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#religion

1/18/2013 2:28:26 AM
68

Something that I would like to hopefully clear up...

When ever I see a topic that bashes the Christian faith and anyone who follows it, I see many people who simply do not know what it means to be a Christian. I do not simply mean: go to church, believe in God, etc. There is much more to it than that. So allow me to explain my friends :D Let me firstly start off by saying this. When ever a person labels somebody like myself a "hateful person" or something else that relates. It is usually off of the misdeeds of another person who calls their self "Christian," when in fact they are anything but... A Christian is supposed to be the person that the scripture tells them to be. One is: not to hate or spread hate, but to love all as God has done us. A Christian is not to use their one hand to love somebody, but smite them with the other. That is somebody who has absolutely no idea what it means to be what we are. Take the Westburro Baptist Church for example on that one. I do have my own personal disagreements with the life styles, and beliefs of others. But I do try my absolute best to keep that to myself. I want to be an example that we are not a hateful people, that when you cut out the white noise of the false Christians and get to really know us--you will see it for yourself. Yes, we may get angry and frustrated from time to time when something happens. Or when people troll us, we are human after all. ...About a year or two ago. Somebody in this forum sent me a PM for a reason I do not remember. I only remember him asking me (what I think) "If Christians are such kind people, then why do they spread so much hate, etc?" I simply replied with: "They are not TRUE Christains." Well, later he said that there cant be a single right choice of what a real christian is. Everybody has their own definition. While that may be true to a certain degree; like the Jehovah witnesses, Mormons, Catholics. They all have their own little different belief that is not from the Bible. Yeah, I know that the Mormons have theirs, but I am talking about the MAIN Bible, The KJV, or the others that pertain to the dominant faiths. If I had another chance to talk with that young man again. I would have said "Well what do you define as a Christian?" To which I would has said after his reply: I believe that God built the world in 6 days, and on the 7th he rested.. I believe that Jesus died on the cross for ME and MY sins that who ever shall accept him into their heart will become born again and begin life anew with the spirit of the living God within. I believe that you can be touched by the Holy spirit with the evidence of speaking in tongues. I believe that you lay hands on the sick so that they may be healed, I believe that the Father will never leave me nor forsake me and that he supplies all of my needs. I believe that I will go through trials and tribulations; to the point where I feel like breaking. But I will come out the other end stronger than before, because God is in control my life. I believe that satan has no hold over me and that he has to flee at the sound of Gods great name! I believe that Jesus died and rose again on the 3rd day. That he is the God who was and is and is to come again soon. /End rant... I really would not like to get into an argument about this. This is what I believe with all of my heart and all of my soul. Nothing will ever change it. I believe that the Lord has changed my life from what it once was and that I have only scratched the surface. I am just going to leave the thread at that. I prefer to not talk about it and get many people hot headed. I know that I am going to get battered anyway, but it has no hold over me. So bring it ;)

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  • Edited by Wyldfyre: 1/18/2013 6:50:09 PM
    That may have been me, I still have the conversation thanks to this new site. I wasn't the one who instigated it either. The initial conversation was in a thread of which I don't remember much. And I've already heard that reply/explanation so many times. It doesn't change across many of the various sub-context interpretations of the same belief system. If you believe something, that's fair enough. If you wish to hold it close to you, I have no problem with that unless you're using it as an excuse to be a prick. What I [b]don't[/b] like is when people start preaching to or pushing their beliefs upon other people. There's no need for it and all it does is cause friction and unease. If I know what religion you follow from any other way than visual cues or other people, you're probably talking about it more than you should be. I do have my own beliefs, and they aren't encompassed by the simple labels of "atheist" or "religious". Does anyone know what they are? -blam!- no, because I understand that they're MY personal beliefs and until asked, I won't even [i]consider[/i] talking about them because, you know, NOBODY ELSE NEEDS TO KNOW. The problem with the "But a lot of *certain religious people* are nice people. It's just the extremists that are like that" excuse causes issues too. The more you allow people to practice their own hateful or damaging version of beliefs under the title of a certain religion, the harder it is to distance the two and separate the dangerous ones from the inert ones. The saturation of "good" practitioners amongst the community essentially defends the beliefs of the extremists. THAT is what is so damaging about such a widespread and self protected religion under a single label, even if their beliefs differ greatly. We’ve heard it a million times: “The version of religion you criticize is a fringe minority. It’s not representative of the whole. Christianity is not the Westboro Baptist Church, Judaism is not the orthodox hassidim who insist that women sit at the back of their buses in Brooklyn, and Islam is not the terrorists and the men who stone women to death for daring to regard themselves as anything other than a shameful second class citizen/object whose only desire should be to please the man who owns her.” So say I’ve got myself a machine gun. Don’t laugh. British transsexual women can have imaginary machine guns too. Now let’s say I fire my imaginary machine gun into a small cluster of lizardmen. Let’s say out of the two dozen imaginary bullets I fire, fourteen miss. Were those bullets any less lethal than the ones that hit their mark? Ridiculous and violent metaphor? You bet! But bear with me. Sometimes we get lucky. Sometimes religious beliefs end up manifesting amongst people who are kind and decent. But the kindness and decency is not necessarily resultant from the religion, and while it mitigates the danger of the religious belief it doesn’t necessarily make that belief any less dangerous in and of itself. The fact that religion often fails to manifest as violence does not in any way detract from the underlying potential it carries for violence. Religion doesn’t necessarily make a good person any more good, but it can make a dangerous person a lot more dangerous by giving them conviction, certainty, and an excuse. Let’s say we have 100 believers, and 99 of them are people with enough compassion, empathy, common sense, and understanding of consequences to not take the passages in their spiritual texts about stoning adulterers seriously. One of them has genuinely hostile misogynist attitudes, and extremely violent feelings towards his ex-wife who cheated on him. He himself may not necessarily act on those attitudes, but this holy book of his tells him it’s okay, and his faith in God, armored from criticism, in which the intellectual brake lines have been cut, gives him all the rationalizations he could ever need. Meanwhile, his congregation, the 99 fellow believers who would never dream of capital punishment for adultery, egg him on in his faith and his belief and his adherence to the holy book. They thereby maintain the mentalities that though for them (luckily, incidentally) are not dangerous are for him a ticking time bomb. They not only maintain it, they fuel and celebrate it. Spurned on by his faith, which he uses to excuse his hatred of his ex, he one day murders her, permitting and forgiving himself by believing it had been the will of his God. The 99 believers say “it wasn’t us! It’s not our fault! We’re not ALL like that!” But it was them, too. They collectively participated in the conditions that allowed the crime to occur. There is harm in the absence of critical thought, though it doesn’t always manifest everywhere this absence occurs. There is harm in ideology. There is a dangerous potential for violence in every religion… which is often only a potential, except when it’s not.

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