Now, I was raised to believe that God is love, that the Lord is quick to forgive, that the Lord understands us better than we understand ourselves, that he is all-merciful, omniscient, omnipotent, etc.
Then some devout Christians come along and warn me that because we think for ourselves, respect other faiths, interpret the scripture a little differently, then we are automatically excommunicated and likely on our way to hell!
Frankly, I want nothing to do with such a narrow, judgmental, bigoted misrepresentation of Christianity. I view my faith altogether differently. Jesus was quick to use the Samaritan as our example, and Samaritans were despised by the Jews for their 'heresies'. His whole ministry was geared to the outcasts. He ate with publicans and sinners. He was crucified in part because he defied the pious 'church' establishment of the time. And we could go on.
All attempts to make Christianity into a chauvinistic religion that condemns every other faith and shows a face of intolerance is tragic. No wonder more and more people are coming to see religion as a negative force.
I regard legitimate religion as a force that liberates and doesn't repress. I see Christ as a redeemer and not a bigot. There is a big division within Catholicism and within wider Christianity (Protestantism and Orthodoxy, too) between those who are cocksure that they are right, the only ones with the correct faith, the only ones heading for heaven, and - on the other side - those of us who want Christianity to be broad-minded, magnanimous, open to a variety of views, welcoming to a wide assortment of souls. I don't want a church like that of Pius IX who condemned democracy and the separation of church and state. I am embarrassed to think that the Christian church once burned heretics, condemned Galileo, and kept generations from reading great works of science and literature.
I'm painfully aware that most posters on CAF disagree with this viewpoint, but it needs to be expressed, because that's the direction in which most honest Christians are moving. God give us wisdom, patience, and most especially love.
And may God bless all of his children, whatever their faith, color, or nation - even those with whom we have major disagreements. And may Christianity become a bridge and not as barrier to understanding, harmony and peace.