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Member
(05-14-2012, 11:21 PM)
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#151
I don't necessarily know why I would consider faith inherently good or bad. I think it depends on what you have faith in and what effect that faith has on you and your actions toward others.
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(05-14-2012, 11:23 PM)
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#152
Depends on your view of God.
He'd probably do nothing, because why an omnipotent super-being would care about the love and behavior of a few billion highly-evolved great apes I do not know. If we're talking the Christian God, here, he'd probably kill us out of spite. That seems to be his thing. |
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Member
(05-14-2012, 11:26 PM)
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#153
If you were doing good, practical, smart things with faith, then you have found some faith that didn't need to be there to begin with.
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Member
(05-14-2012, 11:36 PM)
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#156
Well, then that kind of just goes back to my observation in regards to assessing what responsibility faith has in seemingly faith-based acts that are harmful. Is it fair to blame religion for homophobic bigotry, or should we account for the fact that, though the Bible may embolden some, their bigotry is hardly something that only exists because of the Old Testament.
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Member
(05-15-2012, 12:21 AM)
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#157
I think that what's interesting is that the Old Testament has Jewish origins and the Jews held negative attitudes towards homosexuality (as well as masturbation, etc.). The New Testament on the other hand is more of Greek origin, a culture that clearly didn't care about homosexuality whatsoever (Athens lol). American society is the only perspective that I can speak from and throughout American history, Christianity has ruled with an iron fist with pretty gruesome consequences. That's why gays (or any counter-cultural group) were shoved into corners and kept in the dark. They were dubbed heretics, blasphemers, and immoral. So America has a lineage of anti-gay whatever. Bigotry and intolerance is then inherited through the generations. Lack of education or exposure to other cultures prevents this from changing but we're finally being exposed to others and seeing the world on a global perspective. |
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Banned
(05-15-2012, 12:24 AM)
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#159
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Member
(05-15-2012, 01:46 AM)
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#160
The same was true in Italy, even at the height of Catholicism. |
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Member
(05-15-2012, 05:03 AM)
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#161
Well, clearly a lapsed Catholic/atheist nowadays, but still: he writes what he knows. Well, yeah, that's the point, God giving up his omnipotence kickstarts the entire storyline.
Last edited by jaxword; 05-15-2012 at 05:06 AM.
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