dave_a_mbs
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Posts: 1655
central california
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Hi Juditha- If priests could not maintain the mythology of God's rage, hatred of sinners, and hell, damnation and punishment, plus faith in a wholly material world in which there are no spiritual truths to be learned to advance our understanding, then their livelihood would be seriously affected.
I get the impression that when people can't understand something, they cling to their prior beliefs and tell us to, "It is an Article of Faith," or sometimes, "It is a Sacrament, and a Holy Mystery." In this way they prevent themselves from having to reconsider their lifestyles or their belief systems upon which their lifestyles are supported. And on that basis, if it only takes a little persuasion from the Inquisition to alter people's expressed beliefs, certainly that must indicate that they're doing "good".
Interestingly, we occasionally see political figures who claim that their actions are similarly based on "what is really good for the people", and "teaching the people the proper lifestyle and political system", as they impose their will on other nations by force of arms. And in the present world there seems to be a combination of both religious and political obsession with similar obsessions about right and wrong.
It's almost as if the obsession with "fantasied versions of truth" is a severely neurotic distortion of reality that is pandemic among people with obsessive and manic tendencies. Those who are best qualified to lead, because they are open minded and insightful, are too smart to allow themselves to be forced into politics or formalized religion. As a result, those who wind up as our political candidates or our fundamentalist religious leaders are quite generally the least qualified, but the most motivated, perhaps out of manic rage that arises from fear that they might be wrong, or that they might miss out on an opportunity for pecuniary gain and power.
dave
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