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#1 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
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This is an interesting read.
article I've read "The God Delusion" and watch a couple of presentation by Sam Harris and they both seem to be really out of touch with what a typical person on the street believes about religion. Some of these stats seem to back this up "Ironically, however, both atheists and committed Christians share one unusual area of common ground: concern about superficial, inert forms of Christianity in America. There are nearly 130 million American adults who describe themselves as Christians, but who are Christian in name only; their behavior includes little related to experiencing and expressing their alleged faith in Christ."
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"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." Bertrand Russell http://rayofsolar.blogspot.com/ http://zeropointseven.blogspot.com/ |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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shoshaku jushaku
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INTP
Location: Where ever I can annoy management
Posts: 1,552
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More of its esotericism got lost during the de-emphasis of ritual. What ritual is good for is to give the active mind a focal point while stilling it. A reaction was the turn to Eastern religion. While I think it is possible to find an enveloping experience in modern Christianity, I think that experience is downplayed and denigrated by large parts of the faithful. I'm willing to accept that what the Evangelicals describe as being saved is a similar experience, but I'm not convinced it's a transformative experience, which I think it should be. It's too clean and contained and doesn't seem to change the core--only serves, in many cases, to re-emphasize existing beliefs. But, who am I to say for sure? I am not the people I speak of.
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Who rises in the morning, looks in the mirror and says, "I think I will do something stupid today?" -- James Hollis If people never did silly things nothing intelligent would ever get done. -- Ludwig Wittgenstein Whaling is illegal in Oklahoma.
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#3 (permalink) | ||
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Totally Twinkly
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INtP
Location: My Splendid Forties!
Posts: 12,175
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The largest difficulty nowadays still seems to be the political movements -- the notion that it is the church's job to create a theocracy, rather than simply having people as individuals be effective in their roles in life and impact the lives of those around them. That is my perspective, as an "insider" type. |
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#4 (permalink) | |
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au lait
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INFj
Location: depressed midwest
Posts: 4,854
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This is one of the miracles of love: It gives a power of seeing through its own enchantments and yet not being disenchanted. ~C. S. Lewis
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
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I could be wrong, but I think pushing for a theocracy from the right wing fundies will force americans to rethink their religious belief because a theocracy goes against the American constitution. Giving people an ultimative, we are one people under one god, might not be such a bright idea. Do they honestly believe they can turn America into a theocracy, or do they have some other goal?
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"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." Bertrand Russell http://rayofsolar.blogspot.com/ http://zeropointseven.blogspot.com/ Last edited by darlets; 06-21-2007 at 05:14 AM. |
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#6 (permalink) | |
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Totally Twinkly
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INtP
Location: My Splendid Forties!
Posts: 12,175
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Quote:
For some people, it's not even a group-political activity, it's simply what they feel as individuals. Here is what the Bible says is right and wrong, and the law should reflect true morality, so therefore the law should be the same. (It's very simplistic thinking but seems very sensible if you are that sort of believer -- the "Law" should be the "Truth!") For others, they might see American as losing ground morally, they don't like the promiscuity and the horrible things that people do (drugs, sex, gluttony, greed, etc.), and they feel that to reestablish laws based on God's principles will provide the sort of society that is needed to nip such sin in the bud. This is more an SJ "Garbage in, Garbage Out" philosophy -- people are malleable and need to be put into a positive environment in order to ensure they respond positively. And they already see other philosophies as "enemies" and ultimately sinful, who thus need to be defeated. Because God wouldn't want sin, and sin is bad for people in the long run... so let's get rid of it! And if it's a war... well, Christians should be willing to fight and sacrifice for Jesus, just like he sacrificed for us. (Etcetera.) There's definitely a war mentality in some of the conservative trenches, and they're defending the homeland which has been taken over by people who don't serve God, and they need to be patriotic and fight. So you get at least those three mentalities in place. And I suppose you could even throw in the "godless liberal media" cliche as well as working under the scenes, which basically prejudges any knowledge that arrives through the media that might challenge one's viewpoint as simply the work of the devil / sinful mentalities (which it WOULD be... if you are of that bent). This is why much of the scientific discussion has been shut down... because anything running against the Christian group-thought can simply be attributed to the "godless people" and ignored. (Put another way, scientists believe in evolution because their hearts are hard and they don't want God to be in charge of their lives, NOT because there happens to be any real evidential basis for evolution; it's a sad truth, they think, but that's what they've been told it is...) It's getting late... my head is swimming... did I make any sense?
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#7 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INTP
Location: New Mexico
Posts: 145
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I am quite confused by their statement that American infidels* are concerned about moderate Christians. I'm far less concerned about moderate Christians than I am about the ones trying to get Creationism into public school curricula, for example. I don't know any other atheists, agnostics, free thinkers, humanists, et cetera, who are more concerned about Cafeteria Christians than they are about Evangelicals. *It's OK. I'm taking it back for us so that it can be a symbol of pride. I just have to make sure it stays politically incorrect for anyone else to use it.
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JBS Haldane's Four Stages of Scientific Theories: 1. This is worthless nonsense. 2. This is an interesting, but perverse, point of view. 3. This is true, but quite unimportant. 4. I always said so. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
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Posts: 372
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Sadly a little too much. Sigh, that's all very depressing.
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"The time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time." Bertrand Russell http://rayofsolar.blogspot.com/ http://zeropointseven.blogspot.com/ |
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#9 (permalink) | |
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shoshaku jushaku
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INTP
Location: Where ever I can annoy management
Posts: 1,552
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Constantine converted in 312. Sometime soon after that, Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire. Political and religious power was, in some way, strongly intermingled from that time forward. The Protestant Reformation and other such broke some of this combination of power, but it's always been there. Christian texts have always included some promise of a theocracy. The same promise is in the parts of the OT that were made canon--the parts about Solomon, the return from Babylon, etc. Theocracy is basic to Christianity. What we see now in the States is nothing new. It's a very literal reading of texts and traditions, right down to attempts to breed red heifers in Jerusalem because some document says that the Apocalypse will be signaled by the birth of red heifers in Jerusalem. Christianity has made itself purely exoteric--what you see is what you get, no hidden traditions or meaning here. The exorcism of esoterisicm forces literal readings of the texts. Subsequently, if we read of a "kingdom of heaven" then that must be a theocracy, rather than a state of mind or a guiding principle.
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Who rises in the morning, looks in the mirror and says, "I think I will do something stupid today?" -- James Hollis If people never did silly things nothing intelligent would ever get done. -- Ludwig Wittgenstein Whaling is illegal in Oklahoma.
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#10 (permalink) | |
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shoshaku jushaku
Join Date: Apr 2007
Type: INTP
Location: Where ever I can annoy management
Posts: 1,552
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Quote:
__________________
Who rises in the morning, looks in the mirror and says, "I think I will do something stupid today?" -- James Hollis If people never did silly things nothing intelligent would ever get done. -- Ludwig Wittgenstein Whaling is illegal in Oklahoma.
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