It isn't just that they believe you will burn in hell forever. It is that they AGREE that it is JUST for you to burn in hell forever. You don't have to believe their dogma to see how morally bankrupt it is. And all of these negative views can and do carry over from their religion to their other views. Religious views do not exist in a vacuum.
Christianity teaches self-depreciation (we all deserve eternal torure). And it teaches that belief and worship are the way out instead of works. Those who disbelieve are not to be saved and are to be punished. Is it any wonder that highly religious countries such as the US are highly authoritarian and people there will snap at you for questioning the authority figure? Is it any wonder that disasters in the distant future like global warming are ignored, when a good portion of the country sees the end of the world as soon to come and as being a GOOD THING?
i agree with all that you have mentioned. we had a secretary of the interior who said we didn't need to worry about the trees because jesus would be coming back soon.
also, i think it is very possible that bush, inc and ahmedinijad will attempt to fullfill the prophecy about armegeddon, which they share.
Christianity teaches inherited blame. It says that we should be punished for what our ancestor, Adam did. Can you see bad behavoiurs that may result if this mindset is copied over to other aspects of life?
yes, of course i do.
Christianity teaches that blood and death are the way to make up for wrongdoing, rather than good deeds. It teaches that we are forgiven our sins not by working them off but by the death and torture of Jesus. Is it any suprise that the US allows capital punishment? And that so often punishment is placed above reform and reparation?
Chrisitanity, and most other religions, teach a black and white, good vs evil, God vs Satan view of the world. Is it then any wonder that US politics are so sharply polarized and binary and ingroup/outgroup? "We must destroy the evildoers before they destroy us". "You are with us or against us".
Because their views effect you.
i agree with most you have written above. these things do me and they concern me a lot. but this is when i think about it in the abstract. when i come across an individual who believes these things, i don't feel any need to try to change them. i hate it when they try to change me - is the answer to do the same thing to them?
we have to live with people of different beliefs. i think these beliefs are harmful but i am not about to try to "save them". i think political action is definitely laudable, in trying to fight tooth and nail attempts by christians to influence our government and nibble away at our separation of church and state. so i think the acts are worthy of criticism.
Do you also ignore white supremecists or those who speak speak terrorist sentiments?
no. i avoid them.
i don't believe for one minute that i could convince them that they were wrong. i have had political arguments with people in the past. we both came away with the same beliefs and opinions that we started out with.
Indeed, and if it were released for the first time today, as a novel or a movie, it would likely be banned as hate speech designed to encourage violence and intolerance. But because it is a religious holy book it is taboo to speak a word against it.
agree.
No, because secularism has subdued this part of Christianity in the west. But so long as the bible reads as it does and so long as Christians continue to pass it off as the word of God, the part of Christianity you refer to is merely subdued, not dead, and it could very well rise up again.
i too, recognise this danger.
I don't advocate "correcting" the christian next door. I don't "correct" the racists next door either. We're not about to round people up like an inquisition.
But we should speak against these things, and we should encourage people to question the authority that pushes these beliefs on them and to question these beliefs themselves by looking at them in other contexts. We should not allow Christian to go unchallanged. Our voices as non believers need to be heard as well.
That is true. But its far easier to justify attrocity to yourself and your society when there is a handy religious texts to support it.
And as I mentioned above, many religions encourage hate and intolerance. For example, do you know many non-religious people who oppose same sex couples having equal rights to heterosexual couples? Or is it mostly religous people who take this stance? And if you've asked those religious people why they descriminate like this, have they ever given you good rational and fair explanations, or do they just tell you its an "abonimation" and their God declares it "evil"? At the extreme you've got Fred Phelps - and he and those like him have plenty of bible passages directly backing their views.
I was not one of them. Was it posted in a fellowship section of the board or here in "Comparative Religion"? If the former I'd equate an atheist jumping in and "correcting" the post to somebody rushing into a mosque or church and screaming at everybody. Rude. But if it was here in "Comparative Religion" I see nothing wrong with people pointing out the flaws in the logic.
it was posted in comparative religion. do you think it possible that a poem such as this (seeing nature as confirmaton of god's existence) might be a good thing because it is something that muslims, christians and jews can agree on - that can bring them together? i think there is value in that.
So you are alarmed by the growth of the christian right and its influence but you feel it is wrong to do anything about it?
no - fight it, if you're an activist type (i confess i am not) - fight their attempts to chisel away at our constitution. but spare somebody's aunt emily from having to hear "The Truth" as you see it, and respect her religious beliefs. again - it's about actions, not beliefs. i agree the beliefs cause the actions, as you've said - but you can only fight the actions.
not every christian is going to do this stuff. there are many very decent people who happen to be christian.
i am convinced that the people who want to do the types of things we've been talking about are that type of people and would be no different if they were marxists instead of christians. many christians find things in their religion that lead them to do positive things.
Nor will I. I find that offensive too. People like Dawkins (the author of "the god delusion") do more harm than good. But I also won't just sit around and smile as a hateful ideology spreads and tries to control my environment either. That is just as bad, if not worse.
so you think you can come to an islamic forum and enlighten the misguided and they will read your comments and say aha! of course! i've been wrong - pygo is right and the qur'an is wrong!
Yep. They try to control what you wear, what you eat, and what you believe about just about everything so that they can profit from it. Advertising, religion, fashion "trends", it is all the same deal.
Tell that to Martin Luther King Jr. It is not wrong to try to change people's beliefs and opinions, especially if those beliefs and opinions are harmful or dangerous. Its just a matter of how you go about it.