Seinfeld26 wrote:
Here's my overall opinion: Religion can bring out both the best and the worst in people. It can be used for the greatest good, but it can also be used for the most evil of evil. The better something is, the worse you can make it. And religion, in particular, is something so deep and profound that it's very easy to corrupt it and turn it into something completely destructive. And, particularly if you're a Christian, you need to keep a discerning eye out. Make sure you're going to a legitimate and spiritually sound church that actually preaches what Christ taught us (rather than preaching propaganda or scare-tactics), one where the clergy is truly committed to their work, etc.
I completely agree with this.
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I have to disagree here. I find the Biblical Creation story to be much more logical and sensible than the mythological tales you just described. Because it's a very straight-to-the-point, no-nonsense account with a human/personal explanation of the origins of man. God created the Earth, and that was that. How he created it is, of course, left up to scientific discovery (while why he created it is left up to personal faith). It's a lot more open and less rigid than Greek/Egyptian/etc. accounts on Creation.
I would still argue that it makes a lot more sense to us just because we're so used to living in a world where monotheism is considered the most logical thing- Hindus, I'm sure, would feel differently. And I completely disagree that the Judeo-Christian creationist account is a lot less rigid and more open than the Greek (I don't know nearly as much about Egyptian religion so I can't speak there): Greek mythology and religion was incredibly open and non-rigid: Hesiod's Theogony is one of many, many Greek accounts of Greek creation, none of which were accepted by everybody (it is pretty anachronistic in general to speak of a unifying "Greek religion"). There were many different accounts of the world's creation and man's creation, told by philosophers, poets, Bacchic priests, and found in local legends- these were things that could be argued about. Whereas it seems to me at least that the Judeo-Christian account is pretty straightforward and leaves little room for interpretation.
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A lot of what's in the Old Testament is based on Jewish Scripture. We don't really know what the people who wrote such scriptures had in mind when they were writing them. We know the "what", but we don't really know the "why." I'm not necessarily saying that they wrote was false (in fact, I'm sure most of the OT is true), but I don't know if their motivations were really as straightforward as you might think. I also think the events in the OT (particularly the supernatural ones) were probably a lot more complex than the Bible makes them seem.
Yep, its a very complicated process. I mean, as far as we know (I think), what we know of as the Old Testament was cobbled together from five or six different sources. It seems like a ridiculously hard document to analyze- but I do think that if we do analyze it, it has to be done from the perspective of those 1st millenium BC Jews, and I'm not too sure that it can be applied to our modern world anymore than the Iliad can. But hey, in the end, I don't know better than anyone else.
Zad wrote:
What annoys me is that Christianity today is not what Jesus would have wanted it. Read the NT; he's all about loving your fellow man. It was Constantine and co that made it the state religion, and by doing so removed the nonviolence ethos in favour of using it to control people. All these Black Metal bands have got the wrong person to hate!
I think you're seriously misanalyzing the history of the Church here. First of all, Constantine did not make Christianity a state religion: It is not clear to what extent Constantine even understood the major concepts of Christianity, and to what extent he viewed it in light of traditional Roman religion, in that you might adopt one god especially as a benefactor (like Aurelian did with Sol Invictus), and in exchange he would grant you victories- in any case, Constantine did not make anything a state religion.
It also is quite weird to blame the institutionalization of Christianity for any deviation from Christ's message; imo, most work on the historical Jesus suggests that as of Paul and later on the Gospels, Christ's message was clearly transformed in ways he most likely would not have approved of- this includes fights between different sects of Christianity, Jew baiting, etc.. I also think you're being a bit too conspiracy theory: As if Christianity was adopted by the Roman emperors as part of an evil plot to control the world and subvert Christ's message! It just so happened that Constantine adopted the Christian god as a patron god; his son Constantius was more religious, and since he had power, was able to attempt to create an Arian empire. But the ancient world is the ancient world, and no Roman emperor ever had the resources or the ability to control the empire as a police state and enforce a religion.
Also, just to address something: I always hear that the NT is all about peace and love and puppies. That is a pretty big part of Christ's message in the Gospels, but I think that people like to willfully ignore stuff like:
“Do not think that I come to bring the peace upon earth: I came not to send peace but the sword. For I come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and the man’s enemies shall be they of his own household. He, who loves father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me; and he, who loves son or daughter more than Me, is not worthy of Me. And he, who does not take up his cross and follow Me, is not worthy of Me” (Matt: 10: 34-38).
Not to mention all the times he quite clearly says: Its not enough to be a good person, you have to believe in me or else you're fucked.