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03-05-2002, 12:25 PM | #41 |
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doc58:
Your story sounds very much like mine (other than I'm an ex-Assembly of God/Presbyterian/Episcopal). How long since your "deconversion?" Mine's going on two years. Fortunately, it gets easier as time goes by. However, knowing what I know now (esp. from spending time on this board) I know that I can never go back to xianity. In no shape, form or fashion does it make any sense. I like living morally and with integrity. Except perhaps this one (if only most xians actually lived this way). And guess what? You don't need to be a xian to live morally and with integrity. I'm beginning to think it helps not being a xian. You can evaluate right and wrong in a situation without having to revert to a 2000-year-old goatherder's manual. "What should I do?" rather than "What would Jesus do?" [ March 05, 2002: Message edited by: Mageth ]</p> |
03-05-2002, 12:56 PM | #42 |
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Thanks for sharing doc58; I really appreciate it.
love Helen |
03-05-2002, 06:10 PM | #43 |
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Mageth,
I am nearing the one year mark of my deconversion. Now that I have deconverted I am much more aware of non-Christians who live moral lives. So I agree with you that being a Christian or non-Christian has little relevance as far as morality. Helen, Thanks for the note. I enjoyed reading it. One thing I am thankful for is the access the internet gives me in finding people with similar stories to mine. I would never have thought that there are so many people who were genuine, believing, committed Christians who now no longer believe. |
03-05-2002, 06:11 PM | #44 |
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I thought that the original article was most excellent!
I have always wondered how anyone could believe that this or that belief was the only way to Heaven. Not only is it not at all clear in the Bible how one may attain Salvation, but it is not at all clear to me, and countless others, that the Bible is actually the inspired 'Word of God.' That's the real (excuse me) fundamental belief here. Christians are convinced that *their* book is the true one, Muslims think *theirs* is, Buddhists don't have a book, etc. Even if one can get past the doubts about the divinity of the Bible, one must then contend with the unclear teachings therein. I think I like this idea better: <a href="http://jhuger.com/tract/dtr/index.mv" target="_blank">http://jhuger.com/tract/dtr/index.mv</A> Echo, I totally agree with your statement "So how do we determine which one is right?" Each faith passionately believes that theirs is the right one and that everyone else is wrong, perhaps deadly, or eternally, wrong. For every verse seeming to require faith for salvation, another seems to require works, or grace alone, or... I think the <a href="http://jhuger.com/" target="_blank">Computer Analogy</a> says it all! A group which is not listed in the article, and with whom I often have discussions, are the 'Bible Christians.' They seem to be 'none of the above' when it comes to putting themselves in a group or sect. They only adhere to the Bible, and usually come up with the "faith alone" viewpoint. Some can be found at <a href="http://alliedconservatives.com/" target="_blank">http://alliedconservatives.com/</A> formerly 'unitedconservatives.com.' I don't know why they changed their name. They have a new forum called "Faith and Religion in America." Whereas I usually lurk here at infidels (since I often agree with what is posted and have nothing to add) I post there because I am in the minority...much as a theist is here. Rather interesting, actually. As for me: I see parts of the Bible as inspirational, such as the Sermon on the Mount, the Good Samaritan story and the Golden Rule. I also take inspiration from other sources such as the Tao, Cosmos and the jhuger site. The God in whom I (sorta) believe doesn't really mind this at all. The God in the Chick tract parody at the jhuger site said that we are here to "Learn and Grow as [people.]" Sounds good to me. If Christians and Muslims want a "psychopatic egomanic" to worship, well, more power to 'em. |
03-05-2002, 07:56 PM | #45 | |
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But secondly, I have had JW's, and mormons come a knocking at my door, and i have talked to them. My point was not to discard all the groups I disagree with, I didn't completely agree with a number of the groups I did not take exception with (why does nobody notice this, I think I have mentioned it a couple of times). My point was there are groups included that are generally regarded as cultic and fringe loonies, why not add the christadelphians, the branch davidians and the KKK to the list. They all use the bible, and claim all manner of things from it. I would have thought they would be obvious pseudo christian groups to add. They are at least as in line with biblical teaching as the JW's or mormons, and closer than the FCJCS. Jason |
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03-06-2002, 02:58 AM | #46 | |
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03-06-2002, 05:14 AM | #47 | |||
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We're never going to get anywhere until we reach some sort of agreement on the very basic qualifications one must possess in order to be considered Christian. Saying "their beliefs must match the bible" isn't going to cut it, as that puts us right back where we started, with questions of whose interpretation is "biblical." |
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03-06-2002, 02:20 PM | #48 |
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Hi Jason:
I never quite know what to think of you. You seem well-intended. You also seem to be interested in actually being certain of what you know and honest about what you don't from what I've seen. I genuinely want to help you come to a fully informed conclusion about your beliefs and religion, and I think many here feel the same way I do. It's pretty clear you've had the standard indoctrination and not a lot of exposure to the historical reality of the church, systematic theology or in depth comparative religion. I've been there. Ignorance is only a moral fault if you are content with it. While you don't seem to know a lot about your faith, I grant that you know more than many, which is not a compliment to you, but rather a sad comment on the amount of credence people are willing to give to superstitious beliefs and mythologies about which they know next to nothing and for which they have been provided no actual evidence. Where I think I can be the most help is to suggest some historical research that would disabuse you of your misunderstanding of orthodoxy, what it actually means, how it has come to be understood and determined over the years, and that it is in fact nothing more than a political concensus, arrived at quite separately from any scriptural support. In point of fact, the various doctrines and dogma that form the foundation for the notion of orthodoxy, were not arrived at to explain scripture, but were in fact inventions to cover nebulous areas of theology, Christology, soteriology and pneumatology. Many of the early church fathers would have been quite comfortable and even intrigued by the doctrines of Christian Science and the Latter Day Saints, both of whom would have been seen as completely orthodox prior to and including the first ecumenical council at Nicaea. You would call the Montanists, Sablellians, Arians, and all such heretics today with the retrospective of centuries of Roman dominance, but at one time they were the true faith and trinitarianism was considered heretical and polytheist by many Christians for years. Only the power of the emperor brought the particular views of the Wetern Church to dominance, but that was a political decision, not an act of god. I would recommend you study the Apostolic and Ante-Nicene Fathers, particularly their "Contra" letters, where they take on those they consider heterodox, heretic and simply enemies of Christianity. Then read up on the first seven ecumenical councils. Read Celsus: On the True Doctrine. Porphyry's: Against the Christians, what little remains. The church burned most of the works of their opponents, but some very instructive pieces remain. As for the Mormons, I recommend Restoring the Ancient Church: Joseph Smith and Early Christianityby Barry Bickmore. Despite his lack of academic credentials as a hisotrian, BIckmore does a fabulous job with early Christian sources to prove that Mormon doctrine was well represented in the writings of earliest years of the church with some of its most notable authorities, and in fact simply lost the political battle, not the Biblical debate. You an order it here: <a href="http://deseretbook.com/store/product?product_id=100010047" target="_blank">Restoring the Ancient Church</a>It's $20, and I guarantee it will leave you thinking twice about what is and isn't genuinely Christian. [ March 06, 2002: Message edited by: Ron Garrett ]</p> |
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