jews from possessing Christian slaves; the laws of the
decretals further
forbade Christians from entering the service of Jews, for Christian
women to act as their nurses or midwives; forbidding Christians
from employing Jewish physicians when ill; restricting Jews to
definite quarters of the towns into which they were admitted and to
wear a dress by which they might be recognized.
These rules have now given way to modern
legislation and Catholics, in civil life, are no longer governed by
ecclesiastical law.
Notes
References
- Robert A. Williams, The American Indian in Western Legal Thought: The Discourses of Conquest, 1990, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0195080025
- Christopher L. Tomlins, Bruce H. Mann, The Many Legalities of Early America, 2001, UNC Press, ISBN 0807849642
External links
- Definition of "infidel" by the Merriam-Webster dictionary
- Definition of "unbeliever" by the Merriam-Webster dictionary
unbeliever in Czech: Nevěřící
unbeliever in Danish: Vantro
unbeliever in German: Unglaube
unbeliever in Spanish: Infiel
unbeliever in Persian: کافر
unbeliever in French: Mécréant
unbeliever in Dutch: Ongelovigen
unbeliever in Swedish: Hedning
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Pyrrhonist, Sabbath-breaker,
apostate, atheist, backslider, blasphemer, deserter, disbeliever, doubter, doubting Thomas,
gentile, giaour, goy, heathen, infidel, kaffir, minimifidian,
non-Christian, non-Jew, non-Mohammedan, non-Mormon, non-Moslem,
non-Muhammadan, non-Muslim, nonbeliever, nullifidian, pagan, recidivist, recreant, renegade, sacrilegist, secularist, shegets, shiksa, zendician, zendik, zendikite, zetetic