Hotfoot wrote:It's more along the lines of: "There is a man around a corner in a city on the dark side of the moon orbiting the planet F'ratk in the Andromeda Galaxy who is handing out money." You could spend your entire life devoted to nothing but the belief that that man exists, and trying to get to him. You might even convince other people to similarly dedicate their lives towards trying to reach that man. Meanwhile, other people claim that the man lives on the moon, or on mars, or at Pegasi 51. They all offer their own ways of how to get their, but obviously anyone who doesn't follow those ways won't ever get the money, and are thus left out in the cold. The methods are arbitrary in the extreme, and while you might argue that the ability to readily travel to Andromeda would mean that you could stop by the Moon, Mars, and 51 Pegasi as well, what if the truth is that the man is outside of even our local galactic cluster?
Either way you like. I happen to think that "getting God" means nothing more than living a morally upright life. And if that's as difficult as travelling to Andromeda, well... Then there's a whole other aspect of humanism that needs to be discussed.
It's nice to try and paint it as an unconditional gift, but that is plainly not the case with the vast majority of Christian docterine.
I'm sorry, but that's just plain wrong. The majority of Christian doctrine says that God loves all of his creations, and accepts them regardless of their transgressions on earth. The NT talks about it for chapters on end. You could create an entire new book on biblical examples of God's unconditional love (or, as the Greeks called it,
Agape).
I'm not saying that it can't be the case for a specific branch of Christianity (or for a specific faith), but overwhelmingly it is not. To defend a majority by the actions of a minority is not logically sound.
But is it sound to let the minority hang out to dry while we defend only the majority? Even if it were true that Christians don't believe that God is all-loving and all-caring, your argument would still essentially condemn the minority who DO believe it, and that is not MORALLY sound. I'll take morality over logic anyday.
If we never questioned religion, we'd still be in the dark ages with the Catholic Church ruling over us with an iron fist, and we would not be having this conversation.
Thank God for Luther, eh?
No one gets hurt? I would beg to differ. You obviously are not considering financial damage from various price scams, nor emotional and psychological damage from being fed lies by a con artist.
That's what I said: So long as no one gets hurt. People actually believe in this stuff, so let them believe. Even if the person they talk to on the phone IS a con artist, there are those who claim to be real. So the people who spent $9.95/minute to get conned will just go to the friendly neighborhood tarot card reader down the street and get his fill there from someone else who professes to know of such things. And if no one is getting hurt, then it's fine.
Yes, and people still believe the Earth is flat, the center of the universe, and that evolution is a lie and should not be taught in schools. That shouldn't go without argument at all, I guess.
My argument is that if they want to believe it, then fine. They can go on believing it. We know different, and we are in the majority. We can prove that the earth is round, we can prove that it is not the center of the universe, and we can prove that evolution does exist (all of which, by the way, the VAST majority of Christians believe, as well). So let them believe what they want. So long as they aren't murdering
en masse everyone who doesn't have a Jesus-Fish on their car, and so long as they aren't banging on my door at 3am, who cares? I mean, We could have this same discussion on any number of things: Should pro-lifers want to "convert" pro-choicers? No. But they have a right to their beliefs as much as the pro-choicers do.