Topic: The Religion Thread

They say you shouldn't talk about politics or religion in polite company.

I say, I'm not polite company, and They can go fuck Themselves.

A few terms worth defining at the outset here:

Theist: One who believes in the existence of a god or gods.

Atheist: One who does not believe in the existence of a god or gods.

Notice, an atheist is not necessarily someone who believes that "there is no god." Rather, it is at its core definition merely a person who has not accepted any god-claim with which he or she has been presented.

Now, there is a subset of atheists who would say that they not only reject claims that there is a god, but think that there is in fact no god. The term for this is "strong atheist." (I don't really like the term, in the sense that I don't like the implication that others are "weak atheists," but I didn't make it up and it is what it is.)

The distinction may not make sense so let me give a quick analogy. Say you flip a coin and cover it with your hands. You ask, "do you think that this coin is heads?" And I say, "No."

This does not inherently mean that I think the coin is tails. What it means is simply that I do not have a good enough reason to accept the claim that the coin is heads. Rejecting a claim is not the same as accepting its opposite.

So with theism. If someone does not accept the claim "there is a god," it does not mean that they inherently accept the claim "there is no god." Though some atheists do.

You may have also noticed that I didn't list "agnostic." That's because agnostic is not a valid theological position. The question of theism is binary. Either you believe in a god, or you do not. If you "don't know" if you believe in a god, then by definition, you obviously don't. If you did, you'd know. You don't. You're an atheist.

Agnostic, rather, is a philosophical position on what it is possible to know. It's part of a separate binary pair that derives from the Greek work gnosis, meaning certain knowledge.

Someone who is of a gnostic philosophy believes that it is possible to know something with absolute, incontrovertible certainty. An agnostic, on the other hand, thinks that it is not possible to know anything with absolute certainty. You may be 99.999...99% sure of something, but there is always a 0.000...01% chance that you are incorrect.

It is my view that in the gnostic/agnostic dichotomy, gnosticism is not an intellectually tenable philosophy. We are finite creatures and our ability to know something is also necessarily finite. We cannot ever have absolute knowledge.

But, as I said, recognizing that our knowledge is necessarily limited is not the same as saying everything becomes 50-50 odds of being true. You can be pretty damn sure based on all available information, but intellectual honesty demands that you always remain open to new information that will require you to rethink your position.

I am myself both an atheist, and agnostic. I do not believe that any god (as traditionally defined) exists, based on the information that I have seen; however I recognize that I may be incorrect, as I do not have a full knowledge of the cosmos (and if I did, I would have to believe in a god, because it would be me).

That being said, I am also a "strong" atheist. I not only reject all god-claims with which I have been presented, but because of this, I believe I have, if not all possible knowledge, then at the very least the same amount of knowledge that any theist has, and I find the evidence wanting. The universe not only behaves unlike what we should expect to see if there is a god, it behaves exactly as one would expect if there was no god. Therefore, though I am open to compelling evidence to the contrary, I not only do not think there is a god, but I think that there is in fact no god.

However, I acknowledge that this steps beyond the boundaries of what can be satisfactorily demonstrated, and so in terms of debate I only go so far as to accept or reject theistic claims as presented.

This all got started because of a discussion of faith and religion in the Contact commentary thread. We can pick up that conversation here or start anew, but in the main, the question put out to anyone who wishes to answer it is this: what do you believe, and why do you believe it?

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Re: The Religion Thread

As has been noted by more than a few people here and elsewhere, I tend to err more to the "let's just shut up and be nice" side of things.

Call it upbringing or something, my good, polite Christian mom taught me to do what you believe and believe what you want, and when your mouth opens, say something kind. I take a lot of pride in knowing that our community has had quite a long conversation back and forth across the issues without being unkind, so I'm comfortable reading and enjoying the arguments back and forth.

In terms of aggressive participation, I've lost interest in the aforementioned taboo conversation topics. I have a huge interest in the subjects at hand - but not in the form the conversations usually take, after years and years of having them.

There was a time when I was actively trying to convince Dorkman of the fallacies I found in his Christianity. In a long, unrelated simmering down, I've gotten to the point where people can talk about just about any damned thing and I don't feel the need to respond.

But, for full disclosure and because it's the question at hand...

I'm an atheist, and a very strong one, according to these terms. The part of the conversation I've always been most interested seems to be something that occurs in a proof far back in the arguments back and forth about "God" and the Bible and whatnot, and that is essentially a boiling down of what I see as the real question.

"Do you think the mechanism that facilitated the creation of the Universe cares about us?"

There may be more elegant ways to put it, but frankly, I find this pretty elegant. It pre-questions most of the arguments I've heard.

The mechanism. God? A cosmically inevitable cycle of bouncing gravity? An alien race in desperate need of more space, creating universes left and right for some unfathomable reason?

Facilitated. Through existence allowed or caused the universe to be created. God made it? The universe simply does this? Aliens artificially induced it?

Cares. Comes before all questions of worship, assuming knowledge in the first place. (The only leaping of a conclusion I detect in my sentence.) If God, or a God, did it, were we part of whatever he/they were doing, or a side-effect? If it's an eventuality of cosmic existence and the Drake equation, naturally there's not much of a question. If alien creatures are to blame, does whatever their plan happens to be preclude the existence of little ants mulling around on a rock within it?

It also has the effect of pouring water on the debate, and cools me down when I want to start nitpicking Bible verses. I sort of reject the premise of the Bible entirely, because it absolutely doesn't matter. An intelligent, spiritually active creator is what matters, and only insofar as it's one of many available possibilities. And as it's the keystone of major religions throughout history, not just modern ones, I'd say it's the safest representative of human interpretation in general.

What interests me is that the notion keeps happening - or at least, kept happening, until at least two thousand years ago - not whatever the fuck someone in one particular year in history believes.

I'm not intellectually opposed to some intelligent force creating the universe, that covers two of my basic three possibilities handily. The thing that strikes me as extremely unlikely is that anything responsible for creating a universe, and think about the term universe, cares at all about the various conglomerations of carbon extremely rarely scattered around within it.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: The Religion Thread

The word "god" is one of those that we throw around a lot, as a culture, without ever rigorously defining it. This isn't inherently a bad thing; we refuse to rigorously define practically all the nouns we use. But in the context of this kind of conversation, that lack of definition can trip us up.

Christians tend to have a very specific definition of "god," and they call it "God." I'm gonna stick with the capital-G spelling to refer to the more-or-less consistent Christian idea of the deity, which is close enough to the Jewish and Muslim ideas of the deity for purposes of discussion, and because otherwise I'll get sick of typing God/G-d/Allah.

It's a fairly easy proposition to debate the existence of God, because God is well defined for those people who believe in Him. The Christian/Jewish/Muslim God is fundamentally like us, or I guess more to the point we are held to be fundamentally like Him. God has opinions, God has likes and dislikes, God has intentions and ambitions and emotions. God can be happy or sad. Whether you hold the opinion that God created us in His image, or whether you think we invented God to be like us, the net result is the same: God is fundamentally a person.

Lots of people have trouble believing in that. I'm one of them. I don't know if I can go so far as to say I definitively don't believe in that notion, but I'm so far down the path of "I don't know" that I'm effectively a non-believer.

But when we start talking not about God but about god, I get fuzzy.

A lot of non-Christian/Jewish/Muslim/whatever belief systems postulate that multiple gods exist, and that they're all jerks, basically. From our lofty perch at the zenith of all human achievement we can look down and tsk-tsk at those belief systems, dismissing them as naive rationalizations of the fact that life is nasty, brutish and short. Crops all died? The rain god is angry. Another tribe burned our village? The war god is angry. Jaguar ate my sister? The jaguar god is … hungry. Something. Life sucks, so we conclude that there must be some malevolent, or at least mercurial, intelligence directing the myriad ways and means by which it sucks.

I call this the theology of paranoia. There are gods, and those fuckers are out to get us.

Personally? I find this philosophy a lot easier to buy into than the notion of a parental deity who loves all of us dearly but who lets that malaria thing have a pass anyway and who takes an inappropriate level of interest in just how much time I spend soaping up my privates in the shower.

Sure, we can get all reductionist on this shit. We can study hard and learn all about how climate works and come up with metaphors based on imaginary Chinese butterflies, but at the end of the day, it still all boils down to "dammit, sometimes it just don't rain." But this is the part where Pascal's wager comes into play. If you deeply, sincerely believe that sometimes it just doesn't rain and there's nothing you can do about it, but there are those who believe there's a rain god with a hardon for animal sacrifices … is it really all that unreasonable for you to toss a goat on the bonfire once a month? Couldn't hurt, right? I mean, it's stinky, and you're out one goat, but other than that, it's an easy precaution to take. And plus, it's something to do. Life without purpose is boring.

But what if we expand our definition of "god" even further? For all their differences, the God of Abraham and the rain god with the yen for overcooked mutton still have one fundamental thing in common: They're like us. They're rational beings, entities with minds. The choices we make in life influence the deity in some way. Burn a sheep and the rain god is pleased. Masturbate and God won't answer your prayers. There's a system, and there are rules, and all we have to do to get what we want all the time is to figure out what those rules are and play by them. We can map inputs to outputs in a way that makes logical sense to us, even if, like the rules governing what is and what isn't kosher, seems pretty arbitrary sometimes.

But what if god isn't like that? What if there is a god — some kind of entity that causes things to happen somehow — and it has a mind, but its mind works in ways that are so different from ours as to be totally incomprehensible? You sacrificed a sheep yesterday, and it rained. You sacrifice a sheep again today and it doesn't rain. Why? Because yesterday your sacrifice pleased god, and today it didn't. There's no simple, linear relationship between what you do and how god reacts, because god isn't like us.

Of course … how would that be different from there being no god at all? Maybe on a practical level it wouldn't. But it would remain the case that there is a deity out there, making the sun come up and the rain fall and the jaguars eat our sisters. There's just nothing we can do about it.

What if god exists, but it actively hates us?

What if god is an animal?

What if god is a plant?

It comes down to this: It's a fairly straightforward problem to subject Christianity, or any other organized belief system, to a sort of informal scientific method. Line up a set of if-then propositions and look for the fallacy. It's not a perfect test, obviously, because belief systems are mazes of twisty little passages, all alike. But it's possible, in the broad strokes, to say that "If what you believed is true, then this would be the case, only it's not, so you're wrong."

But even if your reasoning is both applicable and correct, the very best you've done is to invalidate that one belief system. You've convinced yourself that God, as defined by thus-and-such set of beliefs, cannot exist. You haven't convinced yourself that god cannot exist, any more than you've convinced yourself that all men are Socrates.

Your question, Dorkman, was what do we believe and why do we believe it.

I believe in awe. I believe the universe is a bigger, more wondrous place than the human mind will ever be able to comprehend. I believe that in my best moments, just before sunrise, when everything is quiet and still, I can occasionally catch a glimpse of the vastness and the beauty of the universe out of the corner of my mind's eye, not enough to understand it, but just enough to be aware that it's there.

I believe that certain truths are absolute. I believe it's impossible to construct a universe in which parallel lines in a plane never intersect and yet the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter is equal to something other than pi. I believe that we have, through our reason and our imagination, discovered certain inviolable facts … and I believe this makes me sad. Because I believe I prefer to imagine infinite possibility than definitive, easily comprehensible truth.

But more than anything I believe that if the Christian God exists — or the Jewish one, or the Muslim one — I'll be intensely disappointed. Because I want to believe that there's more. I want to believe in the ineffable, in the infinite, in the incomprehensible. And if this whole thing, the whole entirety of existence, was thought up by an omniscient, omnipotent deity who, deep down, really isn't very different from me … sigh. That just seems like a waste of a perfectly good premise.

I want there to be a god. And I want that god to be a rhododendron a trillion trillion light-years across. And I don't ever, even in the fullness of deep time, want to understand it.

Last edited by Jeffery Harrell (2010-04-17 13:46:23)

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Re: The Religion Thread

Damn. Good post.

Teague Chrystie

I have a tendency to fix your typos.

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Re: The Religion Thread

That's three superb posts in a row. Hats off to you gentlemen.

The more I learn about the universe the less inclined I am to believe that if there was a god he cares about us - the universe is trying to kill us, and eventually it will succeed. It's not a question of if but when.

That to me conjurs up the image of a child building a castle of sand next to the sea. Whilst such an entity could be labelled a prime mover or mechanism I question calling it god, which is a being defined by omnipotence and omniscience.

Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere. - Carl Sagan

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Re: The Religion Thread

In lieu of posting my own response - whatever I'd probably have said has been said already by someone or other - I present you with Food For the Eagle.   

It's the text of a speech Adam (Mythbusters) Savage gave this month to the Harvard Humanist Society.

As supernatural worldviews go, the eagle-food model makes as much sense as any other.  Actually, it makes more sense than many...

Re: The Religion Thread

That was fucking awesome and Adam is now even more awesome in my mind. Thank you for that Trey.

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Re: The Religion Thread

I'm not big on labels, but you would not be wrong if you labeled me as a Soto Zen Buddhist.

While I could go on and on about why I practice Buddhism (which in my mind isn't a religion, but whatever) I'll sum up the differences between that and most religions as a contrast between faith and doubt.

I was raised Protestant, and minored in religion in college.  In my life and in my studies the common denominator in the Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition is the concept of reward for faith.  Have faith in God an his chosen messenger (Moses, Jesus, Mohammed) and you will be rewarded.

What I find interesting about Zen in particular and Buddhism in general is that its not based in faith, but in doubt.  The whole point of our Zazen practice is to question, literally, everything.  Question authority, question society, question our community, our very understanding of the world around us.  But more important than any of that...question yourself.  Hold yourself accountable, don't let yourself off the hook.  This is especially hard since our own internal psychological defenses enable quite a bit of self delusion to protect our ego.  Through Zen we question that, and in doing so, aim to destroy this fallacy we have come to understand as, "self."  If this sounds a bit like Tyler Durden's, "You are not a precious snowflake routine," that's because Palahniuk basically took a lot of Zen and formed that character around it (the ritual of leaving the space monkeys at the doorstep and berating them for two days straight before letting them in the house is straight out of a Rinzai Zen ritual for accepting new monks.  I've literally seen it happen).

The Gautama Buddha's dying words to his students were, "Be a lantern unto thyself."  He understood that everything needs to be questioned, even himself.  This appeals to me.  Anything or person that says, "THis is the definitive answer!" tends to set off BS alarms in my mind, and the fact that Zen doesn't claim to KNOW anything definitively feels honest to me.  Zen practice is less about discovering the truth, then pursuing it.

So yeah, while most religion rewards blind faith, Zen rewards contemplative doubt.

Eddie Doty

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Re: The Religion Thread

Oh thank god. Activity in a topic other than the Star Trek thread.

*reads title*

Shit.

Re: The Religion Thread

How is it that the religion thread is more civil and even tempered than the Star Trek thread?

......


Actually, it's not that surprising.  Never mind.

Eddie Doty

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Re: The Religion Thread

I had a nearly identical experience as pastormacman. Only it was a medical doctor instead of a witch doctor, and he told me it was a kidney stone. Drugs, not hugs, man.

EDIT: I didn't mean that to sound so jerkish. Still. God gives babies leukemia.

Last edited by Zarban (2010-05-17 01:11:15)

Warning: I'm probably rewriting this post as you read it.

Zarban's House of Commentaries

Re: The Religion Thread

I look at the universe and am filled with a sense of wonder and beauty and power and awe, and that fills my heart with peace and happiness.  I see the perfect, rational sense that all of it could have absolutely no inherent meaning, naturally.  I also know that we are really bad, as a species, at seeing things that seem obvious in retrospect.  So for now, I'll say that I haven't seen any compelling evidence of a God- making me an atheist by the parameters set forth here.  But I do firmly believe that there is a great deal more order in our universe than we know, and I hope (and it may be a more flimsy hope than any faith) that our species makes it long enough without killing ourselves or being killed to have that order revealed to us.

But if there is a God, I hope it's Dorkman.

Last edited by Kyle (2010-05-16 10:39:23)

When.

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Re: The Religion Thread

If I were God, you would know.

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Re: The Religion Thread

If someone asks if Dorkman's a God, YOU SAY YES

Posted from my iPad
http://trek.fm

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Re: The Religion Thread

You have no idea how awesome it is to find younger American kids who not only give time and effort to thinking these things thought but are willing to go to bat over it. Go dorkman!

From Canada it seems to get crazier and crazier with the god stuff down there every year. Sadly, for the first time i can recall there's a small group of these nuts starting here, mostly funded by US religious groups that are of a similar ilk.
But maybe its just that these small loud crazy groups are consistently getting louder as the real numbers drop?
Sad that magazines [before the current US crash] like "time" had articles like "Does god want you to be rich?".

I was truly shocked when "Passion" was a huge hit, as it contained ever kind of image that for years so called moral groups have argued against, along with the concept that this crazy S&M ending to Jesus's life was more important then what he stood for or any other moral conflict or idea he may have had.
These same nuts protested "The last temptation of Christ" which without me being a christian, I found to be a profound film, a truly spiritual film, mean while they embracing this crazy blood letting of a medieval passion play.

When i was younger I thought the Greek god concept of the pantheon made a sort of basic psychological sense. In that if gods are role models there was one covering every type of human behavior in metaphor and with logical human nature and behavioral outcomes. 

Versus a perfect "him" who gave birth to another perfect part of itself and then killed it. [really, god has a penis?]

Understanding the role and workings of any national leader in history you will quickly see how so called sins are committed to further very specific agendas that benefit that nation, faction etc. I think one of the most atheist texts ever written is "Machiavelli's The prince" for this reason.
And one of their tools to get people to fight and kill is to invoke some sort of god and their enemy is also a enemy of that god too.
Centuries from now the current nuttiness in the middle east will look the same as the crusades in tone, as the real political reasons will have become a sub note.

Last note on the Greek thing, when you ask some one to describe "god" in a anthropological sense they invoke a white bearded man in a toga throwing thunder bolts.
One of the ancient wonders was a statue of Zeus made by Phidias which ended up in Constantinople. Around this time the first images of this more modern single god as man images start to appear.  hmmmmmmmmm.

PPS does owning a RED camera or Apple product count as a religion?

Last edited by Deamon (2010-05-27 03:17:48)

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Re: The Religion Thread

Bringing over the conversation from the DR. STRANGELOVE thread:

fardawg wrote:
DorkmanScott wrote:
fardawg wrote:

If the charges are true, then not only does that violate his rights but also true Christianity. No real Christian would send death threats or harass anyone. trying to force someone to convert is the antithesis of Christianity.

No TRUE Scotsman would put sugar on his porridge!

Really Dorkman? I can't believe you would sink to that. It is in no way a "no true Scotsman" fallacy.

Of course it is. It is exactly a "no true Scotsman" fallacy.

"No Christian would send death threats or harass anyone."
"What about the Crusades?"
"No TRUE Christian..."

Certainly you have a point, up to a point, that there is such a thing as definitional requirements. Someone cannot identify as an atheist but claim to believe in a god. It's not that "no true atheist" would do that, it's that by definition if you do that, you aren't an atheist.

But when it comes to Christianity, it's far less cut and dried. What's a True Christian(TM)? Roman Catholic? Coptic? Anglican? Lutheran? Methodist? Baptist? Anabaptist? Presbyterian? Episcopalian? Calvinist? Puritan? Greek Orthodox? Pentecostal? Congregationalist?

See, here's the problem. You say "New Testament teaching" as if it's some clear, agreed-upon thing. It's not. The whole reason we have so may sects is that they all disagree on what the teachings of the New Testament precisely are, and in particular what their order of priority is. You can argue that New Testament teachings lead one to oppose gay marriage and find scriptural support. You can argue that New Testament teachings support gay marriage and find scriptural support. You can argue that New Testament teachings lead to pacifism and find scriptural support. You can argue that New Testament teachings lead one to be a warhawk and find scriptural support.

"Following New Testament teachings" is so vague as to mean whatever you want them to mean, and as a result everyone thinks they're the True Christians and anyone who disagrees with them is somehow a False Christian, because the True Christian interpretation of scripture is self-evident. Therefore any behavior that disagrees with your idea of what a Christian ought to be can be dismissed as behavior that "no real Christian" would engage in.

You talk about certain things fitting certain categories by definition. As such, you argument fits "no true Scotsman" by definition.

Gregory Harbin wrote:
downinfront wrote:

Ever mix linens?

That was Judaic law, which Christ superseded.

I mean, if we're going to get pedantic.

Christ would be surprised to learn that he superseded Judaic law.

"For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven." -Matthew 5:18-19.

It was Paul -- a Gentile who never met Christ during Christ's life (though supposedly did in a vision years later, conveniently with no one around) -- who began teaching that Judaic law no longer applies. Which, according to Christ, means Paul shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven.

If we're going to get pedantic.

So, who should we believe? What would a True Christian do?

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Re: The Religion Thread

DorkmanScott wrote:

Christ would be surprised to learn that he superseded Judaic law.

Just as Moses would be quite shocked to hear Jews don't sacrifice goats anymore. And Joseph Smith that Mormons aren't marrying multiple wives. And L Ron Hubbard that people are still worshipping his Sci-Fi novel. What's your point, that religions don't change?

Posted from my iPad
http://trek.fm

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Re: The Religion Thread

More likely that any change that occurs after the death of the founder should be viewed with a little suspicion. Either the Gods keep changing how they want to be worshiped, or humans keep changing what they're willing to do with little to no input from the divine. I wouldn't be shocked to discover that anyone not currently sacrificing animals to YHVH on the Temple Mount is in fact going to Hell.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: The Religion Thread

I am the son of God, come to earth as prophesied to save my Father's chosen people! All you have to do is believe in me!

—We don't want any!

All right then, I'm opening the offer up to anyone at all. Anybody? Heaven forever? The "chosen people" are now going to hell, by the way.

Warning: I'm probably rewriting this post as you read it.

Zarban's House of Commentaries

Re: The Religion Thread

I don't want to talk about this. I have no dog in this fight. I am not a Christian, nor do I subscribe to any other religious or spiritual creed, denomination, sect, cult, faction, fraternity, order or coven. On the other hand, I don't have any problem with anybody who does subscribe to any of that stuff; to them, I say verily, blessed are they that rocketh out with their cockeths out.

So I really don't care.

I do, however, want to clarify the point I (perhaps impulsively) made over in yonder thread from whence this recent attention came.

At the risk of getting all strawmanny, we have two points of view here. One says, "Christianity sucks because Christians do bad things." The other says, "Those people aren't really Christians, so don't judge Christianity by their actions." If anybody wants to get all up in my face about how that's not a fair summation of whatever it is they were trying to say, go right ahead, but I don't care, 'cause those opposing points of view are what I'm talking about just at this very moment.

Both of these positions are fundamentally specious — pronounced "stupid." Lemme splain why.

The phrase "no real Christian" doesn't mean anything. Seriously. I know it means something to you, person who argues from that side of the fence, but it has no objective meaning. How you, as an individual person, define "Christian" is literally between you and your god. There's no objectively true definition of the word, and no authoritative body that has the universally recognized right to define it by fiat, and no widespread consensus about what, specifically, it means. It's inherently a fuzzy term.

Okay, so you say X isn't Christian, so anybody who does X can't be Christian. That's your opinion, and you believe it's — literally! — God's own truth. This is fine. But that doesn't change the fact that some other jerk says X is Christian, and he thinks it's God's own truth too, and sorry, but there's no simple way to determine whether he's right and you're wrong or vice versa.

And besides, the whole line of reasoning misses the point. When somebody says "Christians do X, so Christianity sucks," their argument doesn't hinge on the premise that the people who do X are really, truly, no-shit Christians. There's a subtext, and that subtext is something along the lines of, "People who hold to a set of beliefs that's more or less compatible with mainstream, man-on-the-street Christianity do X," or else, "People call themselves Christian and do X while the rest of the people who call themselves Christian don't denounce those guys," or something like that. It's got nothing to do with whether those guys are really Christian, or whether they're something entirely else but calling themselves by the wrong name, or whether they're just jerks who say they're Christian just to mess with other people who also say they're Christian. So saying that those guys aren't really Christian isn't going to make the argument go away.

On the other hand.

There are, in history, examples of ethics that I think we can all agree are just objectively bad. The notion that it's okay to own other people as property: I think we're all on board with saying that wasn't a great idea. The concept of dealing with workplace stress by loading up as many handguns and as much ammunition as you can carry and going to town on your coworkers? Bad plan. Premeditated genocide? Let's all just rethink that one, cause that one's dumb.

Christianity does not fall into this category. I'm sorry to be so blunt about it, but it just flat-out doesn't.

There is absolutely no legitimacy to the idea that you can, based on whether somebody self-describes as Christian, draw any conclusions whatsoever about that person's character, values or overall worth as a human being. It's pretty to imagine that self-described Christians should be paragons of virtue, but we all know there are those who aren't, so correlation denied. Whether somebody self-describes as Christian tells you precisely as much about what kind of person they are deep down inside as whether they prefer cream or sugar in their coffee.

So it's just as foolish to find a venal Christian and jump to the conclusion that all Christians are jerks as it is to find a virtuous one and assume they're all awesome. It just ain't that simple, folks.

And before anybody gets the idea that I'm talking about Christianity here, go through all that crap I just spewed out and replace the word "Christian" with any other named ethos you can think of. I'm pretty sure it'll still be just as valid.

Are there Christians out there who want to establish some kind of theocratic state? Sure, no doubt. But that's not true of all Christians, and it's also not unique to Christianity. Hell, Tibet used to be a Buddhist theocracy. Wherever there exists a group of people with a shared set of axioms, sooner or later some damn fool will show up who thinks those axioms should be made mandatory, and that the opposite of orthodoxy is apostasy. Those people are jerks, whatever flag they happen to pick their noses under.

But you know what else you can find if you look hard enough? Pick a religion, any religion, even expanding your definition of "religion" to include anything even vaguely spiritual. Look around for a bit, and I guarantee you'll find some adherent of that belief system who draws from it the comfort and courage he needs to get through the day. Maybe it comes from prayer, maybe it comes from chanting, maybe it comes from meditation, maybe it comes from stripping starkers and dancing around a bonfire like a weirdo. Whatever it is, it's not hurting anybody, and it's making at least that one person just that much happier.

And if you'd deny that guy his faith, and the joy he derives from it, just because some other guys who don't even know that guy decided to do something stupid … well, you're either somebody who's never longed for a little comfort or courage during a long, lonely night — in which case, fuck off, robot — or you're just an asshole.

TLDR? Some people are jerks. Most aren't. We should judge folks by what they do, not solely by what they profess to believe.

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Re: The Religion Thread

Alright I feel a pressing need to resuscitate this post momentarily.

First off, if you havn't already seen this guy, watch this video (or one of his others, they're all equally as batshit).

So I know obviously that he isn't the first nutjob who claims to be a prophet, but he is however the first one I have seen come into a certain amount of prescence in the online world, namely through youtube. And even a cursory glance through the comments on all of his vids will leave you A) sickened by humanity and B)with a very disturbing feeling that there are a lot of people out there that are eating up what this guy is preaching.

So I'm wondering, do you think this ability for anyone to say basically anything they want online is going to affect the...religious architecture...(best way i can phrase it...if I think of something better I'll let you know) of the world. Is it going to become more of a fad for kool aid cults and the like to spring up through this sort of a medium. Virtually uncontrollable, these things could exist without even a single "physical" manifestation of the cult, just a lot of individual people listening to the preachings of these people and acting seperatly.

I don't know, I just find it interesting, I have no clue if this would make a good discussion topic at all, but I figured if you haven't seen this guy yet, if not for a good discussion it's definitely good for a few laughs.

ZangrethorDigital.ca

Re: The Religion Thread

There's two aspects of this. On the one hand, it's a way for a preacher to reach a greater number of people over a greater distance. What before required years of travel and trying to draw crowds can be done from home. On the other hand, that wacky message isn't hidden in a church where only those who bother to go to the meetings will hear it. 20 years ago you would never have discovered him.

I think in the end the main effect will be in fact fewer "successful" prophets, as there will be less need for regional cults and the most effective can draw followers from the marginal ones.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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