N
Newsy
Guest
Thank you for that most enlightening bit of your opinion, completely backed up by more of your opinion and Bart Ehrman. You have really impressed meI grew up surrounded by Catholics and I always found it to be a very odd belief system.
There is an obsession with Mary, with blood, the saints, every other day is a feast day of some kind. In an effort to learn more about it, I came to realize that it’s mostly just a lot of made-up stuff from centuries ago.
You can bash me if you like, I don’t really care. But, I am of the opinion that most of the rituals, the mission statement and the early “history” of the Catholic church are just figments of vivid imaginations.
I have no problem with Jesus.
I like him, but, I find some of his so-called followers to be mostly a bunch of kooks!
The first couple of hundred years of the church was a messy mish-mash of beliefs centered around Jesus. The many churches founded throughout Europe and the Near-East and Northern Africa had many, MANY differing viewpoints in how to arrange and organize the church. It really wasn’t an unbroken line of succession from Jesus down to the Pope of today. Most of the early popes were horrible people! Interested more in political power than anything else.
Anyway, Once Emperor Constantine declared Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire, things really began to take off. Thats why the Roman church is still in power today. Rome was the dominant economic, political, and military power of the day.
Constantine saw that the new religion appealed to the peasant masses and he used it to bind his subjects together under a common belief system. There used to be as many pagans gods as there were families in the Roman empire. This way, he could consolidate his power and his authority over the subjects of the empire.
If anyone should get a chance read some books by Bart Ehrman. I took a course of his way back in the early 1980s as a lark, and I still read his books today.
It is common knowledge among theologians and scholars that the Gospels were translated, re-translated and copied and re-copied and even changed along the way. Nobody was following Jesus around with a stenography pad taking dictation! The earliest book, Mark, was written a generation after Jesus preached. How accurate could a story be if written 30 years after the events happened? As time went by the scribes would copy the texts and re-copy them to send to churches all over the empire. But, some were added to, some were changed, some were made shorter. The copies that we have today are NO way the same documents that were written almost 2000 years ago. We know this because some scraps have survived through the ages, and almost all of them are different from one another!
So, in order to have confidence in a religion, I would think that you first need to have confidence in the books and scrolls and documents that you base your religion upon. If you wish to say that you have faith and that the Lord will provide, or something like that, fine, but, if all you have is faith…what does that really mean? You can believe ANYTHING you want to then. I could believe in a 6 foot tall white rabbit named Harvey if I wanted to.
All praise Harvey…the true messiah!
Also, how does anyone REALLY know if this is what Jesus really wanted? What if he came back tomorrow and said that you guys got it all wrong?
Of course, the Pope would disagree with me. He’s supposed to be the mouthpiece for Jesus in the interim.
What makes you guys think that jesus is coming back again anyway?
Where does he say this?
You don’t think that the idea of the General Resurrection is pretty bizarre?
But, Catholics don’t really know the Bible all that well. They just ask Father Bob down at The Church Around The Corner what to do so that they are absolved from all responsibility.
It’s a great belief system for the mentally lazy.
But, it is great exercise!
All that standing, sitting and kneeling is like Simon Says.