Is Religion a Scam?

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Last night on The Factor a noted atheist argued that religion is a scam, and many Christians know it in their hearts. They just haven’t got the courage to admit it. He invited Christians to join the atheist cause since atheism is a fact, whereas religion is governed by people who specialize in hawking wishful thinking.

Your thoughts?
Wow, man, good timing! I was just taking with a guy who was in the christian music scene producing records for twelve years. He said he quit because those guys were doing as much sex, drugs, and wheelindeelin as anyone in the regular music industry. It made him sick, finally and he quit that and christainity because he said he saw it in the pastor’s homes and behaviors, too, with their big cars and tithing stuff. He said the whole thing was a business and they were all doing the things they were preaching against. Now he’s a happy web designer and just works at home and loves his family.
 
Wow, man, good timing! I was just taking with a guy who was in the christian music scene producing records for twelve years. He said he quit because those guys were doing as much sex, drugs, and wheelindeelin as anyone in the regular music industry. It made him sick, finally and he quit that and christainity because he said he saw it in the pastor’s homes and behaviors, too, with their big cars and tithing stuff. He said the whole thing was a business and they were all doing the things they were preaching against. Now he’s a happy web designer and just works at home and loves his family.
Maybe with those guys, but not with every Christian, much less every Catholic. 🙂
 
Maybe with those guys, but not with every Christian, much less every Catholic. 🙂
Hey, I didn’t mean everyone, that’s like impossible. But are you saying you guys are special? I mean you got to be to yourselves, that’s cool, but we can read and watch the news. Doesn’t look to me like any bunch is special or exempt. No reflection on you or good peeps, it’s just anyone’s sunday stuff doesn’t make any bunch special, only different with the same problems, you know what I mean?
 
aQman

He said he quit because those guys were doing as much sex, drugs, and wheelindeelin as anyone in the regular music industry.

Yes, and there are doctors who tear up babies in the womb. And there are judges who take bribes.And there are people who pretend to be loyal Americans who want to destroy America.

You will find hypocrisy everywhere in the world. Even Christ prophesied the coming of the wolves among his sheep.
 
*No reflection on you or good peeps, it’s just anyone’s sunday stuff doesn’t make any bunch special, only different with the same problems, you know what I mean? *

Yeah. We try to be especially good. Does that turn you off? :confused:
 
aQman

He said he quit because those guys were doing as much sex, drugs, and wheelindeelin as anyone in the regular music industry.

Yes, and there are doctors who tear up babies in the womb. And there are judges who take bribes.And there are people who pretend to be loyal Americans who want to destroy America.

You will find hypocrisy everywhere in the world. Even Christ prophesied the coming of the wolves among his sheep.
Yeah, like I said. Whadaya mean “coming?” Ain’t all of histrory a pretty picture?
 
*No reflection on you or good peeps, it’s just anyone’s sunday stuff doesn’t make any bunch special, only different with the same problems, you know what I mean? *

Yeah. We try to be especially good. Does that turn you off? :confused:
Yeah. So now I know what religion peeps are if I think they are especially good. Too cool, dude! A real test that works! Didn’t figure you for bill nye the science guy.
 
Hey, I didn’t mean everyone, that’s like impossible. But are you saying you guys are special? I mean you got to be to yourselves, that’s cool, but we can read and watch the news. Doesn’t look to me like any bunch is special or exempt. No reflection on you or good peeps, it’s just anyone’s sunday stuff doesn’t make any bunch special, only different with the same problems, you know what I mean?
Because our religion commands us to do good. Those who take drugs and hurt people are breaking the ground rules of Christianity.
 
Because our religion commands us to do good. Those who take drugs and hurt people are breaking the ground rules of Christianity.
Sorry dude, didn’t mean to squash your toes. I mistakenly thought that other religions and philosophies and ethics and common sense and even a mature sense of survival and drug rehab programs all taught that too. My bad. Sorry to charlie, too. ooops.
 
Sorry dude, didn’t mean to squash your toes. I mistakenly thought that other religions and philosophies and ethics and common sense and even a mature sense of survival and drug rehab programs all taught that too. My bad. Sorry to charlie, too. ooops.
What? They do, I don’t get your point. Bottom line is:

Christianity is/was not a scam and offers good living code and morals.

If you think anything else, back it up and stop bouncing around the topic.
 
What? They do, I don’t get your point. Bottom line is:

Christianity is/was not a scam and offers good living code and morals.

If you think anything else, back it up and stop bouncing around the topic.
Cool your jets! You and charlie were talking like catholics have a corner on the market for doing good. Out here, it doesn’t look like that, one way or another. Neutral. Just sayin.

Any religion etc might offer such a code and still be used as a scam. AA people have been scammed even. I’m just saying that religion isn’t the question in scamming. Peeps who scam can sometimes use religion to do it, that’s all. Just read the news. Pretty simple, eh?
 
*Cool your jets! You and charlie were talking like catholics have a corner on the market for doing good. Out here, it doesn’t look like that, one way or another. Neutral. Just sayin. *

Catholics do the best they can, given their frail nature just like the rest of humanity. No need to criticize others outside our faith who are doing the best they can. It will be up to God to decide who deserves what in the long run. Those who do not believe in God will not escape His judgment, just like the rest of us who did His will or refused to do His will.
 
*Cool your jets! You and charlie were talking like catholics have a corner on the market for doing good. Out here, it doesn’t look like that, one way or another. Neutral. Just sayin. *

Catholics do the best they can, given their frail nature just like the rest of humanity. No need to criticize others outside our faith who are doing the best they can. It will be up to God to decide who deserves what in the long run. Those who do not believe in God will not escape His judgment, just like the rest of us who did His will or refused to do His will.
Hey, I’m cool with that. But I don’t get how someone can decide they know as well as god what his will is? Like there are sooooo many peeps out there saying “I’ve got the one true” and they say the same stuff about why. And they are all different. Kinda confusing.
 
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Tonyrey, this discussion began because you claimed that for me to say that it’s possible that the apostles were wrong, I have to explain why the moral teachings that the gospels attribute to Jesus are accepted by many. That’s extremely misguided. Having the moral teaching that the gospels attribute to Jesus in no way removes the possibility of the apostles simply being wrong.
False beliefs usually have adverse effects on those who hold them. What adverse effects are experienced by Christians?
First, I would like to emphasize the word usually because we don’t determine whether a belief is true based on whether or not it has adverse effects.

Second, I don’t want to turn this into a thread about the effects of Christianity, so I’ll just mention one general negative effect: fear of going to hell. Studies show that Catholics tend to fear death the most.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
tonyrey;7637397:
TruthSeeker60;7631395:
Is your point that because many people today are Christians, that must mean that the apostles cannot have been mistaken? If so, that’s a non-sequitur and an argument ad populum
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argumentum_ad_populum). It’s fallacious.

It’s not only a question of quantity but also of quality. The moral teaching of Christ is generally accepted even by non-Christians and is the basis of modern civilised values.

The moral teachings of a religion have little to do with how likely the religion is to be true.

They do when the life and death of the founder is the basis of the moral teachings.
Going from, “the life and death of the founder of my religion is the basis of great moral teachings that are accepted by most people,” to, “therefore, the supernatural claims about my religion are probably true,” is a non-sequitor.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
My argument is that IF Christianity being the most popular religion today makes one justified in believing it to be true, one would have to say the same thing about another religion when the other religion was the most popular religion, or else you’re using a double-standard.

In other words, if the popularity of Christianity today makes you more justifies in being a Christian today, then if you lived thousands of years ago when Hinduism was the most popular religion, one’s Hinduism would be more justified by popularity.
You are assuming all religions are static and do not develop.
You did not understand my point. Re-read what I wrote. My point is that if you consider popularity of a religion to be a criterion that makes the claims of a religion more likely to be true, then if you lived thousands of years ago, you would have concluded, at that time, that the popularity of Hinduism would have made its claims more likely to be true.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
In other words, if the popularity of Christianity today makes you more justifies in being a Christian today, then if you lived thousands of years ago when Hinduism was the most popular religion, one’s Hinduism would be more justified by popularity.
Please refer to my next point >
Whether a religion corresponds to a person’s needs or whether it has a “ring” of truth (which I take as meaning it merely appears to be true) has nothing to do with whether or not it is true.
Then you must totally reject pragmatism and also our ability to form reasonable judgements of what is true or false from an accumulation of evidence.
Just because I do not think that the fact that something would satisfy a need if true, or that something may seem true from an unscrupulous analysis (“has a ‘ring’ of truth”) makes it any more true, does not mean that I would have to reject pragmatism or our ability to form reasonable judgments of what’s true or false from evidence.

The argument you were making, that I was rejecting, was that because something fills a spiritual need (whatever that is), it is more likely to be true.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
tonyrey;7637397:
Other religions are popular because all religions teach the same fundamental truths!
You would have to really water down religions to hold that.

Not at all. All religions teach that we do not exist by chance, that life is immensely valuable, that we are all responsible for what we do and that we should respect the lives of others.
The point that I was refuting was that a religion being popular does not make it any more likely to be true. Even if you were to use this “all religions teach the same fundamental truths” to sidestep the objection that most people belong to non-Christian religions, you would only be making an argument for those fundamental teachings, not Christianity. Those fundamental teachings you mentioned could be held by anyone regardless of whether or not they were religious and/or believe in a god. And that’s only if the fact that a claim is popular means that it’s more likely to be true.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
Anyways, you originally brought this form of an argument from popularity to attempt to refute the point I made by comparing Christians who gave up their lives, and others who gave up their lives for their false beliefs. I suppose I could refer to Muslim martyrs who died on 911, but you’re now saying that “all religions teach the same fundamental truths!”
I specified that popularity is not the sole criterion.
My point that people have sacrificed their lives due to false beliefs, and that the apostles may have been wrong, stands regardless.
 
Part 2/2
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
tonyrey;7637397:
Other religions are popular because all religions teach the same fundamental truths!
You either helped me make a point I was trying to make early on in the thread (that just because someone sacrificed their life for something, doesn’t mean that thing is right) or you think that the apostles and the 911 hijackers sacrificed their lives due to the “same fundamental truths!”

The Apostles did not sacrifice other people’s lives!
That’s irrelevant to the point I made that either
A the 911 hijackers gave up their lives due to a false belief
or
B the 911 hijackers gave up their lives due to a belief that is shared by your religion.
You have to explain how its false beliefs originated if your argument is to carry conviction.
I don’t need to claim how a false belief originated to believe that it is possible that someone is holding a false belief. I don’t need to know how the belief that the sun god Ra rides in an underground channel from west to east every night so that he can rise in the east the next morning came about in order to think that it’s possible for those who believe it to simply be wrong.
You have just stated that Christians hold false beliefs!
I meant to say that Christians hold unjustified beliefs.

Strictly speaking, I cannot claim to know that all of Christianity is false because it is virtually unfalsifiable. After all, what would it take to convince you to no longer be a Christian? My guess is nothing would convince you.
TruthSeeker60;7637817:
It seems, from reading this, that you do not
think that the 911 hijackers were misled?! Since I want to avoid putting words into your mouth, which others have done to me on this thread, I’ll ask you, don’t you think they were misled? What about the Muslims who are sympathetic to the terrorists?

The vast majority of Muslims are not hijackers or sympathetic to the terrorists.
I noticed that you sidestepped the question, “don’t you think [the 911 hijackers] were mislead?” So, do you think the 911 hijackers were misguided (which would mean that people could sacrifice their lives due to a false belief, and confirm my point in this thread), or do you think that the beliefs that cause them to sacrifice their lives (as well as murder thousands) are true?
I specified the same **fundamental **truths, some of which I have listed.
So your argument from popularity, even if it were sound, would only mean that the fundamental teachings, such as “we do not exist by chance, that life is immensely valuable, that we are all responsible for what we do and that we should respect the lives of others,” are likely to be true.
 
Christianity really got a kick start with the conversion of the Roman Emperor Constantine. Painting croses onto his soldier’s shields was either a very divine revelation or a stroke of genius on his part. However, it would seem strange that he would put the symbol of a persecuted group onto the shields of his soldiers and ask them to believe and label it as merely a stroke of genius. Something strange happened that caused Constantine to become a Christian and the persecution of Christians ended… In fact, he elevated Bishops to the rank of imperial advisers and gave the Church what is today the Vatican.
It is estimated that more than a tenth of the population of the Roman Empire was Christian, and maybe 20% in the eastern part of the Empire. Constantine’s mother was a Christian. Constantine’s own religion was Sol Invictus–a form of monotheism. ** So the leap to Christianity was not that broad, even if we stick to worldly reasons.** That he found Arianism so attractive gives a clue to his thinking, for it was more strictly "monotheistic"than the traditional Catholicism of Athanasius and the majority at the Council of Nicaea. After all, he rehabiliatated Arius and restored his position before Arius’ sudden death. His son and the court, and the majority of bishops adopted what is called “semi-Arianism,” It does, of course, demonstrated the dangers of giving the ruler so much power in the Church. For many years, Christian bishops had been imperial prelates because of the growing numbers, wealth and power of the Christian communities. But now they began to displace the pagans in their positions of power. Naturally, they began to kowtow to their royal patron.
 
Nothing new here:

*So the other disciples told him, “We have seen the Lord!” *

*But he(Thomas) said to them, “Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe.” *
 
Part 2/2

That’s irrelevant to the point I made that either
A the 911 hijackers gave up their lives due to a false belief
or
B the 911 hijackers gave up their lives due to a belief that is shared by your religion.

I don’t need to claim how a false belief originated to believe that it is possible that someone is holding a false belief. I don’t need to know how the belief that the sun god Ra rides in an underground channel from west to east every night so that he can rise in the east the next morning came about in order to think that it’s possible for those who believe it to simply be wrong.

I meant to say that Christians hold unjustified beliefs.

Strictly speaking, I cannot claim to know that all of Christianity is false because it is virtually unfalsifiable. After all, what would it take to convince you to no longer be a Christian? My guess is nothing would convince you.

I noticed that you sidestepped the question, “don’t you think [the 911 hijackers] were mislead?” So, do you think the 911 hijackers were misguided (which would mean that people could sacrifice their lives due to a false belief, and confirm my point in this thread), or do you think that the beliefs that cause them to sacrifice their lives (as well as murder thousands) are true?

So your argument from popularity, even if it were sound, would only mean that the fundamental teachings, such as “we do not exist by chance, that life is immensely valuable, that we are all responsible for what we do and that we should respect the lives of others,” are likely to be true.
Pace, Karl Popper, but very little of what we know, beyond our personal experience, is “falsifiable.” Strict logic is a tool, but it does not produce what it mines. Having said this, Christian is based ultimately on the Resurrection, or more exactly, on the reports of Our Lord’s disciples. How does one “falsify” the accounts of Julius Caesar’s life? Only by comparing it with contrary reports from other documents.
 
Is Science a scam? The major argument against religion often comes from science. They will talk about the Big Bang Theory, the Theory of Evolution, and so on. They are all taught as science FACT, but they are all theories. They are not proven; they are speculations. Few scientists take the Creation Theory as a slight possibility. What a shame.

In the end, the same people who will hide behind science on these subjects, will deny science in others. For instance, science has proven that life begins at conception, but many Pro-Choice supporters choose to ignore the science behind it.

There is plenty of scientific and historical evidence that supports the Bible and Creationism. When it comes down to it, it is all a matter of faith.

Chad
Waking Up Catholic
 
This is taking on the radical skeptic position that the Gospels and Epistles are not reliable sources, of course.
It’s not exactly being a “radical skeptic” to not consider the gospels and epistles all that good of sources historically, but that’s another discussion.
TruthSeeker60;7638213:
The reason I mentioned the consequences of believing in the existence of a particular thinker verses the miracle worker of the gospels because in general, claims that have the biggest impacts generally aren’t claims one aught to casually make assumptions about on little evidence.
Socrates/Plato have some pretty big impacts…
The philosophizing that was attributed to them had big impacts. That philosophizing is not dependent on the existence of Socrates/Plato, while Christianity is dependent on the existence of Jesus, which is partially why the existence of Socrates/Plato as they are presented in writings, doesn’t call for the same standard of evidence as Jesus as a miracle worker and messiah does.
YES! CORRECT! Now, we have 3 options:
  1. End the debate here (between us) with the mutual agreement it is safe to say Jesus was a real person.
  2. Continue on to the reliability of the Gospels as a source on Jesus’ life.
  3. Agree that the Gospels are historically reliable without a debate and move on to the resurrection.
Of these options, I’m inclined to go with 1 right now. In doing so, just so that no one misunderstand my view, I’m willing to assume, on the little evidence we do have, that a Jesus whom the gospels were loosely based on, existed in a similar sense that many people believe King Arthur existed.
 
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