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06-05-2003, 12:43 PM | #21 |
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How about just leaving them alone?
As far as I can see, once a person reaches "Freethinker" on that list, he/she is pretty home free. You don't need to do that much work. |
06-05-2003, 12:57 PM | #22 | |
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06-05-2003, 01:04 PM | #23 | |
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1) From fundamentalist Christian to one who questions and wonders, but still believes. 2) From one who questions and wonders, but still believes, to an agnostic. 3) From agnostic to atheist. I think going to "liberal" Christian is a step backwards, as far as being a rational thinker is concerned. And QueenofSwords is a good example of what I am talking about. QueenofSwords does not appear to be irrational enough (even when a Christian) to ever be tempted to believe in Christianity without believing in its foundation. |
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06-05-2003, 01:39 PM | #24 | |
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06-05-2003, 01:42 PM | #25 | |
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06-05-2003, 01:45 PM | #26 | |
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If the Bible is the word of god, then the fundamentalists are right, and the "liberal" Christians are wrong. But if the Bible is not the word of god, then it is just another book written by men (and possibly some women), with nothing special about it at all. Now, if you believe I am mistaken about the Bible being the foundation of Christianity, by all means, make your position clear to us, if you can. |
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06-05-2003, 02:03 PM | #27 | ||||
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Before that, people understood that there were parables, allegories, and metaphors, and interpretation and hermeneutics were an important part of what it meant to say that someone "accepted" the Bible. The fundamentalist position that the Bible is either literal and historical fact, or nothing special at all, is patently silly, and does not constitute a useful critique of the positions of liberal Christians. When trying to show a position inconsistent, you can't just grab premises that aren't part of it, weld them in, and say "look, a contradiction!". |
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06-05-2003, 02:06 PM | #28 |
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I've wondered alot about instilling the ability to think critically or logically in grown ups who still believe in 2000 year old fairy tales too.
I think I might get one of those books on how members of cults are deprogrammed some day. I would think that taking issue with one's security blanket right away would be impossible with many and highly difficult with the rest. Could there be some better way to teach them how to see reality without ever raising the subject of religion? |
06-05-2003, 04:21 PM | #29 | |||||||
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With a fundamentalist, there is typically an attempt at following everything (that they know about), not simply a rejection of the passages that may displease them. Quote:
Now, if you mean to suggest that some of the books of the Bible are the word of god and some are not, then we would just be talking about a different canon, not a difference between being a fundamentalist and a "liberal" Christian. As for the Bible being non-literal, that would show that the author(s) were incompetent, as there are ways to indicate that something is a parable instead of literally true. Indeed, there are examples in the Bible itself of stories that are presented as parables, which is highly suggestive that the parts that are presented as being literally true are meant to be literally true. And if the authors were incompetent, then the book is pretty worthless. (Again, some of the passages seem to allow of no metaphorical meaning, such as the killing of witches, etc., listed above. But if you have any suggestions for a metaphorical meaning to the laws, then, by all means, let us hear what you have to say.) Furthermore, I have never met ANYONE who regards the entire Bible as being non-literal. I guess you don't believe that there ever really was a guy named Jesus who rose from the dead? Or that there was a group of people, called Israelites, who moved into the "promised land"? If you do, then you are taking some of it literally. You then are in a position in which you need to justify taking some of it literally and some of it as metaphor, if you are going to have any claim to rationality. Quote:
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06-05-2003, 04:38 PM | #30 |
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1) From Fundy to Conservative Christian
2) From Conservative Christian to Liberal Christian 3) From Liberal Christian to Freethinker 4) From Freethinker to Agnostic 5) From Agnostic to Soft Atheist 6) From Soft Atheist to Hard Atheist 7) From Hard Atheist to Secular Humanist 8) (optional) From Secular Humanist to Secular Transhumanist Sounds like the slippery slope to hell once you get past conservative Christian. SLD, I think the key is getting a person to have a rationalist world view. I've seen other discussion boards where a fundy has said that it doesn't matter what the evidence was - she believed that Jesus was her savior and rose from the dead. Kind of like that old bumper sticker: God said it, I believe it, and that settles it. There's no sense in arguing with that. You've got to get them at a more basic level to see the world in a different way. I disagree. I think that even with with the hardcore fundie you've described I think it is possible to get them to "the dark side" by asking them to question certain concepts within Christian doctrine. For myself, as you know, I question some concepts such as hell and original sin from a justice standpoint. If you ask them how some of the concepts square with certain universals such as justice I think you at least plant seeds for thought. You will of course get the pat "Our understanding of justice is imperfect" when speaking with them but they still have to come to grips with it. Gene/FTR |
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