E
Eleve
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Those posts weren’t made in this thread, so I got a little confused looking for them. But I see the line of conversation now. Thanks.
I haven’t read the book (and don’t intend to as time is preciousThat YouTube video is interesting, but I’m not really sure who’s ‘side’ it is on… I agree that the God Delusion is rather harsh in places and would have benefited from a good edit, as someone else here said.
But it has certainly made me think. In particular, I think Dawkins ( if he really exists) does a good job at drawing attention to the problems with Theism.
I certainly want to read more Dawkins, but it sounds like his science oriented books are better than this one.
How long? I don’t remember exactly. It was over a period of several months – at the beginning I had belief and at the end I had none. I was rather motivated at the time, but too many things just did not make sense.How long did you pray before you gave up?
I am looking for consistency and evidence. I find all claims of personal Gods inconsistent. I am aware of the arguments attempting to show consistency, but they are seriously flawed. I find most forms of deistic or pantheistic God consistent but simply lacking in evidence.So what are you looking for? What kind of a God do you think there is or could be? The God I know is love.
I’m going to take a guess that you live in North America. When we in North America think of witch trials we think of Salem. We think of a practice the Puritans imported from Protestant England. However, the Protestants didn’t invent the practice. It was addressed in Papal Bulls and being practiced by Catholics more than a century before the Reformation. Although in German speaking areas there was more witch hysteria in the Protestant areas than in the Catholic areas, there were areas of intense persecution where the Catholics dominated the action such as Southern France and Spain.Ok, you weren’t specific in your last post, when one refers to the witch hunts of Europe, we speak of the actual persecution of those thought to be witches (not the same as the inquisitions which focused on heretics), concentrated mainly after the reformation in mostly protestant countries (I am not saying that Catholics didn’t do this just to a lesser degree).
Evidently, the people committing them didn’t think so. For many centuries they found plenty of justification in the Bible and in the institution of the Church.Yes, because the atrocities committed under the banner of religiosity is in direct conflict with Christianity
By all appearances, neither does the RCC or any religion have a transcendental moral authority. Although they claim a timeless morality because of this transcendentalism, in practice their moral outlook has shifted along with the Western world at large.They had no higher power in order to set the standard for them, they were the standard, i.e, loss of religious belief and/or moral relativism does lead to such events.
Yes, the 1st Crusade was more about rescuing the holy land from the most prosperous, technologically and scientifically advanced culture of the era. Along the route, they also got around to murdering Jews en masse.The Church had a valid reason to start the Crusades (it was only later in the 2nd or 3rd crusade that things got to be more about booty than protecting Christians and/or Christian land) has there was an invasion by the turks in the Holy land.
At that time in history, if I had a choice between living in a Christin or Muslim society I would choose the Muslim. Things are reversed today, but at the time Muslim society led the world in science, mathematics, and commerce. They were the most open and free major society of the times. It is no coincidence that the Renaissance began around the time the Crusades ended. Many Renaissance scholars of Europe learned Arabic to learn the work of Islamic scholars and their translations of works from antiquity or non-Islamic areas. One of the penultimate Renaissance works, the Copernican model of the solar system was plagiarized from an Islamic astronomer’s work right down to the letters used to identify planets in the diagram. Islamic scholars devised algebra, and Europeans would not improve on that until devising the calculus some 800 years later.In fact throughout the centuries thereafter Christian Europe was constantly threatened by Muslim hoardes trying to conquer (the battle of Lepanto and other such battles) in the name of “Allah”.
Both Christian and Islamic nations were out to conquer lands by force at that time. Often both first asked everyone in an area to convert to their religion by peaceful means. If the stubborn people didn’t see things your way, what choice did you have but to attack them? Either religion would have converted the whole world if they could have. Both found imperatives in their sacred books that demanded war to spread their religion. Funny thing is that scholars today reading the same books can’t find those imperatives.What you describe above fits the image of Mohammed and his followers more than it does the CC and Catholics. Do you think if Mohammed’s followers weren’t trying to conquer the whole world we would have even had a crusade? We were not the aggressors in initiating such an event.
At the time, religion was the rallying cry to get people to kill and die for causes that provided them no gain or loss however the war resulted. The people who start wars almost never tell the people who fight wars the real reason for them.Europeans were killing each other mostly for power. Just take a look at the history of England during the reformation, and tell me whether this had anything to do with religion?
Is that what we’re fighting for?You do not think it correct to fight for freedom in Iraq?
sighNo, they don’t.
What we do to the poor nations today in the name of the almighty dollar is unjust, but less so than in the past. I will give credit to many priests and bishops of the RCC for standing up for the rights of the people in many of these nations today. However, your claim that the Church “throughout time… has acted as the conscience of the world” etc, is way too grandiose. As with most things in life, it’s more nuanced.continuation . . . .
No, now we force countries into poverty so we can rise to the heights of capitalism. I wonder how many untold people have died to feed the egos and greed of others. And that my friend is moral relativism (whatever’s good for me). And furthermore, it is the Church throughout time (for the most part for I know it has made mistakes of its own) that has acted as the conscience of the world in order that a standard morality be applied to all aspects of life. Imagine if people actually followed through on their christian faith, what a different world it would be?
This most certainly is *not * a valid way to define moral relativism. If that’s what you think non-religious people think, you’re way off the mark.This is hogwash, moral relativism by definition means that there is no set standard for morality (to each their own basically).
So when the Church had that power before the Reformation, they used it to sanction slavery. They used it to evict Jews from their land, to force them to wear identifying badges, and live in a walled part of Rome locked at night. When the Church had that institutional power, they used it to censor and burn Jewish books. They used that power to call for crusades, witch hunts, torture – all officially sanctioned or ordered by the Pope. The Pope, of course, cannot act alone. He needs many others in the RCC, clerical and lay, to agree with and execute his ideas. That is what they did before they lost that power.And as I mentioned before the Church tried to act as the conscience of the world but with loss of power to influence (starting with the reformation) it was ignored.
It’s somewhat of a notional concept to say the world would be a better place if the Church were no longer ignored. I could say that people are suffering in the world because they’re not listening to me. I keep telling people in power not to start wars, to treat all people fairly, etc., but they just don’t. The larger issue is not what people agree should be done and just don’t do, but on issues where people disagree about the morality. On many of these issues today, I think the RCC position will prove as it has time and time again to be on the wrong side of history. If history is any guide, someday they will amend their position and give the pretense of never having had another (Mark Twain waxed poetic about this Christian tendency). If the RCC position were correct, my two lovely daughters would not be in this world. I would like them to look these lovely little girls in the eyes and tell them about the horrible mistake their parents made in conceiving them.It’s still being ignored, and many people throughout the world are suffering for it.
Then why did popes officially sanction chattel slavery with Papal Bulls? Are we to pretend that they didn’t write them and publish them? Are we to pretend that the Popes acted alone, without the support of other clerical leaders of the Church? There were some priests and bishops who spoke out against it, but institutionally at one time the Church was all for it.We are immersed in a culture of death. And chattel slavery was never accepted by the Church (not speaking of individuals in the Church but the Church as a whole).
Someone posted this in another thread but I thought you might find it interesting, as it pertains somewhat to things you wrote here.What we do to the poor nations today in the name of the almighty dollar is unjust, but less so than in the past. I will give credit to many priests and bishops of the RCC for standing up for the rights of the people in many of these nations today. However, your claim that the Church “throughout time… has acted as the conscience of the world” etc, is way too grandiose. As with most things in life, it’s more nuanced.
This most certainly is *not * a valid way to define moral relativism. If that’s what you think non-religious people think, you’re way off the mark.
So when the Church had that power before the Reformation, they used it to sanction slavery. They used it to evict Jews from their land, to force them to wear identifying badges, and live in a walled part of Rome locked at night. When the Church had that institutional power, they used it to censor and burn Jewish books. They used that power to call for crusades, witch hunts, torture – all officially sanctioned or ordered by the Pope. The Pope, of course, cannot act alone. He needs many others in the RCC, clerical and lay, to agree with and execute his ideas. That is what they did before they lost that power.
It’s somewhat of a notional concept to say the world would be a better place if the Church were no longer ignored. I could say that people are suffering in the world because they’re not listening to me. I keep telling people in power not to start wars, to treat all people fairly, etc., but they just don’t. The larger issue is not what people agree should be done and just don’t do, but on issues where people disagree about the morality. On many of these issues today, I think the RCC position will prove as it has time and time again to be on the wrong side of history. If history is any guide, someday they will amend their position and give the pretense of never having had another (Mark Twain waxed poetic about this Christian tendency). If the RCC position were correct, my two lovely daughters would not be in this world. I would like them to look these lovely little girls in the eyes and tell them about the horrible mistake their parents made in conceiving them.
Then why did popes officially sanction chattel slavery with Papal Bulls? Are we to pretend that they didn’t write them and publish them? Are we to pretend that the Popes acted alone, without the support of other clerical leaders of the Church? There were some priests and bishops who spoke out against it, but institutionally at one time the Church was all for it.
This reminds me of the James T. Kirk line in the song Star Trekin.Someone posted this in another thread but I thought you might find it interesting, as it pertains somewhat to things you wrote here.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_and_Truce_of_God
I’ve read Dawkins, and nothing I’ve read made me lose faith–or even doubt my faith. I think that those who point to Dawkins as their reason for leaving a faith are just using his books as an excuse. They already gave up on faith. Dawkins is just an expert they can point to, to say, See! I was right all along.I read The Blind Watchmaker by Dawkins about eighteen years ago. The God Delusion struck me as a bit shrill when I read it, though surely it is in response to fundamentalist rhetoric in politics over the same time period. The Blind Watchmaker is much more focused on evolution and biology rather than religion.
I don’t remember anything specific about the book that made me doubt, but I do remember praying about it and other questions, and getting no answer.
The methods of the priest and the parson have been very curious, their history is very entertaining. In all the ages the Roman Church has owned slaves, bought and sold slaves, authorized and encouraged her children to trade in them. Long after some Christian peoples had freed their slaves the Church still held on to hers. If any could know, to absolute certainty, that all this was right, and according to God’s will and desire, surely it was she, since she was God’s specially appointed representative in the earth and sole authorized and infallible expounder of his Bible. There were the texts; there was no mistaking their meaning; she was right, she was doing in this thing what the Bible had mapped out for her to do. So unassailable was her position that in all the centuries she had no word to say against human slavery. Yet now at last, in our immediate day, we hear a Pope saying slave trading is wrong, and we see him sending an expedition to Africa to stop it. The texts remain: it is the practice that has changed. Why? Because the world has corrected the Bible. The Church never corrects it; and also never fails to drop in at the tail of the procession - and take the credit of the correction. As she will presently do in this instance.
During many ages there were witches. The Bible said so. The Bible commanded that they should not be allowed to live. Therefore the Church, after doing its duty in but a lazy and indolent way for eight hundred years, gathered up its halters, thumbscrews, and firebrands, and set about its holy work in earnest. She worked hard at it night and day during nine centuries and imprisoned, tortured, hanged, and burned whole hordes and armies of witches, and washed the Christian world clean with their foul blood.
Then it was discovered that there was no such thing as witches, and never had been. One does not know whether to laugh or to cry. Who discovered that there was no such thing as a witch - the priest, the parson? No, these never discover anything. At Salem, the parson clung pathetically to his witch text after the laity had abandoned it in remorse and tears for the crimes and cruelties it has persuaded them to do. The parson wanted more blood, more shame, more brutalities; it was the unconsecrated laity that stayed his hand. In Scotland the parson killed the witch after the magistrate had pronounced her innocent; and when the merciful legislature proposed to sweep the hideous laws against witches from the statute book, it was the parson who came imploring, with tears and imprecations, that they be suffered to stand.
There are no witches. The witch text remains; only the practice has changed. Hell fire is gone, but the text remains. Infant damnation is gone, but the text remains. More than two hundred death penalties are gone from the law books, but the texts that authorized them remain.
It is not well worthy of note that of all the multitude of texts through which man has driven his annihilating pen he has never once made the mistake of obliterating a good and useful one? It does certainly seem to suggest that if man continues in the direction of enlightenment, his religious practice may, in the end, attain some semblance of human decency.
Wikipedia is not a reliable source. Even its founder called it a failure.What is the definition of Moral relativism?
In moral relativism there are no absolute, concrete rights and wrongs. Rather, intrinsic ethical judgements exist as abstracta, differing for each perception of an ethical outlook.
It’s just a definition, hence my reason for using wikipedia, would you prefer I used another dictionary to define moral relativism to your satisfaction.Wikipedia is not a reliable source. Even its founder called it a failure.
There are many ways to define moral relativism, but in short they are all relative to something and usually multiple things – normally culture, place, time, relevant history, present state of knowledge or ignorance on a matter, etc.
Thank you for telling me what actually happened to me, instead of what I remembered happening to me.I’ve read Dawkins, and nothing I’ve read made me lose faith–or even doubt my faith. I think that those who point to Dawkins as their reason for leaving a faith are just using his books as an excuse. They already gave up on faith. Dawkins is just an expert they can point to, to say, See! I was right all along.![]()