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I have known very few people who "believe" their religion from rearing and actually understand it. Joel Send a noteboard - 29/02/2012 12:08:01 PM
By telling them that atheism is a religion ;) Seriously, they really seem to get bent out of shape by that, based on the handful of atheists I have had discussions with. I just simply pointed out that atheism isn't a lack of belief, but rather a belief that God doesn't exist. You're still believing something either way. It takes just as much faith to not believe in God (something that can never definitely be proven) as it does to believe (something that can never definitely be proven). Either side can conjur up compelling evidence. So in the end, it comes down to what you believe.

It tends to work wonders, yes, because you are usually dealing with people who consider religious belief subjective irrationality far beneath them. They react about the same way any other partisan does to accusations they are just as partisan as their opponents. Sometimes you get the minority who realize it is true, but whether they just look at you and shrug or get even madder is even money.

And I just tell them it's a religion to get a rise out of them :P It's really more a belief than any type of organized religion. Personally, (changing topics here for a minute), I think religions are the downfall of mankind. I prefer to be more spirtual than religious. Yes, I believe in God and basic morality, but I rather not invent a bunch of nonsensical rules to live by and then try to force other people to adopt my rules.

Good call; accepting a bunch of sensible preordained rules to live by is much better. Of course, you will still at least momentarily fail to adhere to at least one of them sooner or later and, while consequences to others vary, in terms of morality you will be every bit as immoral whether you swiped a candy bar or gunned down an orphange. Either way, a wholly PERFECT God can no more associate with you than with any other sinner without ceasing to be perfect, and, since that is among Gods defining attributes, ceasing to be God. Whatever poison you choose is pretty much infinitely intolerable, and God would be neither just nor perfect if He ignored that for loves sake. Worst of all, you can really offer nothing to "make it right" with Him, because you HAVE nothing He did not give you in the first place.

Enter grace, paying an infinite debt with an infinite price, namely God Himself. It does not let anyone off the hook physically; our bodies still die, but since they are what convince us to act immorally, that is just as well. SPIRITUALLY (which I agree is far more important than a series of laws; I read somewhere the law brings only death,) those who repent morality in for God rather than fear of death are offered redemption and forgiveness by grace, through faith in the worth and word of that Sacrifice. Spirituality, is what makes Communion such a big deal (and a Sacrament,) because our spirits partake of not only the death our immorality merits, but also resurrection in grace by the worth of the sinless Sacrifice. While we retain our bodies we remain vulnerable to the immorality they inherited with our DNA, but we are no longer spiritually prisoner to that. We receive the grace to resist and of forgiveness when sought in faith, with the assurance the vulnerability will ultimately perish with the bodies it taints, and our spirits will be fully perfected in eternal communion with God.

Understand, I am not trying to preach, only make clear Christian faith very much does NOT "invent a bunch of nonsensical rules to live by and then try to force other people to adopt [its] rules." It fundamentally and categorically rejects that premise, not because the law is inadequate (it delineates morality fully,) but because I am. Traveling to Vega is theoretically POSSIBLE, but in practice, if I left right now traveling at 10% of c I would be dead before half way there. Grace is infinitely better than law anyway, because if one perfectly adheres to law it is a credit to oneself; if one is immoral but redeemed despite unworth, by grace, it is a credit to God. I have a Pithy Pet Phrase addressing the subject: "Faith is God directing man; religion, the reverse."

Which, actually, raises an interesting question. If you are religious, and really believe in your religion, is it because you were raised that way?

Ah, I see this thread turned into a survey when I was not looking. To answer, no, it is not because I was raised that way, and I do not think it can be, because it involves a conscious mature choice. A child can no more choose their faith than they can choose their spouse, sexual partner, business partner, whether to drink, whom to vote for, whether to enlist in the military, etc. etc. They can express a perference, but true choice is impossible without understanding of what the choice involves and signifies. My personal belief is THAT is, in a very real sense, the downfall of man; without knowledge of immorality we could not knowingly choose morality in rejection of it. One might say the downfall of man is the cause of religion. ;)

If not, was there ever a point where you consciously decided you believed in the religion?

Yeah, but it is difficult to pinpoint, because of the hellish interval between when I believed in Christ and when I received FAITH in Christ. It is an unpleasant experience to believe something both precious and vital but be prevented by doubt from relying on it when one knows that is fatal.

Imagine you are holding a parachute aboard a burning crippled plane hurtling toward the ground, and BELIEVE the parachute will save you. You do not KNOW it, because the only way to test it is to jump out of the plane, but your parents always said it works, you have read books that say it works, your logic and reason say it works, and yet—what if you leap to the ground and it does not work? What if you refuse to leap even though you believe it works? Take all the time you need to make up your mind, but the ground is always getting closer.... (8

Make no mistake though, knowing and believing are not the same. My mom borrows an old country example of a woman trying to explain the difference to a friend by saying, "See that kid out there playing? My husband BELIEVES that is his son; I KNOW he is mine." "Knowing" in this instance is something I "believe" only the Holy Spirit can accomplish, directly; without being in Gods Presence I see no way to completely eliminate rational doubt. I think that the meaning of Christs assertion that one must be "born again," (though the Greek text can also be understood as "born from above," which makes more sense to me.) Maybe other people are different; certainly they are, to some extent, but it seems inevitable that the rational mind requires a first hand, supernatural event unique to a faith to fully embrace that faith as a reality rather than probability.

Anybody ever change religions as an adult?

Maybe. If agnosticism counts as a religion, definitely; despite devoutly Christian parents and six and a half years at two different parochial schools (with a couple years off in between,) I was fully agnostic by the time I was out of HS. I was pretty much pantheist, and likely would have wound up Wiccan before it was all over had not a series of naturally inexplicable incidents, considerable study and consultation with a good friend (not to mention God) altered my course.

If you are religious, is there any aspects of your religious doctrine that you choose to ignore because you don't believe in it?

No, because 1) I do not identify as "religious" and 2) because my doctrine is sparing, since I know my limitations in both capacity and perfection. I endorse many dogmata, but recognize them as such; it is entirely possible they are erroneous, but they are also all non-critical, so mainly valuable in terms of how well they do or do not improve understanding of God. In doctrine I try to keep to necessities, but they are non-negotiable, because vital (hence necessities.) Peter Meiderlins famous sentiment covers it well: "(In essentials unity, in doubtful things/non-essentials liberty, in all things charity." I generally trust the bible, the Gospels and OT virtually without exception, but to the extent I hang my hat on anything more than Christ Himself, it is the Nicene Creed, which is blessedly short and generally blessed.
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
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This message last edited by Joel on 29/02/2012 at 02:17:59 PM
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Do you know the best way to anger an atheist? - 28/02/2012 07:10:57 PM 1856 Views
Or, you could baptize one of them, posthumously. - 28/02/2012 07:32:48 PM 1188 Views
Ooo that is hilarious *NM* - 28/02/2012 08:22:19 PM 428 Views
I can't think of any reason for an atheist to be annoyed by that. - 28/02/2012 11:08:44 PM 946 Views
Well, for starters, it's really effing rude. - 28/02/2012 11:31:36 PM 984 Views
It is an act of love. - 29/02/2012 12:34:03 AM 1008 Views
Everyone does it for that reason? (edits for clarity) - 29/02/2012 10:27:02 AM 898 Views
I have some disturbing news for you... - 29/02/2012 06:42:41 PM 946 Views
For anyone reading this: the guy above is wrong, and I am admitting that to you on his behalf, so - 29/02/2012 07:15:38 PM 956 Views
Maybe without realizing it, you have articulated.... - 29/02/2012 07:24:13 PM 811 Views
I actually find that conversation quite interesting. - 29/02/2012 08:18:35 PM 933 Views
Re: I actually find that conversation quite interesting. - 29/02/2012 09:07:06 PM 957 Views
I cannot possibly agree more with these two paragraphs of yours... - 29/02/2012 09:28:09 PM 968 Views
I'm surprised to see some of this. - 01/03/2012 12:11:31 PM 824 Views
You said it was really effing rude. - 29/02/2012 08:18:40 PM 993 Views
I meant that the act of choosing for someone else - 29/02/2012 08:54:02 PM 884 Views
Question - 29/02/2012 07:58:32 PM 996 Views
No, I don't blame them or think they are fools. - 29/02/2012 08:41:13 PM 909 Views
It is not an act of love to defy the beliefs of a loved one. - 29/02/2012 02:32:45 PM 1054 Views
Rape? That is ridiculous. - 29/02/2012 05:26:13 PM 957 Views
It's a bit of hyperbole, but not too far from it, imo - 29/02/2012 05:45:39 PM 989 Views
You are trying your best to not understand. - 29/02/2012 07:12:57 PM 976 Views
I suspect that that is where a lot of the issue with it lies. - 02/03/2012 01:33:43 AM 1028 Views
one thing - 29/02/2012 06:25:45 PM 997 Views
Precisely *NM* - 29/02/2012 06:59:15 PM 474 Views
Bad example - 05/03/2012 05:06:21 AM 1045 Views
Why would they be angry about that? - 02/03/2012 01:23:56 AM 1114 Views
Denying people rights since it was written 3000 years ago? - 28/02/2012 07:44:02 PM 909 Views
Isn't religion different than faith, though? - 28/02/2012 07:44:07 PM 1013 Views
Yeah that's pretty much what I said - 28/02/2012 08:21:56 PM 803 Views
Only if I get to be Pope. - 28/02/2012 08:25:45 PM 916 Views
I love me my vices! Thanks Pope - 28/02/2012 10:14:27 PM 786 Views
Generally the same way you piss off anyone else - 28/02/2012 08:43:04 PM 930 Views
Great post. - 28/02/2012 09:18:38 PM 911 Views
I find that the best way is to smile. - 29/02/2012 06:23:50 AM 933 Views
Some answers - 28/02/2012 09:05:35 PM 880 Views
that won't work on Buddists - 28/02/2012 09:21:48 PM 952 Views
On the other hand ... - 28/02/2012 09:28:27 PM 791 Views
For some reason I always imagine Buddhists as the monk class on RPG games... *NM* - 28/02/2012 10:13:27 PM 473 Views
LOL same *NM* - 28/02/2012 10:31:38 PM 451 Views
Best way to anger an atheist, by declaring all atheists are the same. *NM* - 28/02/2012 10:38:51 PM 616 Views
Telling anyone what they actually believe will work. *NM* - 28/02/2012 10:51:56 PM 443 Views
This kind of works for many, doesn't it? - 29/02/2012 06:22:33 PM 813 Views
I'm an atheist, and I consider it to be my religion. *NM* - 28/02/2012 10:51:00 PM 426 Views
Common error number 1: "Atheism isn't a lack of belief, but rather a belief that God doesn't exist." - 28/02/2012 11:18:23 PM 1097 Views
I second that - 29/02/2012 03:46:15 AM 914 Views
Curiously, anger at statements of simple obvious facts is a hallmark of religious fundamentalism. - 29/02/2012 10:27:29 AM 1037 Views
What you're doing there is defining "atheist" and "agnostic" in a way that suits you, but... - 29/02/2012 11:50:27 AM 835 Views
What I am doing is using the terms as they were universally used until about the time I was born. - 05/03/2012 01:11:21 AM 972 Views
So what do you call this position?: - 05/03/2012 08:43:20 AM 927 Views
I call them both agnostic, but the former leans toward atheism while the latter has no lean. - 05/03/2012 10:53:02 AM 982 Views
See, there you go again, defining atheism in such a way as to make it sound ridiculous. - 05/03/2012 11:21:17 AM 805 Views
Well, is unswerving belief a good thing, or not? - 05/03/2012 11:57:05 AM 1032 Views
What's happening - 05/03/2012 02:24:41 PM 1015 Views
Conversationally, DKs use of "atheism" at the start of this convo is the only practical definition. - 07/03/2012 03:10:18 AM 1322 Views
Oh really? The guy who was doing it to annoy people? - 07/03/2012 09:53:38 PM 920 Views
The guy who was doing it to annoy atheists based on the terms technical and popular meaning, yes. - 11/03/2012 04:04:36 AM 795 Views
Whatever. - 12/03/2012 12:39:24 AM 1236 Views
*NM* - 12/03/2012 01:14:39 AM 447 Views
I understand that as "I completely agree." - 13/03/2012 12:11:18 AM 1074 Views
I saw it as.... - 13/03/2012 10:44:37 PM 830 Views
My browser does not like your gif. - 13/03/2012 11:32:06 PM 1085 Views
I have known very few people who "believe" their religion from rearing and actually understand it. - 29/02/2012 12:08:01 PM 1164 Views
I have a few good quotes for this one. - 29/02/2012 03:29:22 PM 929 Views
I snerfled. *NM* - 29/02/2012 05:12:32 PM 462 Views
Re: That's it? *NM* - 01/03/2012 06:33:48 AM 519 Views
Re: Do you know the best way to anger an atheist? - 02/03/2012 01:47:03 AM 864 Views

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