Then I'm not down with it.Skipjack wrote: not based on science.
Read better.
Then I'm not down with it.Skipjack wrote: not based on science.
With what specifically?Skipjack wrote:I read it and I still dont agree.
Modern evangelicalism which is what most of the US is composed of; adapts completely to the fact findings of science. I'm sure there are other religions as well that evolve over time.Skipjack wrote:But there were and are plenty of so called "modern" religions. The ones without gods were ideologies like communism, national socialism and so on.
Then there is all the new age crap.
In the end they are all just religions with a different front end.
There are some things that are common to all religions:
1. They all follow some dogmatic teaching that refuses to adapt to newly discovered fact and new scientific discovery. Usually something written in a (one), also referred to as "the" book.
E.g. genetics are frowned upon by the followers of almost all religions and ideologies (communists hated them and had them sent to siberia or executed, socialists hate them, christians hate them, muslims of course hate them) and there is probably no other science that get slandered as much as genetics, even tough this science is saving lives, constantly.
Modern evangelicals most often agree that there are great lessons to be learned from all religions. (Satanism is the common exception.) They merely point out the distinction they hold between "special revelation" in Christianity, which is stuff people would not understand without divine intervention; and "natural revelation" found in places like Buddhism that can be derived from normal observation of life.2. They believe that only their religion is the real one.
See note above. Many evangelicals support the observations of other religions that are not in contradiction of Christianity. They do however most often note that Christ has a divine message that makes a significant difference in the life of a person, though sometimes but not always a matter of ultimate salvation. Evangelicals are divided on this issue. Those that believe one must "accept Christ" in order to receive salvation, almost always believe in "geographical dispensationalism" which is to say, that people will be judged by their Creator, based upon the truth they were exposed to during their lives.3. They believe that they and only they have the solution to all of mankinds problems.
This is wrong start to finish. All Christians teach they are sinners in need of forgiveness, same as any participant of any religion.4. They all teach that their followers are in some way better (chosen or superior, whatever) than those that are not part of the religion.
Bullshit start to finish. Anyone who knows their bible knows that the "mandate" given by Christ is to spread the "gospel" of forgiveness. There is no mandate to persecute, harm or kill anyone outside Christianity in any historic form of Christianity. You're thinking of Islam, which is the only classical theistic religion that teaches from its core to harm "infidels".5. They have their followers go out and spread the religion and by whatever means convince others to follow it or if not possible, kill those that wont follow(evangelize, world revolution, indoctrinate, re- educate, spread with fire and sword, conquer the world, holy war, etc, etc) .
Bullshit start to finish. All of Christianity has always taught throughout all the centuries, that Christ's sacrifice is complete and sufficient. Only dark age crazy versions of Christianity have ever called for sacrifice from believers, and these were to support the fraudulent priesthood evoked upon Europe during the dark ages when believers couldn't read and the priesthood had a monopoly on "what God said". Even modern Catholics don't believe stuff like this, though it is easy to document this during the dark ages and the early-proto renaissance.6. They all require some form of sacrifice from their followers. There is lots of rites and beautiful stories, many using easy to understand metaphors and parabels.
Wrong start to finish. Christianity teaches the opposite--that mankind is flawed and in need of redemption. I guess you've never been to Sunday School and don't really know much about Christianity. And to say the truth, most atheists are in your position, with these same misunderstandings--as was C. S. Lewis before his conversion from Atheist at age 30. You should read him.7. They usually assume some human ideal that simply does not exist. Common (wrong) assumptions (mix and match depending on religion / ideology) are:
All humans are equal (at birth, in front of god, by nature, by class).
All humans are or want to be good by nature and it is society (or the devil, or the lack of education about morals, or the godlessnes) that makes them evil or forces them to do bad things.
Members of people X are superior to all others.
Aquired abilities become part of nature and species adapt. So that e.g. a couple of generations of teaching of an ideology can make a better class of humans.
LOL, yeah sure that is why we have all those young earth creationists run about. That is why we have people complain about "men playing god" whenever genetics are mentioned. The catholic church had been denying basic scientific fact until very recently. Heck they were denying people in areas of Africa that had 50% HIV positives the use of condoms for Christs sake (excuse the pun!)Sure some of them are trying to adapt because they have to, but they would much rather not.GIThruster wrote:I'm sorry Skippy, as much as I want to agree, most of this is simply not true. Corrections follow:
Modern evangelicalism which is what most of the US is composed of; adapts completely to the fact findings of science. I'm sure there are other religions as well that evolve over time.Skipjack wrote:But there were and are plenty of so called "modern" religions. The ones without gods were ideologies like communism, national socialism and so on.
Then there is all the new age crap.
In the end they are all just religions with a different front end.
There are some things that are common to all religions:
1. They all follow some dogmatic teaching that refuses to adapt to newly discovered fact and new scientific discovery. Usually something written in a (one), also referred to as "the" book.
E.g. genetics are frowned upon by the followers of almost all religions and ideologies (communists hated them and had them sent to siberia or executed, socialists hate them, christians hate them, muslims of course hate them) and there is probably no other science that get slandered as much as genetics, even tough this science is saving lives, constantly.
Again, you only go to heaven if you are a Christian. Everybody else goes to hell. So their members are "special" compared to others. It is the same with all religions though.GIThruster wrote:Modern evangelicals most often agree that there are great lessons to be learned from all religions. (Satanism is the common exception.) They merely point out the distinction they hold between "special revelation" in Christianity, which is stuff people would not understand without divine intervention; and "natural revelation" found in places like Buddhism that can be derived from normal observation of life.2. They believe that only their religion is the real one.
Not those devout Christians that I knew. Maybe some more modern ones think so. Anyway, it does not contradict what I said.GIThruster wrote:See note above. Many evangelicals support the observations of other religions that are not in contradiction of Christianity. They do however most often note that Christ has a divine message that makes a significant difference in the life of a person, though sometimes but not always a matter of ultimate salvation. Evangelicals are divided on this issue. Those that believe one must "accept Christ" in order to receive salvation, almost always believe in "geographical dispensationalism" which is to say, that people will be judged by their Creator, based upon the truth they were exposed to during their lives.3. They believe that they and only they have the solution to all of mankinds problems.
How does that contradict anything? You still only go to heaven if you are a Christian. Also again, we are not talking about just Christianity there.GIThruster wrote:This is wrong start to finish. All Christians teach they are sinners in need of forgiveness, same as any participant of any religion.4. They all teach that their followers are in some way better (chosen or superior, whatever) than those that are not part of the religion.
I was not saying that all religions were doing the same thing. I gave examples for what happened in various religions or what had been tought by their leaders. Crusades, holy wars, jihad, world revolution, all the same.Sure Christianity is a lot more moderate these days. I just want to point out the Husite wars, the Hugenotte wars, the reformation wars, the crusades, etc, etc.GIThruster wrote:Bullshit start to finish. Anyone who knows their bible knows that the "mandate" given by Christ is to spread the "gospel" of forgiveness. There is no mandate to persecute, harm or kill anyone outside Christianity in any historic form of Christianity. You're thinking of Islam, which is the only classical theistic religion that teaches from its core to harm "infidels".5. They have their followers go out and spread the religion and by whatever means convince others to follow it or if not possible, kill those that wont follow(evangelize, world revolution, indoctrinate, re- educate, spread with fire and sword, conquer the world, holy war, etc, etc) .
GIThruster wrote:Bullshit start to finish. All of Christianity has always taught throughout all the centuries, that Christ's sacrifice is complete and sufficient. Only dark age crazy versions of Christianity have ever called for sacrifice from believers, and these were to support the fraudulent priesthood evoked upon Europe during the dark ages when believers couldn't read and the priesthood had a monopoly on "what God said". Even modern Catholics don't believe stuff like this, though it is easy to document this during the dark ages and the early-proto renaissance.6. They all require some form of sacrifice from their followers. There is lots of rites and beautiful stories, many using easy to understand metaphors and parabels.
Again, incapable of understanding what I was trying to say. Christianity still assumes that "god made all people equal". This is simply not true.GIThruster wrote:7. They usually assume some human ideal that simply does not exist. Common (wrong) assumptions (mix and match depending on religion / ideology) are:
All humans are equal (at birth, in front of god, by nature, by class).
All humans are or want to be good by nature and it is society (or the devil, or the lack of education about morals, or the godlessnes) that makes them evil or forces them to do bad things.
Members of people X are superior to all others.
Aquired abilities become part of nature and species adapt. So that e.g. a couple of generations of teaching of an ideology can make a better class of humans.
Wrong start to finish. Christianity teaches the opposite--that mankind is flawed and in need of redemption. I guess you've never been to Sunday School and don't really know much about Christianity. And to say the truth, most atheists are in your position, with these same misunderstandings--as was C. S. Lewis before his conversion from Atheist at age 30. You should read him.
Usual response from religious people and their defenders "You just dont understand it".GIThruster wrote:Sorry Skippy, but you demonstrate a complete lack of understanding on this issue. None of your answers obtain.
Dream on. Most scientists are Christians.Skipjack wrote:genetics are frowned upon by the followers of almost all religions and ideologies
Sounds like you have a very small sampling of what Christianity is all about. "Anecdotal" would be an extremely generous way to characterize it.. . .you only go to heaven if you are a Christian. Everybody else goes to hell.
Em. . .yep It does.They believe that they and only they have the solution to all of mankinds problems. . .Not those devout Christians that I knew. Maybe some more modern ones think so. Anyway, it does not contradict what I said.
Okay, so you want to point out examples you agree are not good examples of modern religion? You can do that. Do you want theists to point out examples of comic book atheism to discredit it? Mao Zedong in China, Stalin in Russia, and Hitler--together have killed vastly more people on the planet than everyone else combined for 6,000 years of recorded history, and they were all Atheists.I was not saying that all religions were doing the same thing. I gave examples for what happened in various religions or what had been tought by their leaders. Crusades, holy wars, jihad, world revolution, all the same. Sure Christianity is a lot more moderate these days. I just want to point out the Husite wars, the Hugenotte wars, the reformation wars, the crusades, etc, etc.
Em, yeah, I really do.Where did I talk about sacrificing someone or something? You do understand the meaning of personal sacrifice, do you?
You're confusing 18th century political philosophy with Christianity. Certainly it's true, Christianity teaches a brotherhood of all mankind, but there is nothing in your bible that teaches the modern notion of equality. That is a construct of modern Christianity for sure, but it is not a doctrine of Christianity. If it were, Christ would have been made into a politician, and we would have seen the end of slavery much sooner than we did. As it is, Christ had bigger plans than social justice. He decided instead, to save the world.Christianity still assumes that "god made all people equal". This is simply not true.
I read the Babble when I was eight, and again when I was fifteen. I'm an atheist and the son of atheists. I've also read two translations of the Q'uran and have studied Zen and read most of the Mahayana Sutras. I've read parts of the Gita and several of the Upanishads.Skipjack wrote:Usual response from religious people and their defenders "You just dont understand it".GIThruster wrote:Sorry Skippy, but you demonstrate a complete lack of understanding on this issue. None of your answers obtain.
My grandmother was a very devout Christian. I went to a catholic school with priests as teachers...
They're not fundies like you.GIThruster wrote:Dream on. Most scientists are Christians.Skipjack wrote:genetics are frowned upon by the followers of almost all religions and ideologies
Noted you didn't deny it. You just tried to sweep it under the carpet. That's a pretty big lump you got there under that carpet.GIThruster wrote:Sounds like you have a very small sampling of what Christianity is all about. "Anecdotal" would be an extremely generous way to characterize it.. . .you only go to heaven if you are a Christian. Everybody else goes to hell.
You left something important out. This doesn't make any sense.GIThruster wrote:Em. . .yep It does.They believe that they and only they have the solution to all of mankinds problems. . .Not those devout Christians that I knew. Maybe some more modern ones think so. Anyway, it does not contradict what I said.
You know nothing of atheism or atheists.GIThruster wrote:Okay, so you want to point out examples you agree are not good examples of modern religion? You can do that. Do you want theists to point out examples of comic book atheism to discredit it?I was not saying that all religions were doing the same thing. I gave examples for what happened in various religions or what had been tought by their leaders. Crusades, holy wars, jihad, world revolution, all the same. Sure Christianity is a lot more moderate these days. I just want to point out the Husite wars, the Hugenotte wars, the reformation wars, the crusades, etc, etc.
Hitler was not an atheist. You're lying again.GIThruster wrote:Mao Zedong in China, Stalin in Russia, and Hitler
And it would even be relevant if anyone actually followed it.GIThruster wrote:Em, yeah, I really do.Where did I talk about sacrificing someone or something? You do understand the meaning of personal sacrifice, do you?You're confusing 18th century political philosophy with Christianity. Certainly it's true, Christianity teaches a brotherhood of all mankind, but there is nothing in your bible that teaches the modern notion of equality. That is a construct of modern Christianity for sure, but it is not a doctrine of Christianity. If it were, Christ would have been made into a politician, and we would have seen the end of slavery much sooner than we did. As it is, Christ had bigger plans than social justice. He decided instead, to save the world.Christianity still assumes that "god made all people equal". This is simply not true.
You should read Mere Christianity, Skippy. You'd like it.