L
Lief_Erikson
Guest
That’s what I’m going to do.Pray: Jesus, Mary and Joseph - I love you - Save souls.
And too, pray the rosary.
That’s what I’m going to do.Pray: Jesus, Mary and Joseph - I love you - Save souls.
And too, pray the rosary.
That’s what I’m going to do.
#4 is, yes, but I’d argue #5 is not. It’s directly extended from the teachings of a certain carpenter, philosopher, and rabbi in 1st century Judea, where and when I am not and almost certainly will never be.First of all, I’ll mention that the two additional reasons you’ve given are the product of where and when you grew up, as well as Vatican II. They come after, not first, so they can’t be included in the basic reasons why people believe what they do.
That’s a vastly different case from changing the attitude of the government. If a cleric defies the rule of the order, that is a matter for the order to consider – and, if need be, the Church hierarchy, to which the order is beholden.Even St. Francis of Assisi wrote in his Testament that non-Catholics or Catholics who wanted to change the rule of his order should be seized and put into the hands of the bishop for judgment. They thought of “love they neighbor” as including justice as well as mercy.
We punish rapists because we love our neighbors. We punish murderers and thieves for the same reasons. We should punish idolaters for the same reasons. For while murderers only kill human bodies, idolaters often kill souls.
Rape, murder, and theft harm the fabric of society. Freedom of religion only harms a theocracy, which most societies these days are not. One who worships another deity may damn his eternal soul as far as you are concerned (and you may be damning yourself by his lights – and a secular government can’t tell and doesn’t care), but it is up to the will of a person to worship one god, another god, or none, and mere worship or non-worship harms no-one else. The Church, at least after Leo XIII, respects that expression of free will as it sees it, and for that I admit considerable respect for it.That doesn’t make sense. Is preventing a rapist from committing rape an act that defies his humanity by preventing him from acting in accordance with his free will? No it’s not, because he’s harming other people. An idolater does the same, only toward souls rather than toward bodies. Though idolatry usually ends up resulting in immoral physical actions too. As Romans 1 and Wisdom 14 say, it is the root of all evil.
God ordered Israel to do a lot of outright evil things in the Old Testament – but that’s another discussion entirely.Besides, on an evidence level, if denying someone free choice of religious values is tantamount to denying their humanity and yours, God would never have ordered Israel to do so in the OT.
#5 is a modern interpretation of Jesus’ words. Throughout almost the whole of Church history, it was interpreted differently.#4 is, yes, but I’d argue #5 is not. It’s directly extended from the teachings of a certain carpenter, philosopher, and rabbi in 1st century Judea, where and when I am not and almost certainly will never be.
But the present day Church would not seize and imprison a man who breaks the rule of the order, until he can be handed over to a bishop for sentencing. The bishop, in that time, would also have used the legal system to pronounce penalty on a proven offender. St. Francis agreed with the order that heretics be punished in ways beyond excommunication.That’s a vastly different case from changing the attitude of the government. If a cleric defies the rule of the order, that is a matter for the order to consider – and, if need be, the Church hierarchy, to which the order is beholden.
Idolatry, according to Wisdom 14 and Romans 1, is the source of all evil. Both chapters of the Bible include long lists of the kinds of evil deeds that result from idolatry.Rape, murder, and theft harm the fabric of society. Freedom of religion only harms a theocracy, which most societies these days are not. One who worships another deity may damn his eternal soul as far as you are concerned (and you may be damning yourself by his lights – and a secular government can’t tell and doesn’t care), but it is up to the will of a person to worship one god, another god, or none, and mere worship or non-worship harms no-one else. The Church, at least after Leo XIII, respects that expression of free will as it sees it, and for that I admit considerable respect for it.
Yes the world does, or should revolve around Catholicism! We are the Bride of Christ! The world is spared because God loves his Church that is within it! If it wasn’t for the Church, the world would probably tear itself to shreds within two generations. The scripture says, in the Book of Revelation, “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of God!” That is the goal. Not to become the kingdom of the world, but to transform the kingdom of the world in all of its parts- political, economic, social, judicial, everything. Christ’s holiness should emanate from his Church into every part of society, turning it into a manifestation of the beauty of God’s kingdomThe world does not revolve around Catholicism; are you not to be ‘in this world, but not of it’?
We aren’t supposed to “let the world take its course,” but are instead supposed to change the course of the worldThen let the world take its course, do your good works in it, save the souls of those who come to you, and leave the others in God’s hands: most of the rest of us will be doing more or less the same thing as best we can. Whether or not our best is as good as, better than, or worse than yours will either be up to one final Arbiter or won’t matter at all. Since you believe in such an Arbiter, let him do his job. If you’re right, hopefully he grades on effort.
Take a look at Chapter 2 of this text by Tertullian:God ordered Israel to do a lot of outright evil things in the Old Testament – but that’s another discussion entirely.
I’m going to also try to convince Catholics that religious freedom is wrong, because I believe in justice. But I’ll pray and focus always on what I can do.
Good, and try not to worry too much -
Also, if you care to, light candles when you can…
I also carry a little spray bottle with holy water in it - easily refillable at the church.
God bless you!
Yes; however, that was a time and place in which the Church and the government were very closely linked. Wouldn’t you say that might have influenced their actions in many respects?But the present day Church would not seize and imprison a man who breaks the rule of the order, until he can be handed over to a bishop for sentencing. The bishop, in that time, would also have used the legal system to pronounce penalty on a proven offender. St. Francis agreed with the order that heretics be punished in ways beyond excommunication.
I have yet to make a single convert to agnosticism. I’ve seen plenty of other people end up here, but it wasn’t because of anything I said or did.If a nonbeliever was only going to harm his own soul and no one else, I might find its presence in society acceptable. But if unbelief has a presence in society, it can trick others into joining it and so damn them. Many people, including most true believers, have serious weaknesses in their personalities that God is working in them to transform. But people can lose grace after receiving it.
On the latter, they were simply doing exactly what you want to do – if, maybe, being a bit more permanent about it. Murdering (er, executing) or imprisoning those who don’t believe for that fact alone? What makes it right and just when you do it, and immoral for anyone else?The Mormon heresy, throughout a good deal of its history, permitted promiscuity and the murder of non-adherents.
The Church was established some millions of years after the earth formed and there were still people around to found it, so that’s a wash.Yes the world does, or should revolve around Catholicism! We are the Bride of Christ! The world is spared because God loves his Church that is within it! If it wasn’t for the Church, the world would probably tear itself to shreds within two generations.
Wouldn’t you say that goal would be all the nearer if you didn’t spend so much time going after the perceived evil of others and instead took what considerable good they had to offer?The scripture says, in the Book of Revelation, “The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of God!” That is the goal. Not to become the kingdom of the world, but to transform the kingdom of the world in all of its parts- political, economic, social, judicial, everything. Christ’s holiness should emanate from his Church into every part of society, turning it into a manifestation of the beauty of God’s kingdom. Praise be to the Lord Christ.
Frankly, I don’t buy the whole ‘benevolence’ schtick at all. I do not see how it would be necessary in theory for a deity (either you shackle a proposed god to a mere moral principle or you deny that it created shadow as well as light – nb. I distinctly disagree with Aquinas on the definition of evil, let’s not go off the rails that way), and in practice so far as the Abrahamic religions are concerned, ‘all-good’ is not an adjective I would use to describe the God they worship. ‘Beyond good and evil’, perhaps, recalling the passage in Isaiah I form the light, and create darkness, I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord that do all these things. ‘Kind of a jerk’ as well, recalling other passages. To me, the God of Christianity as generally presented is too human to be believable as a deity.Take a look at Chapter 2 of this text by Tertullian:
newadvent.org/fathers/0318.htm
He quotes the Old Testament liberally, pointing out that punishing heretics and unbelievers is a righteous act of God.
Nobody’s saying ‘change the Law’. They’re saying ‘have your Law, fine, but we didn’t sign a contract, you can’t prove there is one, and in any case who on earth, heaven, or hell made you the judge and jury?’.Consider also that Jesus said it is easier for heaven and earth to disappear than for the smallest stroke of the pen to fall from the Law. This includes the parts condemning idolatry.
Judaism would be permitted, because its religion is somewhat racially self-inclosed. They don’t try to make converts, and historically, they never have made many converts at all.Quick addendum – I meant to ask this but it slipped my mind
Lief, what place would Judaism have in your ideal world?
Certainly it did, just as our environment of Separation of Church and State influences our viewpoints. I’m just pointing out what the Church tradition is.Yes; however, that was a time and place in which the Church and the government were very closely linked. Wouldn’t you say that might have influenced their actions in many respects?
The cultural acceptability of agnosticism, and its ability to explain its views to others or challenge other moral systems makes it a threat.I have yet to make a single convert to agnosticism. I’ve seen plenty of other people end up here, but it wasn’t because of anything I said or did.
I don’t believe this world ever will be perfect- we’ll have to wait for the next one, the New Heaven and New Earth. But we are expected to become vessels of Christ’s grace in whatever field of society we’re called to help. When Jesus said, “My kingdom is not of this world,” he was saying that his kingdom is spiritual values, a kingdom that exists in the hearts of men. Those values include how to do what God wants, no matter what part of society one’s working on. There is no position, whether judiciary, economic or other, which is supposed to be devoid of God’s grace. Nothing in scripture suggests that. God wants economies, politics, social life and the judiciary all to run according to his will, because his will is love, and his Counselor can reveal to us how to make that love manifest to the most people in our systems.But sure, other religions make converts. Isn’t that a risk you’re going to have to accept? When exactly did Jesus say this world was going to be perfect and free from temptation? Never! Instead he said ‘my kingdom is not of this world’, remember?
Actually, the nature of the religion one is supporting is crucial to the issue. God’s religion is perfect and leads people to eternal life. Others lead people toward hell. Therefore having laws penalizing the damning religion while supporting the saving religion is only logical, rather like we have laws in our country against spreading putting a lethal dose of sleeping pills in someone else’s cup of coffee, but we don’t have laws against giving advil to our hurting children. Even though they’re both drugs, the laws between them differ because they have different functions.On the latter, they were simply doing exactly what you want to do – if, maybe, being a bit more permanent about it. Murdering (er, executing) or imprisoning those who don’t believe for that fact alone? What makes it right and just when you do it, and immoral for anyone else?
Remember, morality does not change. The act of killing (or otherwise infringing upon the rights of) someone who does not at least pay lip service to a given theological position is the same, no matter who commits it. It cannot be right for some and wrong for others: so which will it be?
When you fall off a chair, you might get hurt, but depending on your fragility and how you fall, you could easily escape getting hurt badly. Fall off a hill, and you could be hurt a good deal more. Fall off a mountain and you will get hurt a TON.The Church was established some millions of years after the earth formed and there were still people around to found it, so that’s a wash.
Well, why don’t you think we should do that for murderers? They may have considerable good to offer, even if they kill a few people too.Wouldn’t you say that goal would be all the nearer if you didn’t spend so much time going after the perceived evil of others and instead took what considerable good they had to offer?
Then why is it that some of his actions in the Old Testament appear evil to you, when they are actually good? That in itself proves that his thoughts are not like yours and his ways are not either. It proves that he does not have a human point of view, unless you assume these actions are bad from your perspective and thus redefine the Christian God. If you redefine the Christian God to suit your own perspective, then of course you can see that deity as too human. But the fact is that the God of the Scriptures and of history does many loving things that people often have difficulty understanding.Frankly, I don’t buy the whole ‘benevolence’ schtick at all. I do not see how it would be necessary in theory for a deity (either you shackle a proposed god to a mere moral principle or you deny that it created shadow as well as light – nb. I distinctly disagree with Aquinas on the definition of evil, let’s not go off the rails that way), and in practice so far as the Abrahamic religions are concerned, ‘all-good’ is not an adjective I would use to describe the God they worship. ‘Beyond good and evil’, perhaps, recalling the passage in Isaiah I form the light, and create darkness, I make peace, and create evil: I the Lord that do all these things. ‘Kind of a jerk’ as well, recalling other passages. To me, the God of Christianity as generally presented is too human to be believable as a deity.
Every human has an intrinsic understanding that they should do what is right (however defined). Kids from infancy are saying things like, “that’s not fair!”, revealing the existence of a concept of justice. Everyone knows that everyone should do right and that they are out of line when they don’t.Nobody’s saying ‘change the Law’. They’re saying 'have your Law, fine, but we didn’t sign a contract,
I don’t have to prove that there is such a contract. Almost everyone knows that they ought to do good (however defined).you can’t prove there is one,
They didn’t. God is. And he has revealed his will through his Church, which rightfully declares what morality is, as it is itself the Body of Christ.and in any case who on earth, heaven, or hell made you the judge and jury?’.
What other exceptions would there be? Voudoun? It’s pretty ‘enclosed’, being a Caribbean religion. Zoroastrianism? They’re about as conversion-friendly as Judaism. Where do you draw the line, and how can you even tell where a particular religion lands? I could make something up that would qualify as ‘acceptable’ to you. You were on much firmer ground when it was all or nothing, even though you’re still in the wrong.Judaism would be permitted, because its religion is somewhat racially self-inclosed. They don’t try to make converts, and historically, they never have made many converts at all.
But this particular viewpoint was very much influenced by the current state of things at the time – indeed, it would never have arisen if not for that. Why is it more valid than our viewpoint from here and now?Certainly it did, just as our environment of Separation of Church and State influences our viewpoints. I’m just pointing out what the Church tradition is.
So I’m a threat because I can communicate effectively and you can’t prove me wrong? Where have I heard that before?The cultural acceptability of agnosticism, and its ability to explain its views to others or challenge other moral systems makes it a threat.
Then prove your religion perfect and the only means to salvation. Wait, first prove there is such a thing as salvation. Get those in, then we can talk about which religions should be supported by the state.Therefore having laws penalizing the damning religion while supporting the saving religion is only logical, rather like we have laws in our country against spreading putting a lethal dose of sleeping pills in someone else’s cup of coffee, but we don’t have laws against giving advil to our hurting children.
One much-vaunted attribute of the ‘natural law’ is that it is eternal. There supposedly was never a time at which it did not apply – just ask Thomas Aquinas.But even granted this, your statement isn’t quite true. God wiped out all the nations of the Earth in the Flood, before the Law was even given. According to Revelation, he’ll wipe them out again, but in fire, because they will severely persecute his Church.
Support your local prison store!Well, why don’t you think we should do that for murderers? They may have considerable good to offer, even if they kill a few people too.
Because things like, oh I don’t know, sending down fire and brimstone, genocide, slavery, ordering the slaughter of infants, and so on and so forth are evil?Then why is it that some of his actions in the Old Testament appear evil to you, when they are actually good?
Thank God for that, I guess!That in itself proves that his thoughts are not like yours and his ways are not either.
I am not – I am simply holding your God up to his own standards. The idea that ‘anything is good if God does it’ does not sit well with me. Given what he is supposed to have done, it’s much like condoning and supporting the actions of a sociopathic arsonist who occasionally drops loaves of bread off at homeless shelters.It proves that he does not have a human point of view, unless you assume these actions are bad from your perspective and thus redefine the Christian God.
An implicit contract with society is nothing like an explicit contract with God.Every human has an intrinsic understanding that they should do what is right (however defined). Kids from infancy are saying things like, “that’s not fair!”, revealing the existence of a concept of justice. Everyone knows that everyone should do right and that they are out of line when they don’t.
Then what are you doing trying to step into his shoes?They didn’t. God is. And he has revealed his will through his Church, which rightfully declares what morality is, as it is itself the Body of Christ.
Perhaps. You know, I see believers in false religions as being rather like suicide bombers, in that suicide bombers destroy themselves and everyone around them. But if the person’s false religion is self-contained, harming no one but that person, then there’s no point in legal restrictions existing on that person. It’s like a suicide bomber who’s only bombing himself. You might try to convince the person not to, through evangelism, but there’s not much reason to bust him.What other exceptions would there be? Voudoun? It’s pretty ‘enclosed’, being a Caribbean religion. Zoroastrianism? They’re about as conversion-friendly as Judaism. Where do you draw the line, and how can you even tell where a particular religion lands? I could make something up that would qualify as ‘acceptable’ to you. You were on much firmer ground when it was all or nothing, even though you’re still in the wrong.
It’s pretty simple, really. Their laws were created in a Christian environment that had just been produced by the evangelistic victories of the Early Church. The Early Church held to its beliefs no matter what, and finally most people converted, including the emperors themselves. The movement of the past was toward Christianity, and the laws were made in a secure Christian environment. Religious Freedom, on the other hand, in our societies was created by the Protestant Reformation and the Enlightenment. It does not have Christian origins, and the Church resisted it until the mid-20th century.But this particular viewpoint was very much influenced by the current state of things at the time – indeed, it would never have arisen if not for that. Why is it more valid than our viewpoint from here and now?
First of all, I’ll mention that it doesn’t matter too much if you can be proved wrong. Some people aren’t going to be as good at arguing as you are, and some are going to be better, but people don’t tend to change their views just because they’ve been defeated in a debate. On the other hand, frequently people join a false belief in ignorance of its true nature, even though there are perfectly logical refutations to it that they just aren’t aware of.So I’m a threat because I can communicate effectively and you can’t prove me wrong? Where have I heard that before?
I can certainly discuss with you the objective evidence supporting Christianity’s truth, but we’d need to move to another thread. It would throw this one completely off course.Then prove your religion perfect and the only means to salvation. Wait, first prove there is such a thing as salvation. Get those in, then we can talk about which religions should be supported by the state.
I agree with that. The natural law has always been there. However, because sin blinds us, its requirements aren’t so explicit to us as the Law of the Old Covenant is. And the Law of the Old Covenant is not so glorious as the Law of the New Covenant that followed.One much-vaunted attribute of the ‘natural law’ is that it is eternal. There supposedly was never a time at which it did not apply – just ask Thomas Aquinas.
So it comes down to the fact that you don’t think false religions damn anyone.Support your local prison store!
Murderers cause direct, immediate, and obvious harm to society. Theological quibbles do not, unless someone murders someone else over them, in which case see rule #1.
A human’s verdict about God is like a child of five years old wandering into a courtroom where a trial is taking place, listening for about twenty seconds, and then delivering a verdict.Because things like, oh I don’t know, sending down fire and brimstone, genocide, slavery, ordering the slaughter of infants, and so on and so forth are evil?
That’s a statement born of blindness. Rather than asking if an omniscient God might have some good reasons for doing things you wouldn’t do, you assume he’s wrong.Thank God for that, I guess!![]()
Doesn’t sit well with me either. God is right, he doesn’t invent right and thus make right meaningless. His nature is eternal, so right is eternal, and it can’t change into something wrong.I am not – I am simply holding your God up to his own standards. The idea that ‘anything is good if God does it’ does not sit well with me.
There are very poignant moments in the Book of Ezekiel, where God says he takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked. In many of the Books of the Prophets, he mourns for Israel and aches for them, grieving at what they force him to do through their actions.Given what he is supposed to have done, it’s much like condoning and supporting the actions of a sociopathic arsonist who occasionally drops loaves of bread off at homeless shelters.
He made us in his image, and these goods are wonderful and beautiful. Especially when you get to know God, who is their source, the heart of all virtue and love. His mystery is so stunningly beautiful . . . it is incomparable.Drop the idea that a deity must be the acme of Good, and how much more majestic and terrible it will be! What are ‘good’ and ‘evil’ but our words and concepts anyway? Why even attempt to put a deity on such a leash?
I don’t think that it is an implicit contract with society so much as it is with God. For God himself is the heart of all virtues, so a feeling that people should be virtuous is an implicit contract with the Creator. But I can understand your view that it’s only a contract with society.An implicit contract with society is nothing like an explicit contract with God.
I’m not. The Church gave a teaching on this issue, opposed to religious freedom, and held to it all the way up to the mid-20th century. The position of Vatican II was firstly born on the wind of modern thinking. It cites scripture and some of the Early Church Fathers, I expect, but these interpretations only came to exist because they believed and were pressured so heavily by modern thought. Church tradition or scripture were not the root of Vatican II’s decision. The Protestant Reformation and Enlightenment were. They announced themselves that their verdict on the issue was non-binding, for their council was only pastoral, only giving advice, and they said it did not give any new dogmatic definitions.Then what are you doing trying to step into his shoes?
What criteria, exactly, would you use? Obviously disinterest in making converts isn’t nearly all of it: a religion can be plenty interesting even if (or because) it discourages would-be converts. Give me a list of What Makes A Religion Okay By Lief Erikson. Give me a list, and I will make up a religion containing no tenet not already held by one or more faiths that will both be utterly abhorrent to you and still be permissible.And you draw the line after an investigation. If it doesn’t seem the religion will spread, you might allow it. If, on the other hand, as time passes, you find that the religion is attracting new adherents, then you ban it.
You’re not answering the question. The idea that freedom of belief was unacceptable was a product of a particular place and time, just as you argue that its opposite is a product of another place and time. What makes one more valid than the other?Their laws were created in a Christian environment that had just been produced by the evangelistic victories of the Early Church. The Early Church held to its beliefs no matter what, and finally most people converted, including the emperors themselves. The movement of the past was toward Christianity, and the laws were made in a secure Christian environment. Religious Freedom, on the other hand, in our societies was created by the Protestant Reformation and the Enlightenment. It does not have Christian origins, and the Church resisted it until the mid-20th century.
Why yesOn the other hand, frequently people join a false belief in ignorance of its true nature, even though there are perfectly logical refutations to it that they just aren’t aware of.
But is it not also a gift from God?An ability to communicate effectively can be a dangerous and destructive weapon.
Indeed, and I’ve already been there, done that, got the t-shirt, and remain unconvinced. No point going there again.I can certainly discuss with you the objective evidence supporting Christianity’s truth, but we’d need to move to another thread. It would throw this one completely off course.
As far as being bound by the law goes, that doesn’t matter.I agree with that. The natural law has always been there. However, because sin blinds us, its requirements aren’t so explicit to us as the Law of the Old Covenant is. And the Law of the Old Covenant is not so glorious as the Law of the New Covenant that followed.
I think they’re all false, and doubt that any saves anyone from anything beyond their own personal demons – in the metaphoric sense.So it comes down to the fact that you don’t think false religions damn anyone.
Again, tell that to Aquinas. And five-year-olds are often the first to point out that the emperor’s got no clothes.A human’s verdict about God is like a child of five years old wandering into a courtroom where a trial is taking place, listening for about twenty seconds, and then delivering a verdict.
Many actions of God in the old testament do not seem ‘nonsensical’, they seem completely and utterly evil. They make perfect sense, and give the lie to the idea that God must be all-good.God has infinite wisdom, so it’s only logical that some of his actions would seem correspondingly nonsensical to little mortals.
Much as your favorable judgment would be, no? And don’t assume I’m ignorant. I am, in fact, quite well-read and educated on the subject.I’ll also mention that you’re attempting to not only judge the conduct of one infinitely wiser and more knowledgeable than you, but you’re also trying to judge his actions in an environment that existed thousands of years ago, when you don’t know much about the crimes of the people he was judging. And even if you did know all the crimes they were being judged for, you wouldn’t know the full ramifications of those crimes. So even if you were a human judging other humans, your opinion from here would be so much more limited because of its ignorance of the time period and circumstances that it would be nearly worthless.
He sure loved those Canaanites.There are loving reasons for the actions of God that you have mentioned. I can discuss them too, if you like, but that again should be another thread.
Isn’t that the whole point of being able to choose whether to worship him or not?However, I think that the idea that humans are in a position to pass judgment on God is foolishness.
How would Israel force God to do anything? This flies in the face of everything you just said about him.There are very poignant moments in the Book of Ezekiel, where God says he takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked. In many of the Books of the Prophets, he mourns for Israel and aches for them, grieving at what they force him to do through their actions.
Not at all. If God were beyond good and evil, and said ‘good is the standard I have laid out for you to follow’, it’d make perfect sense.If God were “beyond good and evil,” were amoral, then really everything becomes relative, nothing either right or wrong in a true sense, and everything correspondingly becomes meaningless and miserable. That is like hell, to me. No one has any reason to do good, and no one even can do good because good doesn’t exist. All value in life drops away. It’s an intensely disturbing ideology. Not “majestic,” though certainly terrible. Nightmarish.
I think you’re wrongI believe that I am holding to the revealed will of Christ.
It couldn’t break any of the country’s laws. The country would have laws banning sexual immorality, murder, witchcraft, theft and many other evil and dangerous practices. The false religion also must not attract converts.What criteria, exactly, would you use? Obviously disinterest in making converts isn’t nearly all of it: a religion can be plenty interesting even if (or because) it discourages would-be converts. Give me a list of What Makes A Religion Okay By Lief Erikson. Give me a list, and I will make up a religion containing no tenet not already held by one or more faiths that will both be utterly abhorrent to you and still be permissible.
In the past, it came from the rise of Christianity’s power and influence. It came when Christianity was doing well, was less under pressure by unholy influences, and this view also came right after the Early Church period of history. Thus beliefs originating in that time period are more likely to be reliable than beliefs that come from Protestantism and secularism first, and the Church only centuries later (under a great deal of pressure, and with a great deal of infighting over the decision).You’re not answering the question. The idea that freedom of belief was unacceptable was a product of a particular place and time, just as you argue that its opposite is a product of another place and time. What makes one more valid than the other?
Good.Why yes![]()
Yes, and so are our hands. We can use our hands to build people houses or to tear them down, to bless or to kill. It is the same with speech. The tongue is a gift from God that he gave us to use to his glory, not to use to people’s destruction.But is it not also a gift from God?
The most important two things I’d suggest on this point, though, without getting into any of the evidence are:Indeed, and I’ve already been there, done that, got the t-shirt, and remain unconvinced. No point going there again.
How so?As far as being bound by the law goes, that doesn’t matter.
And if one really can’t tell which is true, and doesn’t know if any of them are, it makes sense to allow all of them. If, on the other hand, you know that one saves souls and the others damn them, doesn’t it seem logical to you that the government should have a role in protecting its citizens in this crucial area of their lives? Assuming that you know which saves and which destroy.I think they’re all false, and doubt that any saves anyone from anything beyond their own personal demons – in the metaphoric sense.
I don’t think Thomas Aquinas would have disagreed with me. I believe in a natural law like he does. I also believe in sin’s power to blind people so that they can’t perceive morality accurately, and I don’t think he’d have disagreed with that. The Prophet Isaiah quoted the Lord as saying, “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are my ways your ways, declares the Sovereign Lord. As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.”Again, tell that to Aquinas.
Cool. So you think they’d make a valid jury? You’d want them judging your trial, if you were ever to be charged?And five-year-olds are often the first to point out that the emperor’s got no clothes.
They do not. The Lord said that he was judging the Canaanites for their sins, and he said that he was judging the people in the time of Noah because they filled the world with violence. He knows who is guilty and who is not far, far better than you do, because he is pure while you live in an environment highly influenced by sin and non-Christian beliefs, he is omniscient and you are not, and you live thousands of years after the events you’re judging while he lived through them. Your judgment is partially warped by personal sin and sinful surroundings, impaired because of your complete non-proximity to the time period, and above all, finite. Whereas the one you in your wisdom are judging has infinite knowledge.Many actions of God in the old testament do not seem ‘nonsensical’, they seem completely and utterly evil. They make perfect sense, and give the lie to the idea that God must be all-good.
By the scholarly standards of today, that may be. However, you did not live thousands of years ago and the knowledge available today is limited. You are not in anywhere near as good a position as God to judge.Much as your favorable judgment would be, no? And don’t assume I’m ignorant. I am, in fact, quite well-read and educated on the subject.
No, it calls for faith in what God reveals about himself. We can have faith because God came to us as a human and died for us, and he transforms us to make us holy and pure, a state which always brings greater joy and love. Also, when we become united with God we come into the condition St. Paul described when he said, “we have the mind of Christ.” Christ is our head, our director, our leader. To reject faith in God is to be lost. This is all understandable on a basic, experiential level. Our sense of the natural law God made validates it. Our sense of the natural law can be corrupted by sin, but as we come closer to God, this falls away and we come to have more fully the mind of Christ.Isn’t that the whole point of being able to choose whether to worship him or not?
“Force” may be the wrong word. I was using it in the same way Islamic extremists blowing themselves in New York might “force” the government to react against Al Qaeda.How would Israel force God to do anything? This flies in the face of everything you just said about him.
I prefer holy mysteries to unholy ones.Not at all. If God were beyond good and evil, and said ‘good is the standard I have laid out for you to follow’, it’d make perfect sense.
That’s it? I could just read you a list of several old-time Catholic heresies, maybe some current Protestant denominations, and they’d fit just fine. Westboro Baptist Church would skate right on in to your utopia. But I said I’d make one up (and I didn’t specify whether beliefs, practices, or both would push your buttons, but I can manage), so let’s go for the gold.It couldn’t break any of the country’s laws. The country would have laws banning sexual immorality, murder, witchcraft, theft and many other evil and dangerous practices. The false religion also must not attract converts.
If you can suggest a religion with abhorent practices that aren’t condemned by Church canon law or the Law of the Old Covenant, I’d be rather surprised.
Excuse me? Back in those days, the Church was under more pressure than now: it was just one of many regional faiths, and there were heretics lurking around every corner to boot. You want infighting? One name: Arius.It came when Christianity was doing well, was less under pressure by unholy influences, and this view also came right after the Early Church period of history. Thus beliefs originating in that time period are more likely to be reliable than beliefs that come from Protestantism and secularism first, and the Church only centuries later (under a great deal of pressure, and with a great deal of infighting over the decision).
Since the law never changes and the responsibility of people to uphold it also never changes, ignorance is no excuse.How so? [being bound by an immutable Law over time]
We simply cannot assume that. I could ask any person I found walking out of a church, synagogue, mosque, temple, or treehouse what religion saves and which damn, and get as many answers as times I asked the question. If one faith can prove it is the full, exclusive Truth, then it’s a question of ‘that faith’ or ‘not that faith’.And if one really can’t tell which is true, and doesn’t know if any of them are, it makes sense to allow all of them. If, on the other hand, you know that one saves souls and the others damn them, doesn’t it seem logical to you that the government should have a role in protecting its citizens in this crucial area of their lives? Assuming that you know which saves and which destroy.
He may not have disagreed with you, but you are both still judging God. You simply have a more favorable verdict than I do.I don’t think Thomas Aquinas would have disagreed with me.
Sure, I’d give them candy before the hearing. Much more affordable than grownup bribes.Cool. So you think they’d make a valid jury? You’d want them judging your trial, if you were ever to be charged?
You judge God every second you remain a Catholic. I judge him every second I think about the possibility of theism being correct. What’s the difference?It’s not sensible, and is indeed astonishingly arrogant, for a human to think he can judge God.
What does your preference have to do with it? I’d prefer to have a billion dollars cash sitting at my feet.I prefer holy mysteries to unholy ones.
Technically, my concept of divinity would be more ‘holy’ – all that word means is set apart. Mine is, yes, beyond understanding, alien, different; yours is an immortal Boy Scout with a troubled past. Why should God be comprehensible to us in any way?Your God is an unholy mystery, one whose ways are completely beyond understanding (beyond good and evil). Mine is a holy mystery whose ways are simply higher and better than ours, but become more and more comprehensible to us as we become more fully united with him.
Cannibalism would be illegal, under law, and the spiritual experiences and possessions you describe might be investigated, as they sound like they could likely break anti-witchcraft laws. The conversion of any Catholic to this religion (or any other false religion) would be illegal.That’s it? I could just read you a list of several old-time Catholic heresies, maybe some current Protestant denominations, and they’d fit just fine. Westboro Baptist Church would skate right on in to your utopia. But I said I’d make one up (and I didn’t specify whether beliefs, practices, or both would push your buttons, but I can manage), so let’s go for the gold.
Alright, let’s call it Shacathormodoun. Bonus points if you get which real faiths and heresies I’m going to be referencing.
Beliefs:
-The world is evil, created by the angel Demiurge who tried to become God, and was defeated by the death of the Christ. Anything in it or of it is evil (no matter how good it may seem), and it is only through the mercy of God that we may escape it.
-Following from that, sex is especially evil as it may bring another soul into the world; men and women are kept completely separate, and only see each other in church.
-Medicine is evil; all illness and disease is caused by the stain of evil, and can only be cast out by prayer. If it doesn’t work, obviously God thought it was time.
-Science and technology are evil, for howevermuch our souls may be created by God, pursuits of the world are cooperation in evil.
-Possession is a regular occurrence, both demonic and angelic.
-God does not judge souls, as she knew them when she created them; the elect are raised up with the angels and oversee this and other worlds in a kind of cosmic bureaucracy, the rest are consigned to oblivion.
Practices:
-Services consist of readings and periods of silence, frequently interrupted by a member of the congregation being ‘ridden’ by the presence of an angel, shaking and dancing ecstatically. Often persons in this state may relate visions. These occurrences are regarded as God showing us a glimpse of her real, supernatural, infinite Good to give us hope for the next life.
-Being fatalists about predestination, there is no evangelization whatsoever. Either you are one or you aren’t. Converts are grudgingly accepted if they keep trying long enough, a process that may take years.
-As sex is evil, propagation of the faith is pretty static. They run orphanages and raise the abandoned children in the faith as credentes or catechumens. At the age of majority the kids are asked if they want to become full members, going through much the same process as an adult would-be convert. Or they may depart, no debts, no strings attached.
-After death, in an attempt to completely remove the deceased from this evil sphere, they eat the corpse. Church services have some of the best barbecues around.
We Catholics believe that the Early Church Fathers accurately transmitted the original teachings of Jesus and the apostles to their following. A scholar can look at their teachings and at their apostolic succession right from the founders of Christianity and see marvelous consistency. Heretics tended to have one commonality between them: they did not have apostolic succession. Their beliefs originated with them and were discarded by the orthodox Church. Yes, the Church was under immense pressure, but we can look back at their documents and see the consistency of their teaching in spite of that difficulty.Excuse me? Back in those days, the Church was under more pressure than now: it was just one of many regional faiths, and there were heretics lurking around every corner to boot. You want infighting? One name: Arius.
Since the law never changes and the responsibility of people to uphold it also never changes, ignorance is no excuse.
I don’t know much about the objective evidence surrounding the origins of other religions, but I know that it very strongly supports Christianity. I’m very tempted to get into specifics, but I know this just isn’t the right threadWe simply cannot assume that. I could ask any person I found walking out of a church, synagogue, mosque, temple, or treehouse what religion saves and which damn, and get as many answers as times I asked the question. If one faith can prove it is the full, exclusive Truth, then it’s a question of ‘that faith’ or ‘not that faith’.
We’re talking about damnation of souls, not overdrawing bank accountsAnd even then, I would say the government should mind its own business. Does it enforce the FDA recommended daily allowance of sodium, or penalize people for overdrawing their bank accounts? No, many, if not most, things dealing with ‘areas of people’s lives’ that do not infringe upon the same areas of others’ lives are left up to the citizens to deal with as they please. And that’s a very nice system.
I cannot believe you took the bait like that! I’d added that almost as a joke – I really didn’t think you would swallow it! You, who eat the flesh of the son of man and drink his blood every weekend before coffee and donuts, shy away from others practicing eating the deceased as a religious mandate no less integral to their faith than your ritual cannibalism (in convenient bread and wine form, but to you no less flesh and blood for that) is to yours? You said anything that is not prohibited by Church law goes. Show me the canon that prohibits this, and I’ll show you a canon that denies the Real Presence.Cannibalism would be illegal, under law, and the spiritual experiences and possessions you describe might be investigated, as they sound like they could likely break anti-witchcraft laws. The conversion of any Catholic to this religion (or any other false religion) would be illegal.
Then wouldn’t it make more sense for the Catholics to live in ghettos?Beyond that, I don’t know that they would be banned. They might be required to live in ghettos, so that their beliefs wouldn’t have a chance to influence others. The scripture and Early Church Fathers did clearly call on Catholics to separate themselves from heretics and have nothing to do with them.
Arius and Montanus were priests. Donatus and Jansen were bishops, Nestorius an archbishop. The Antinomian schism was a church affair. Apostolic succession? Check.We Catholics believe that the Early Church Fathers accurately transmitted the original teachings of Jesus and the apostles to their following. A scholar can look at their teachings and at their apostolic succession right from the founders of Christianity and see marvelous consistency. Heretics tended to have one commonality between them: they did not have apostolic succession. Their beliefs originated with them and were discarded by the orthodox Church. Yes, the Church was under immense pressure, but we can look back at their documents and see the consistency of their teaching in spite of that difficulty.
You’re mixing up secular law and ‘natural law’. Ignorance may reduce culpability, but it does not eliminate it. If everyone is bound by the Law, everyone is bound by it; after all, the Angelic Doctor says it is engraved on the human heart, no? Then having it on stone tablets, scrolls, or computers doesn’t matter one bit.That doesn’t make sense. In our law courts, when a child steals something, he might get a small penalty of some sort or no penalty at all. It would be unfair to punish him much because of his immaturity. But an adult caught for the same thing would be punished more seriously. Jesus teaches us in the scripture that if a person sins knowingly, he’ll be punished with many blows, but if he sins unknowingly, he’ll be punished with few blows. And God in the Old Testament punished Israel first and other nations much later, after their sins were piled higher, because Israel had been given the Law and it knew what it was doing. This is a consistent scriptural teaching, and we practice it in our own courts too. Ignorance does reduce culpability. Even if the Law is unchanging and we all should obey it.
Never speak from ignoranceI don’t know much about the objective evidence surrounding the origins of other religions, but I know that it very strongly supports Christianity. I’m very tempted to get into specifics, but I know this just isn’t the right thread. This is a seriously related issue, though, just as the supposedly evil deeds of God in the Old Testament are, so should we create a couple new threads about them in the main Apologetics forum?
First you have to prove that any harm is being done; then and only then can you make a valid case for doing something about it.We’re talking about damnation of souls, not overdrawing bank accounts. And about the spreading of that damnation. Murdering a person’s human body only kills them physically, but murdering a soul kills a person eternally. Preachers of false religions would be essentially spreading hellfire around through their words, which destroys people just like suicide bombers do. You’d approve of the use of the army to quell suicide bombers. Why wouldn’t you approve of the use of force against people who spread damnation, assuming you think they actually are doing that?
I’ll be waitingI’ll respond to the rest of your post later.
Eating the Flesh of the Son of God and drinking His Blood is quite different, as He Himself instructed us to do so, and He is not dead, but alive.I cannot believe you took the bait like that! I’d added that almost as a joke – I really didn’t think you would swallow it! You, who eat the flesh of the son of man and drink his blood every weekend before coffee and donuts, shy away from others practicing eating the deceased as a religious mandate no less integral to their faith than your ritual cannibalism (in convenient bread and wine form, but to you no less flesh and blood for that) is to yours?
In this made-up religion, the instruction to eat the dead is implicit. And the deceased are alive with God. There’s no difference at all.Eating the Flesh of the Son of God and drinking His Blood is quite different, as He Himself instructed us to do so, and He is not dead, but alive.