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08-14-2001, 12:22 AM | #11 | ||
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[snip] --Don-- |
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08-14-2001, 10:33 AM | #12 | |
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As for me believing in Jesus? Nah, it's all allegory. Jesus was the reborn Joseph who later called himself John when he wrote the Revelations. No, you do not have to agree with this. Amos [ August 14, 2001: Message edited by: Amos123 ] |
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08-15-2001, 02:15 AM | #13 |
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Hell. If it exists as a literal place we're already here.
I accept entirely that most Christians through most ages have believed in a literal hell. They have also believed in a literal six day creation. They were wrong about the later and I think about the former too. I will not even bother reply to Don's childish demands I explain stuff with certainty. I hope he's grown up enough to see shades of grey. I am not even going to argue that the evangelists agreed with me on this (they probably did have a literal conception of hell although it wasn't as well developed as it later became and Paul almost certainly did not). The real point of my earlier post is that many posters here would much rather we Christians held onto the bliefs that appear most extreme. I have frequently seen atheists erect the strawman that a literal reading of Genesis and the Fall is essential to Christianity and likewise they are happy to tell me I ought to believe in a literal hell so they can then attack me if I do. The two extremes feed off each other. The militant atheist insists evolution destroys Christianity as vehemently as the YEC. Moderate Christians who would be otherwise take a more measured view are driven into the arms of extremists. The atheist wants to set up a false contradiction between science and religion even when it isn't there. I have never seen hell used as an evngelising tool by anyone but the most conservative sects. I certainly don't (although the concensus here seems to be I ought to or I'm not a proper Christian). On the other hand I have frequently seen the term 'Christians' or occasionally 'most Christians' to describe the people who hold the views of such conservatives as if they are representative. Now in an earlier thread Don gave me the impression that the orthodox Catholicism I espouse isn't 'traditional Christianity' and that only biblical inerrantist fundiementalism is. Perhaps this is another example of how atheists insist on all Christians pleading guilty to everything on the charge sheet and crying foul if we do not. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
08-15-2001, 08:10 AM | #14 | ||||||
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It is indeed unfortunate that the Catholic Church insists on taking extreme, unrepresentative positions on these matters which tend to discredit Christianity. |
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08-15-2001, 08:57 AM | #15 |
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Thank you bd_from_kg for aptly illustrating once again that most relgionists, friend Bede being no exception, have no idea what their own faith teaches or whether what they themselves affirm is orthodox or heretical. No surprise this, as which is which shifts with the sands of time and who has the biggest club.
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08-15-2001, 10:39 PM | #16 | |
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08-15-2001, 11:01 PM | #17 | ||||||
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How typically rude--not to mention the fact that your rudeness is based on your misunderstanding of what I asked--not demanded. Now, please explain how it is that when I preface a request with "please"--as I did--that equates to a demand. Next, please explain exactly what it was that I allegedly demanded that you "explain with certainty." Or perhaps you should just reread what I wrote, correct your misunderstanding, and then explain what I asked, namely, "Please explain exactly how it is that you know with certainty that this is a parable which is not to be taken literally." [emphasis added] Quote:
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No, I don't think that biblical inerrantist fundamentalism, only, equates to traditional Christianity, but neither do I think that you espouse traditional orthodox Catholicism. I think that you have essentially a religion of your own making. --Don-- [ August 16, 2001: Message edited by: Donald Morgan ] |
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08-16-2001, 02:29 AM | #18 | |
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I went back and re read the Catechism last night and felt comfortable with my interpretation. The entire passage in context speaks of Hell as being eternal self-imposed separation from God. Theologically as God is the source of all life this can only mean eternal death - as the quotation from 1 Jn in the same passage makes clear. One day I will write about this and gather my reading, thought and prays together into something that could be loosely termed as an argument. In the mean time I am saddened you feel that tactics used by conservative evangelists should make something similar valid on your side. Rather than treating religion as an enemy it would be better if non believers entered into a more sympathetic dialogue with the believers (largely the liberal end) who are willing to engage in that dialogue. Instead the only use of liberal theology and scholarship here is to bash more conservative believers. This further polarises arguments and makes an understanding acceptance of our differences more difficult to achieve. As for Catholicism, it is a very broad church containing wide ranges of opinion from Cardinal Ratzinger to John Dominic Crossan. Long may it so remin. Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
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08-16-2001, 08:10 AM | #19 |
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Friend Bede:
You may well be right that liberal Christians get it from both sides. As a fundamentalist I faulted liberal Christians for trying to remake the Christian faith into something palatable to the modern secular mind. Now that I'm an agnostic, I fault liberal Christians for trying to make the Christian faith into something palatable to the modern mind. Liberals can't win. They lack the purity of the "old time religion" and it's claim to ultimate revealed truth, but they still want to keep the dangerous fantasy alive and breathing, just repackaged for social acceptability. The kind of dialogue non-believers need to have with liberal Christians is called psychotherapy. We need to understand why when you know at some conscious or unconscious level your religion is nonsense and reprehensible, you nevertheless cling to it and try to evolve it to make it agreeable to yourself and others. |
08-16-2001, 09:22 AM | #20 | ||
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As to your “orthodox Catholicism”, it’s quite true that there are many Catholics (including some prominent ones) whose beliefs are at odds with official Church teachings, but their ideas can hardly be described as “orthodox”. Since your version of Christianity is radically different from the version held by the vast majority of Christians throughout history, perhaps you should not describe it as “traditional Christianity”. And since it varies from official Church doctrine you should not describe it as “orthodox Catholicism”. Don’t try to pass off these extremely heterodox ideas as something other than what they are. Quote:
As for the idea that there is no eternal punishment: aside from the fact that this is contrary to the Bible and to what the Church has taught for almost two thousand years, it doesn’t really help. Christianity teaches that those who are “saved” will receive an infinite reward which those who are not “saved” will be denied. Being deprived of an infinite good is just as bad as being subjected to an infinite punishment . Admittedly, it won’t be as painful, so the prospect doesn’t produce such strong emotions, but from an objective point of view there’s no real difference. If we were able to imagine the infinite joy that (according to Christians) awaits the “saved” in Heaven, the prospect of missing out on it would be just as upsetting as the prospect of eternal torment. Don’t imagine that your version of Christianity is significantly less objectionable than the “standard” version. It only seems so at first glance. You’re still saying that my parents were such horrible people that they deserve an infinite punishment (being deprived of eternal bliss), and that I’ll deserve the same unless I change radically. And I still take this as a personal affront. Just how am I supposed to “enter into a sympathetic dialog” with people who consider me and my family to be unimaginably wicked? A dialog, yes, but sympathetic, never. [ August 16, 2001: Message edited by: bd-from-kg ] |
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