GIThruster wrote:tomclarke wrote:Might also say same of christophobia.
Only the grossly uninformed or atheists with an agenda would say the same things about Christianity and Islam. Plenty of us have pointed out the multitude of salient distinctions and you're still playing that pipe, Tom. When it comes to religion, you don't seem an honest man at all.
I think you mean that when it comes to religion I have different opinions from you.
If you read my statement I'm not commenting on religion - it was a meta-comment, saying that either of these two topics had the same inflammatory characteristics.
When we were talking religion, I never said that Islam & Christianity are identical - they are different religions, from different cultures. I never said the situation re terrorism now is identical between the two. I specifically said that many of the things often associated with Islam (but strongly denied by well eduacted Islamic scholars) a version of Sharia law that enshrines nomadic cultural mores - I find profoundly objectionable.
I also said that Jesus's moral teachings were pretty good, any version of Christianity based on just them would be excellent. However Christianity is not just the teachings of Christ, it is them + the OT + the Paulian books + Revelations + (usually) the idea that these religious writings are all literally true.
Now, modern Christian scolars will similarly have unobjectionable ways of dealing with all this, and not require literal truth.
You see the parallels? Also I agree that Christain is a more mature religion that Islam, and the less literal more sensible readings hold more sway. But not exclusively so. I note the required literal reading of the Quran but this is similar to Christianity 300 years ago.
I also agree that the "passive sacrifice" aspect of Christianity is less worrisome than the "active sacrifice" equivalent in Islam. But Christianity has had its share of religious wars so you cannot simply say Islam is violent, Christianity nonviolent.
All great religions encompass both profound morality and great immorality. The idea that Islam is "the evil religion" is stupid because many many non-evil people profoundly believe it in the West. I would say the same of Christianity as interpreted in the dark ages. Many very nasty things went on in its name, but equally it was strongly believed by so many people, and many of them were good, taking what was best from their religion.
In summary, I'm not here being post-modern and saying Cristianity and Islam are equal, it is all a mattr of opinion. I'm saying that there are things I do and don't like about both, because one side my be more apparent then the other at the moment is not enough for me to label Christianity a guaranteed force for good or Islam an intrinsically evil religion.
And a lot of Christian and Islamic religious leaers would agree with the above.