![]() |
State Your Religion
Ironically I got the idea of a revival of the religion debate from Angrist "leaving."
I consider myself Christain these days, but I don't go to chruch and am not associated with any specific denomination of Christainity. I pretty much subscribe to everything C.S. Lewis wrote in Mere Christianity. |
Re: State Your Religion
I don't know what I am these days. I do know that I don't prescribe to organized religion. I've been brought up Christian, have sat through more church than 90% of the people I know and associate with, spent at least 10 years in religious education, and am a firm believer of science. I believe that personal faith is a great thing to have. On a whole scale level, religion can be a devastating thing. Recently, I've considered myself to be more agnostic than Christian, just based on some recent personal preferences.
Hardcore religious people are annoying, and hardcore atheists can be equally as annoying. Like many things, I think faith should be an individual experience. So if you're not a believer in abortion, don’t get an abortion. But leave people alone. The greatest irony is that if you subscribe to a religion, that religion dictates what the rules are. Unless that religion dictates that you are God, and that you are the one who gets to judge people, shut up about other people's personal preferences. Let them get what they have coming on the day of their judgment. I hope this thread spirals into a crazy religious debate. ;) |
Re: State Your Religion
I'm nothing.
Not agnostic, not athiest. I dont think there is a god, I dont think there isnt one. One day, I shall start praying to Zeus, however. Nobody prays to Zeus anymore. What if Zues is the god? Wouldn't he be pissed off that nobody worships him anymore? I plan on it. |
Re: State Your Religion
Zeus was the man, he had sex with everybody.
|
Re: State Your Religion
I'm United (It's like, Christianity-Lite) but I was baptized Lutheran.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Can we get a poll?
Christian- Disciples of Christ I'm one of those people who only attends at Easter and Christmas, and even that has been neglected. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
As for me, I have a weird set of beliefs. I was raised Catholic and I wasn't very fond of it. I believe that there is a god. Sometimes it just seems undeniable that he exists. I think humans have a spiritual nature and decide whether they want to keep it or not.. blah blah. I think Jesus was an amazing man but I can't really decide if he's the son of God. I think Buddhism makes a lot of sense.. but to me it's more of a way of life than a religion. I'm not very decisive about religion.. but I doubt many people are. But I think religion/spirituality is amazing and I love reading about it. PS: I abhor church. |
Re: State Your Religion
Er, hmm. Jewish I suppose, though I don't practice or pray or celebrate any holidays. One parent was Protestant but lucky me wasn't brought up with any knowledge of that and completely missed out on Christmas. I've studied Zen Buddhism a good deal and probably more knowledgable in that than anything else. Pretty much examined all faiths and I pick and choose whatever sounds good to my ears. I refuse to pray to any higher power though. I'm with KillerGremlin on the hardcore people. No matter the faith I cannot stand those who blindly follow their sect, and especially those who impose it on others.
|
Re: State Your Religion
The Bible is a sweet book. It's up there with Tolkien's world. Fantastic literature, everyone should read it. Religious or not.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
I meant in the sense that religion takes up none of my life whatsoever, so it holds no merit to me. I dont like labels as it is, I think they're tacky, and just demean the majority of society, however since religion is nothing to me, I give myself no title. I dont see why religious folk give non-religious folk a catagory. Can we not just be ourselves? Why catagorize us for demeaning by other groups, just because some groups are in bad light from others? So I dont believe in your imagionary friend. Whoop-de-doo. There are tons of religions. Why not pick on the ones that are stating other giant imagionary people exist and are better than yours, other than harping the people who believe there arent any. And none of that was personal towards you, except the first chunk. Sorry if you took it that way. |
Re: State Your Religion
I have no set religion. I don't want to conform myself around something that isn't proven legitimate. I have my own little bits and pieces I believe in but there's no way you'll get me to conform my life and my beliefs around something else that I don't feel is even remotely right.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
When I visited Seattle last month, there was a fair going on. Seattle Atheists had a booth up and I was kinda dumbfounded. I mean.. They had a newsletter and brochures. I just didn't get it. What are they advertising? The fact they don't believe in anything.. It just sounded dumb. Their motto was: "SEATTLE ATHEISTS: A NON-PROPHET ORGANIZATION". It was odd. Wouldn't atheists not want to parade around like that? |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
I think that would just be to piss off the religious people. I dont think anyone is that stupid. |
Re: State Your Religion
I was raised Catholic, although very loosely, as I never went to Cathloic school or anything like that. I very seldom go to Church anymore, and I cant say I really agree with a lot about the Cathloic religion. But if anyone asks, I still say im Catholic.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
The other funny sight was the pro-life booth which was virtually empty and the Planned Parenthood booth (which was 2 booths away) with a heavy crowd. :D |
Re: State Your Religion
I picked up this book today:
![]() Of course we can never really answer the question of whether God exists. And of course it would have been highly unlikely for Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis to discuss this question in person, considering that they were born in different countries and a generation apart. Nonetheless, The Question of God allows readers to listen in on one of the most articulate debates possible by creating a virtual meeting of Freud and Lewis. For the past 25 years, Armand M. Nicholi has taught a similar course at Harvard, where he compares Freud’s atheist-based reasoning against the atheist-turned-believer C.S. Lewis. Both men were considered brilliant, highly educated thinkers who profoundly influenced 20th-century thought. And both men presented compelling arguments for and against the existence of God. At the core is Freud’s assertion that God is a figment of the imagination (more accurately, God is an outcome of our deep-seated need for protection, stemming from the helplessness of early childhood). Lewis, on the other hand, did not see the belief in a higher power as a childish need for comfort. In fact, he wrote, "rendering back one's will which we have so long claimed for our own, is, in itself, extremely painful. To surrender a self-will inflamed and swollen with years of usurpation is a kind of death." Nicholi never take sides. Instead he gives both men a chance to eloquently answer the big questions of humanity: why is there suffering? What should be our guiding belief? How do we form a moral compass? Surprisingly, this debate turns out to be a fascinating page-turner, with most of the credit going to Nicholi. Because he understands these men's arguments so well and respects their beliefs so thoroughly, believers could begin to have doubts and atheists could start to wonder. Regardless of where you ultimately land on the question of God, this stellar book will deeply enrich your understanding of humanity. |
Re: State Your Religion
Just for fun allow me to summarize the Religion v Science debate.
Originally, religion told us the Bible was the literal truth and that we were at the center of the universe. The first two humans, Adam and Eve, were materialized out of thin air. Then came Galileo who theorized that the sun was at the center of the solar system, and the earth revolved around it. Oops! Bad choice. The church quickly put him to death. After the evidence finally became too great the church caved and said "okay okay, earth isn't at the center. But God still created man and the stars are tiny lights hanging from the ceiling of heaven." Of course they eventually lost the star debate as well. Then came evolution which the church also denounced. But eventually after overwhelming evidence they said "okay okay, evolution exists but it was guided by God." Okay.... Then came near death experiences. Finally! Evidence of the afterlife! Ah but then scientists were able to reproduce this effect in the lab, showing it to be biological in origin. "okay okay", said the church, "maybe it's not a mystical experience. Though what you've found is simply the the physical mechanism though which God works." Wholly unecessary, but whatever... Then the church said "many people can FEEL God inside them, we know God exists because we can tell the spirit is in us." Oops, wrong again. Turns out those are hormones. New studies show that a person's tendency to be religious is linked to a certain area of the brain. The more developed is this area of the brain, the more likely the person is to have a sense of a higher power or a belief in a supreme being. It's a survival characteristic. "Okay okay" says the church, "maybe it's not the spirit in us. But it is the physical mechanism that God uses to let us know his presence." Do you see a pattern here? Religion has been on a constant retreat from science and will continue to be in the future. The fact is that science doesn't need God to explain the existence of this universe or anything in it. There are even theories about why there is something (anything at all) rather than nothing. No they are not complete, but they give a glimpse into the kind of understanding that is possible through science (specifically physics). God is continually being pushed to the side and is becoming less and less necessary for explaining this world. I maintain that if you put a universe with God (as the Christians personify him) next to a universe without God, you would not be able to tell the difference between the two. Now before you label me as an atheist or an agnostic, know that I'm not saying God does not exist (I have my own beliefs in this area). I actually hope that a personal God does exist. Afterall who wouldn't want that? Nobody wants to die. We all want to live forever and be reunited with our loved ones. Unfortunately wishing for something doesn't make it so, and we must guard against our desire to believe in something just because it is comforting to us. I am desperately looking for a way to make it true. |
Re: State Your Religion
I am a Deist, meaining I believe in one God, not unlike many of my nation's founding fathers.
Now as we see this topic wildly turning off course into a pro-religion vs. anti-religion slime fest (yet again, I swear Bond makes these just to rile people up), I will simply broach one question: Why do science and religion have to be separate and divisive? I mean, they are really alike in most ways. Most of science's facts are in actuality theories, which we accept on faith. Yes, it is faith in man's empirical knowledge of the subject, but it still unproven. Just like religion. Many of science's real facts and "rules" have been disproven on numerous occassions, yet we don't throw them out. EX. Electrons jump levels at times and places where it defies the laws of physics... the laws of physics... yet we still recognize them even though they are not absolute. Personally, I think it is the peak of arrogance to just throw away one theory of the univers that has been tested by faith and number over thousands of years for science that is both young and constantly correcting itself for its constant errors. But then again, I guess that requires a different kind of faith, so its all the same really. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
I dont know about you, but I've seen the chain of evolution. I can piece it together, I can see how it works and how it makes sense. I've never seen two people materialize out of thin air. And I've never understood why there are so many religions. Surely, each God is the god, so why does the rest of the world not worship him/her/it/them as well? Can a god not just "rule" a certain section of the planet? Much like a president. In a sense what I'm trying to get across here would be like telling an army of ants that we cut the world up into sections and let a handful of people dictate that region, if you get what I'm saying. |
Re: State Your Religion
You're definitely right about science. Physics will tell you nothing about truth - Instead it provides models to describe and predict the behavior of the world. Occasionally new evidence will emerge which will make us alter or discard certain theories. That is the beauty of science and what sets it apart from religion. Science changes as our understanding of the world increases, whereas religion remains static. Scientists are often accused of being closed-minded, but I maintain that they are the most open-minded of individuals because they are willing to change their beliefs and alter their theories based on new evidence. Religious people tend to hold on to their beliefs and rationalize away any evidence to the contrary.
While there of course scientists who are close-minded, a true scientist is one who is willing to grow. For example, while they may be 99% sure that Relativity is a valid description of reality since it has agreed perfectly with every test ever conceived, there is still that 1% room for doubt. Nothing happens in contradiction to the laws of nature, only in contradiction to what we know of them. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
1) Evolution - Yes, it is accepted to be the leading theory, but it is still a theory, regardless of common sense related observation. The "missing link", as in man's missing link in the evolutionary chain, is not the only questionable area of evolution. The most controversial area in evolution is one of the earliest in the fossil record: The jump from bacteria and virulent organisms to that of single celled. Now that might not sound like a big jump, but in terms of bio-engineering they are worlds apart in both size and complexity. There is also no evidence of a beginning of evolution. Once again, it is accepted and probably theory, but still theory. Not fact and probably never will be. 2) Number fo Religions - Yes, there are many religions, but most of them are pretty similar. Even the religions that do not prescribe to a single god have other areas in common. EX. Many theologists separate modern religions from paganism is one important area: morals are not separate from the religion. Most early "pagan" belief structures treated morals independently from the religion. To give some kind of frame of reference let me say this: If Christianity was structured like a "pagan" religion, it would be possible to murder someone, cheat on your wife, etc. and still be considered a "good Christian" as long as you loved Christ above all others. Now Catholocism technically has the "get out of jail free card" of confession, I still doubt any Catholic would consider a murderer to be a good Christian regardless of confessional visits. Catholicism also had the habit of assimillating pagan rituals into their dogma and confession may have been a moral compromise to attract converts that had trouble living up to a Christian code of morals. 3) God as Governor - This one is easy to address. Any Christian would say that God gave man free will along with the teachings of the bible. It is up to man to live up to those teachings, not up to God to impose those teachings on them. Treating God as a parent who must eventually allow his children to make their own decisions/mistakes is a common theme that goes back to Adam and Eve. And as illustrated by Adam and Eve, there are consequences when man fails to live up to God's teachings. This all harkens back to the incorporation of morals into religion. I'm not sure if this is what you were referring to with you "ants" post, but its either this or a polytheist approach that is reminiscent of pagan views of multiple Gods that anyone can choose to prescribe to. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
I don't really understand why some Christians (note: I said some Christians) feel some kind of need to have their religion explain the physical facts of life. Why do the planets circle the sun? Is it because a big mass of cosmic dust had some kind of force acting on it before it all clumped together into the sun and the planets? Or is it because God made it that way? Who knows, but the problem with the debate is that both sides, with sufficient ingenuity, can make everything fit their theory. The fundamentalist says that there is a hole in the theory and that therefore God must be involved. The scientist says that there is a hole in the theory and therefore we need to figure out a new theory. It gets nowhere.
Besides, it never seemed to me that Abrahamic religions were really very concerned with explaining the ways of the world. By their very nature, science is concerned with explaining this world that we know and religion is concerned with the other world that we can never know. The two just have nothing to do with each other. Whenever a debate like this pops up, I always wonder What Would Jesus Do. In other words, if Jesus were to suddenly walk the earth again and look around, what would his sermon be? Would it be something to the effect of, "We have too much cruelty and lack of compassion towards our fellow man. Our lives are made poor by our pursuit of material wealth. We need to discover our spirituality and humanity again." Or would Jesus say, "Our world is a terrible place because we believe that the world is 6 billion years old instead of 10,000"? Somehow, I just think Jesus would find better things to talk about. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Neo, you seem to think that Religion is static, and its anything but. Christianity alone has changed untold times in its brief history, but change does not neccessarily equal invalidity. Some would lead you to believe that on both sides, but not those that understand what they are discussing. Religion is no more invalidated by change than science is, and in fact its even less likely to be invalidated by change because the only evidence that religion is beholden to is one's faith. Religion is more powerful than just what someone is religious about. Its about faith and belief, not about what God is the right one or whether or not the earth was created in 7 days. A world without God is one in which the only in which its inhabitants believe in nothing but themselves, and eventually will believe in nothing at all. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
/me activates heat shield |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
As for religin being static, that is up to interpretation and honestly your ideas about the modern state of religion and its arguments show a lack of knowledge on your side about what you are criticizing. EX. Creation: The Earth was Created in 7 Days. Well, how long is a day to God? If there were no days before the world was created, how were they measured? Most importantly, WHO CARES? You harp on the inconsequential and hand-picked specifics that have nothing to do with the modern religion. The 7 day adventist belief means almost noithing to the modern Christian who views the whole of the message and applies it to their belief. By your logic the Mona Lisa is a horrible painting because the bitch ain't got no eyebrows. You see the loud minority fringe of fundamentalists and then paint the entire religion that way because that is how you WANT to see religion, but you ignore the majority of Christian's beliefs and even the religions most ancient interpretations which saw the Bible a book of moral parables. I really recommend you do more research into an area that you feel so strongly about and try and look at it objectively. You are letting your dislike, and even anger at religion cloud your judgement. I'm not saying you convert to a believer of any religion, but to not see the value of religion is just absurd and shows a faulire to see the world through a large view. FYI: I used Christianity as an example here because it is a great example of a large modern religion, not because it is my religion. It is not, I just think Jesus was a hell of a philospher. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
I'm also shocked that you don't realize your own religious tendencies in your posts. Your absolute faith is science to answer all questions smacks more of religion that empiricism. I'll leave you with this little idea. If you are going to continue with the argument that religion does not exist because of inconsistencies in its practice and dogma, then I'll make this absolute statement of fact: Since the level changing of electrons in many atoms defies all scientific laws that we know, and those laws are considered hard facts and we base all of atomic theory on them, the fact that they defy those laws means that the atom doesn't exist. There are no atoms now. But wait, don't there have to be atoms? Then what are we touching? Well, who knows, but we do know since atoms don't make any sense anymore because of a minor contradiction. They don't exist anymore. We don't exist. I'm not writing this right now. Chew on it, its delicious. Neo, you do not understand faith and its immense power for good as well as evil. All you see is evil because you've never cared to examine the good. Until you do, you will never understand religion or really understand why you are so angry at it. |
Re: State Your Religion
*cough*Mere Christianity*cough*
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
You need to do some research yourself before you start claiming things as absolute fact. Science is also about repeatibility. If we get the same result over and over then we conclude that our current models seem to provide an accurate description of reality. We believe the results but that's not the same thing as faith. Faith is belief without rational thought or evidence. And even if a model is supported by evidence, that doesn't mean that I have 100% "faith" in it. There is always room for doubt. In religion there is no doubt. You either believe or you disbelieve. Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
You say there is no evidence of God's existence. I sa the proof is all around you and as a scientist you deal with His proof daily. You want evidence, when any proof of God would destroy him. Proof denies faith and without faith God is nothing. The fact you want empirical evidence shows that you don't enderstand the philisophical basics religion. As for the example you wanted, you gave it to me. Electrons jump levels when according to the laws of science they can only exist on a level. So if they can only exist on a level, how do they move levels without ceasing to exist? Is there a finite time or space they travel through? There are theories and conjecture as to how this happens, but in the end there is no proof. You accept that there is a scientific explanation on faith. You accept that we will find the link between bacteria and single celled organisms on faith. Why can't you just even consider God as an option? The more I've learned about science and physics the more my faith in God has beened re-affirmed. You can't explain religion, but you can't disprove it, just as the more scientific knowledge we gain, the more questions we discover on a daily basis. And even if science can discover more and more information, does that mean that God dosn't exist? How can you simply eliminate God out of hand? Its rediculous. And with that I bid this argument adeu, as I'm starting to repeat myself. EDIT: Found this explanation Q&A about level jumping. http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?t=18923 If this isn't close to being religious faith in something, I have no idea what is. One theory is that electrons cease to exist on one level and then just exist on another. If this is true, I see no better "proof" of the existence of God than that. |
Re: State Your Religion
This reminds me of that vid where Kirk Cameron and another fellow disprove evolution by asking misinformed college students questions resulting in unsure answers and sitting down to dinner with an orangutan who's lack of table manners proved that humans never evolved from a lower primate.
Why can't everyone just believe what they want? You can't prove God exists to anyone but yourself. And what we know through science changes day by day. I doubt either of you are going to change the other's mind. |
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
This is the only way I know how to believe in God. I can’t just make myself do it out of faith. Every time I try I get these nagging doubts in the back of my mind like “that’s not evidence of design, that’s an example of a well-adapted DNA pattern” or “that’s not God I’m feeling, it’s a chemical reaction within my body.” Even if an angel materialized in front of me I would probably search around for a holographic projector. If there isn't one then I would notice that the angel is obviously emitting photons of light which my brain is interpreting as electrical signals, so the angel must be composed of electrons which generate the photons therefore it is physical in origin. You see what I mean? Quote:
Quote:
Same would be true for the spooky "action at a distance" scenario where two particles created together and sent off in opposite directions always seem to know what each other is doing. If one particle is flipped to spin-up, then the other particle immediately becomes spin-down, though no information has passed between them (as this would violate relativity). This seems impossible unless you think of the world as a giant hologram. While to us it appears as though the particles are separated by a great distance, on a 2D holographic surface they're actually right on top of each other. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
I was born and raised Catholic. I have been going to church for many, many years. And, as I child, I absorbed faith with little care. Eventually, I reached a point where I lost a lot of faith, I didn't feel that my life had any particular purpose and I didn't understand how faith or spirituality could possibly exist in a world so cruel and empty. Well, in the past 2 or 3 years I have slowly felt a gradual awakening to life and faith. I have met someone, and I have felt what I believe is true love and compassion. I have also gotten older, and in the past few months I have began to contemplate my mortality and my life.
I come from a fairly strong foundation in science. Based on what I have learned and have seen, it appears that things like evolution do hold truths. Also, it seems that the earth is easily older than 6000 years. However, as Xantar pointed out, I'm not sure how important these facts are in reference to the bible. Nowhere in the bible does it spell out that the earth is 6000 years old, it has just been conjectured based on the dates in the bible. I've tried to incorporate some philosophies and thoughts into my search. One philosophical path I am having trouble coping with is the purpose of life. Let's say the only purpose of life is to eat, sleep, reproduce and die. Then why do humans feel compassion and love? Why do we have the feelings that we have, why do we question life? Some argue that our fear of death is evolutions greatest defense mechanism against death, but I disagree. I feel that if our place in life was soley to eat, sleep, reproduce, die, and evolve; I feel that there would be no need for compassion, love, or any of that. My biggest flaw is that much like Neo I feel that I need to find evidence. I guess that completely nullifies the point of faith. And, in my mind the evidence is there. We have historical figures and prophets; people like Moses, Abraham and Jesus. And that is a definitive start. I don't buy into Near Death Experiences, as it has been hypothesized and will most likely be proven that right before death your penal gland secretes large amounts of DMT. DMT is a powerful psychoactive substance, and it has been suggested that it is responsible for the things people have seen during NDEs. One thing is for certain however; I feel that modern science, and especially physicists are walking a fine line between knowledge and arrogance. I believe it is the height of human arrogance to assume any definitive answer as to why the universe is. Quantum mechanics has been offered as an explanation as to how we think and why a planet with life could exist amid such chaos. They even have theories as to what happened when Time < 0, or before the big bang. Apparently some scientists hypothesize that there are multiple universes, and that they collide, and that all sorts of zany shit happens ever few billions or trillions of years. And, to that I ask, "Why? How?" Science is the study of how things work. With science, we can analyze systems and based on how that system behaves we can establish a set of rules for analyzes future systems. However, science has yet to answer the "why." Either way, I won't know and you won't know until it happens. And when it happens we may or may not know. But for me, these past few years have been a sort of spiritual awakening, and I'm starting to find faith in God again. Maybe my search will last me till my final days on earth, and maybe it will only last me for a few years. But I hope that I can make peace with life sooner than later. |
Re: State Your Religion
Something happened. More than that is loud conjecture.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
I loathe Christianity, and I have no religion. I believe in evolution, not so much that humans came from a pile of goo in the ground, just that things evolve and adapt. Natural selection is the way to go, except I believe in that to harshly.
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
|
Re: State Your Religion
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:00 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GameTavern