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The Dark Ages is all about Christianity. The Dark Ages started with the religious in power. The Roman Emperor Constantine made Christianity the dominant religion and not soon after him, the Roman Empire fell.
You've got the order of events right, and that's about it.
The Empire was falling already, and it took a long time after Constantine to finish doing so. As it collapsed, the Roman church took over more and more functions of the state, taking care of communication, literacy, and more, and adding functions such as caring for widows and orphans. It was only once the civil authority structure entirely collapsed and the church took it over that any significant symptoms of oppression began. Even then, it was the church (or pieces of it) which kept literacy and learning alive (especially in offbeat Ireland).
You're perpetuating a myth spawned by people wanting to discredit religion, but which is contrary to the record of events.
And what do you call the Kings of Europe who said they had divine right over their people given to them directly from God. Or the British King who killed his wifes because the Catholic Church didn't like divorce very much?
Those were contrary to the teachings of Christ -- and came after the beginning of the dark ages. They were both a symptom and an attempted remedy: a remedy, in that the church was looking for ways to establish order amid chaos. Granted, it was a rather poor remedy, but when about all the reading material anyone literate had was the Bible, Old Testament models came easily.
Hun, the Muslims invaded southern Europe because they were attacked by the Christians. And what about the Mongols? Did you forget they also invaded parts of Europe?
The Muslims invaded southern Europe because they were on a roll, and looking for more lands to conquer and put under Allah. The Mongols were just part of an ongoing historical phenomenon of population movement from east Asia toward, and sometimes reaching, Europe.
In the east, the Muslims attacked Byzantium to conquer it -- not because it had given any offense.
Also, what about the Christians spread all over Europe and then into the Middle East under the guidance of the Vatican to convert the barbaric masses to Christianity?
Um, there wasn't a "Vatican" until quite, quite late in that process!
There wasn't even actually a "pope" as we know it.
Hun, Islam preaches that you allow people to believe in their own religion, even though they are wrong in Allah's eyes, it is not the job of Muslims to convert them to Islam. In fact, Muslims didn't attempt to stringently convert the Europeans to Islam, they were allowed to keep their religion, and they lived side by side with the Muslims for a very long time. If they wanted to convert, they certainly could, and I am sure they were made aware of the teachings of Islam.
Yeas, you can believe your own religion -- and be a second-class citizen, who can be killed if you stand in the way of the Islamic authorities' plans for furthering the Rule of Allah.
And remember that Islam as a one-way religion: you can join, but you can't leave; the 'Prophet' was very explicit that anyone ceasing to be a Muslim was to be put to death.
Now now, this doesn't mean that what they do to homosexuals are right on any level. But killing of homosexuals isn't in the Quran. Wanna know something? The part condeming homosexuality is in the Bible and Torah.
Just like Christianity got over their lust for killing gays and none believers, Muslims will soon realize the error of their ways. Hopefully sooner than later.
Condemnation of homosexuals is only in the Bible for those who don't know how to read. Oh, they may run their eyes over the words and put sentences together, but that isn't reading; reading means taking the whole context. Anyone who has read "Treat others in the fashion you would have others treat you" won't be making laws against what consenting adults want to do between themselves.
Islam is different because Mohammed got more bloodthirsty as he went along, and the later statements define the context of it all. That is the element by which the extremists can justify their positions, because they threw out Jesus, love, tolerance, mercy, and everything else He represents and taught.

