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Originally Posted by BenDover View Post
that does not mean the church and state are involved. It just means that a Christian politician will have more chance of pulling the Christian vote. Its just marketting.



Ok I will admit, that is pretty hilarious, we dont have that here. Im assuming the majority of the world doesnt have that either.
It was voted on at some point, so I guess its the will of the people.



The terrorist factions of the Muslim faith are a minority. The last time i checked, there were 2 billion Muslims in the world. the amount of terrorists within those 2 billion, would not even amount to a fraction, about as much as any christian or athiest faction.
It is simply cause by the propaganda created by a few individuals. manipulating the word of the Quran, combined with racial hatred and greed.
The major description of the terrorists is that they are terrorists, not muslims. The majority dont read the Quran and decide they now hate all non-muslims, it is not a part of their basic theology.

edit:


^

Radical Scapegoats in a Nutshell A fine example of Christianity's ability to justify the most fucked up things that exit the mouth of a human being.
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Originally Posted by BenDover View Post
yay, another debate on religion. oh wait, its the exact same one, with the exact same people and responses.
oh well.
Catholic here.



They do coexist, sort of, and have for years
The Catholic church has accepted the theory of evolution and the big bang theory for years, saying that it was all through Gods action and by his will and stuff. which can be seen as a very general answer but whatever.

The book of genesis was a fictional book created by the forfathers of the church to display the power of God. As such we cant take the story of the creation too seriously. especially when there is such overwhelming evidence towards the theory of evolution.

I think this is the 4th time ive had to explain it.



Yes, sure they can coexist if you phrase it like that.Only if the genesis part isn't meant to be taken literally.But, then how do we know what to take as literal and what to take as a symbolism?Sorry if I'm being tedious,err.

Another important thing for me is that the argument that Christians hold.Since, the disciples of Jesus had no "gain" in following him...Indeed, they were put in a really bad place for believing and teaching by his principles.But, why is this any different than a cult.After all, they were people that really believed that this guy was the son of god,Jesus.It only makes sense that they would sacrifice such a lot for him, and still that wouldn't affirm that in face Jesus was the son of God.

How can you be so arrogant(as how this position sounds to me) to claim that you know that Jesus,the son of God, did in fact live on earth.And, to claim that you know the commandments of our god etc etc...
Your messed up world enthrills me
Originally Posted by William View Post
Another important thing for me is that the argument that Christians hold.Since, the disciples of Jesus had no "gain" in following him...Indeed, they were put in a really bad place for believing and teaching by his principles.But, why is this any different than a cult.After all, they were people that really believed that this guy was the son of god,Jesus.It only makes sense that they would sacrifice such a lot for him, and still that wouldn't affirm that in face Jesus was the son of God.

Yes, the following that Jesus gained could be considered a cult. A relatively small group of followers creating a religious movement around a certain individual. It grew into an organized religion through its wide spread and gain of power and hierarchy.
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Originally Posted by William View Post
Yes, sure they can coexist if you phrase it like that.Only if the genesis part isn't meant to be taken literally.But, then how do we know what to take as literal and what to take as a symbolism?Sorry if I'm being tedious,err.

Another important thing for me is that the argument that Christians hold.Since, the disciples of Jesus had no "gain" in following him...Indeed, they were put in a really bad place for believing and teaching by his principles.But, why is this any different than a cult.After all, they were people that really believed that this guy was the son of god,Jesus.It only makes sense that they would sacrifice such a lot for him, and still that wouldn't affirm that in face Jesus was the son of God.

How can you be so arrogant(as how this position sounds to me) to claim that you know that Jesus,the son of God, did in fact live on earth.And, to claim that you know the commandments of our god etc etc...

sorry if i dont post sources but:
Judaism and Islam both acknowledge the existence of Jesus, as do some historians. Although they dont consider him to be the son of God, and rather a prophet or just a man.
Although Christianity, Islam and Judaism all have roots in each others history and theology, so its not surprising that they all agree that Jesus atleast existed.

As to what is figurative and what is literal:
Educated(and uneducated) people with different opinions, interpretations, information and wants/needs, took from the bible(many of the topics of the bible come out differently depending on which translation is read) what they wanted/believed, and made the separate denominations, like Baptist, Methodist, Anglican etc.

As it stands, theologists have spent 2000 years studying the bible, and what we believe/follow is listed in the various catechisms of the church. likewise with the various denominations.
While the bible is full of inconsistencies, the things that can be taken literally and figuratively are mostly written down in the catechism.

The Pope says that Genesis, while having basis in fact, is largely fictional, written by the forefathers etc. if you want to get more specific, im sure there are plenty of articles on it. I am no theologian.

Catholicism follows(according to some people, again, different interpretations and oppinions on the scriptures) the original doctrine given by Jesus.

You have a choice, accept the doctrine, follow what you believe or find a religion or denomination that fits, always question and always learn. many Catholics, while going to a Catholic church, have issues and questions regarding the catechism, but they accept and understand what they can and follow it as best they can or are comfortable with.

I have my own issues, and i deal with them in my own way.
My moms a Catholic while my dad is a general Christian who doesnt go to church, but still believes somewhat. do i judge my dad to be evil because he doesnt go to church? no.

I know its cliche, but its always down to choice.

The disciples where given a choice, and they made theirs, although they did witness his deeds and actions firsthand, rather than a look through a book based on information that is 2000 years old.
otherwise i dont know why.
skepticism is understandable.

Originally Posted by Frost-Dragon View Post
Radical Scapegoats in a Nutshell A fine example of Christianity's ability to justify the most fucked up things that exit the mouth of a human being.

everyone justifies everything they do, especially when theyr in the spotlight.
i dont agree with many things the church has done over the years, but i dont hold Christianity responsible for the heinous actions people commit. i blame people.

i have the similar oppinions of Westboro baptist church, as they do towards Catholicism. i think theyr a bunch of fucktards who make Christians all over the world look bad, and being associated with them pisses me off.


As to my own oppinions/beliefs, its a constant struggle, rationalizing one thing from another, learning new things, conflicting emotions and oppinions etc
I guess its all to do with the growing process
Last edited by BenDover; Oct 16, 2012 at 02:04 AM.
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Originally Posted by BenDover View Post
sorry if i dont post sources but:
Judaism and Islam both acknowledge the existence of Jesus, as do some historians. Although they dont consider him to be the son of God, and rather a prophet or just a man.
Although Christianity, Islam and Judaism all have roots in each others history and theology, so its not surprising that they all agree that Jesus atleast existed.

As to what is figurative and what is literal:
Educated(and uneducated) people with different opinions, interpretations, information and wants/needs, took from the bible(many of the topics of the bible come out differently depending on which translation is read) what they wanted/believed, and made the separate denominations, like Baptist, Methodist, Anglican etc.

As it stands, theologists have spent 2000 years studying the bible, and what we believe/follow is listed in the various catechisms of the church. likewise with the various denominations.
While the bible is full of inconsistencies, the things that can be taken literally and figuratively are mostly written down in the catechism.

The Pope says that Genesis, while having basis in fact, is largely fictional, written by the forefathers etc. if you want to get more specific, im sure there are plenty of articles on it. I am no theologian.

Catholicism follows(according to some people, again, different interpretations and oppinions on the scriptures) the original doctrine given by Jesus.

You have a choice, accept the doctrine, follow what you believe or find a religion or denomination that fits, always question and always learn. many Catholics, while going to a Catholic church, have issues and questions regarding the catechism, but they accept and understand what they can and follow it as best they can or are comfortable with.

I have my own issues, and i deal with them in my own way.
My moms a Catholic while my dad is a general Christian who doesnt go to church, but still believes somewhat. do i judge my dad to be evil because he doesnt go to church? no.

I know its cliche, but its always down to choice.

The disciples where given a choice, and they made theirs, although they did witness his deeds and actions firsthand, rather than a look through a book based on information that is 2000 years old.
otherwise i dont know why.
skepticism is understandable.



everyone justifies everything they do, especially when theyr in the spotlight.
i dont agree with many things the church has done over the years, but i dont hold Christianity responsible for the heinous actions people commit. i blame people.

i have the similar oppinions of Westboro baptist church, as they do towards Catholicism. i think theyr a bunch of fucktards who make Christians all over the world look bad, and being associated with them pisses me off.


As to my own oppinions/beliefs, its a constant struggle, rationalizing one thing from another, learning new things, conflicting emotions and oppinions etc
I guess its all to do with the growing process

Finally somebody who agrees with me.
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Originally Posted by Felepeno View Post
Im very closed minded but i try not to be "argue-y" About it, Partly cause i don't want people to believe i'm an arguing dick. But back to the discussion, I have yet another question, When was religion created, I know there was a person in greece who when he saw lightning he would believe it came from a god, But i want to know the first person to "see" god.

Seeing as religion dates back to over 200,000 BC (that is, more than 200 millennia ago), there's no way we can know who the first person to think up god was.

10,000 years ago almost every city, state or kingdom was ruled by religion.

Around 7,000 years after that, the Greeks thought up their religion. The belief that lighting comes from a god probably existed for thousands of years before it was used in Greek mythology.

Religion tends to borrow from each other. For example Easter was once a pagan festival of spring, and Christmas celebrated the winter solstice - both of these ceremonies existed for thousands of years before the bible was written. That's why the bible doesn't really present anything new other than this Jesus fellow. Everything is more or less borrowed from Islam, Egypt and Greece. Have you noticed that classical depiction of the Christian God looks a lot like Zeus? White flowing robes, beard, etc. The halo's around Christian angels exist in works older than Christianity, for example the Egyptian god Ra is depicted with a halo - actually it is a sun disk!

Originally Posted by BenDover View Post
Ok I will admit, that is pretty hilarious, we dont have that here. Im assuming the majority of the world doesnt have that either.

In a nutshell, I would say America is the main reason why people dislike Christians.
USA constantly starts wars and talks about how favoured they are by God, their motto is even "in God was trust". Correlation does not imply causation, so it's unfair to say that their religious devotion is what causes their warmongering.

If I didn't have Christians coming to my door or bothering me at bus stops, and there was no America leading it's modern day crusades, then I would probably be much more tolerant of Christians.

The other thing that annoys me is the assumption that Christianity is "good". When Osama did something bad; "oh Islam is a violent religion", where as when Hitler did something bad; "oh Hitler is a violent person".
Originally Posted by ImmortalCow View Post
Seeing as religion dates back to over 200,000 BC (that is, more than 200 millennia ago), there's no way we can know who the first person to think up god was.

Anthropology major here. We can narrow it down a bit more than that. It's generally agreed that prior to the Upper Paleolithic period, 'humans' had a totemic system of religion. Meaning they worshiped the land, animals, that sort of thing, in a ritualistic fashion - no gods though. That came later (est. 45,000), after tens of thousands of years of religious syncretism.

Originally Posted by ImmortalCow View Post
In a nutshell, I would say America is the main reason why people dislike Christians.
...
If I didn't have Christians coming to my door or bothering me at bus stops, and there was no America leading it's modern day crusades, then I would probably be much more tolerant of Christians.

I think it's got more to do with the hegemonic nature Christianity, rather than America (though it's probably a combination of the two).
Originally Posted by Ele View Post
I think it's got more to do with the hegemonic nature Christianity, rather than America (though it's probably a combination of the two).

i think its the hegemonic(i had to google that) nature of America, rather than of christianity.
Americans are far more into the "freedom of speech/oppinions" thing, than any other culture. (or atleast that is how media has depicted them)
the westboro baptist church is not the first, nor the most extreme right wing faction of anything to come out of the USA.

and in no way am i saying that it only happens in the USA.
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Originally Posted by Boredpayne View Post
People are not killing because of religion. They are killing for political purposes and using religion as a propaganda instrument and justification for said killing. Bin Laden did not plan 9/11 because the Qo'ran told him to.

Its not Qo'ran its Qur'an.The last book of Allah which was revealed on Prophet Muhammad(S.A.W).
Originally Posted by BenDover View Post
i think its the hegemonic(i had to google that) nature of America, rather than of christianity.
Americans are far more into the "freedom of speech/oppinions" thing, than any other culture. (or atleast that is how media has depicted them)
the westboro baptist church is not the first, nor the most extreme right wing faction of anything to come out of the USA.

and in no way am i saying that it only happens in the USA.

There's an interesting oft' quoted ethnography by Joel Robbins on the globalization of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity.

"Many scholars argue that P/c [Pentecostal Charismatic] is markedly successful in replicating itself in canonical form everywhere it spreads, whereas other stress its ability to adapt itself to the cultures into which it is introduced. Authors thus use P/c to support bother theories that construe globalization as a process of Westernizing [hegemonic] homogenization and those that understand it as a process of indigenizing differentiation."

Both of the above positions still argue that Christian hegemony is extremely prominent.

America's only hegemonic because it's primarily a Christian nation.