I doubt Clyntahn is that oblivious as to make such an argument. If he does, he digs his own theological and actual grave.
JeffEngel wrote:PeterZ wrote:God will have His victory, indeed. The Inquisition will have failed God because they failed to instill obedience to God plan in more than a handful of God's children. This is a religion of works which justifies evil deeds by the good that results. Torturing 1,000 innocents which results 1,000,000 would be sinners obeying God instead is a very large net good and great success for Inquisition.
The corollary is that if they only save a small fraction of humanity despite the evil they do to the larger fraction in order to guide them towards obedience, the good that results is minute compared to the evil done and the Inquisition will have failed.
Not an argument Clyntahn will entertain.
Maybe not one he should, but I don't think he'd actually hesitate. The Inquisition's stance on concentration camp prisoners has been that, in a pinch, better to kill them all to catch whatever heretics are in there. God obliges them to kill the heretic, and gives them a pass at least if there are some friendly fire casualties in the process.
If it turns out that most of humanity cannot resist Shan-wei's lures, it's clearly less of a victory for the Inquisition than it would be had heresy been contained and expunged with just the leaders of Charis Punished. But Shan-wei's powerful and sometimes, what the best mortals can do is only so much. Preserving the faith and obedience of any of God's children when heresy walks the land in apparent triumph is good work, and sheer popularity can never make heresy right or the Inquisition's work better left undone.