(I started writing a reply to the Bible thread and then realized what I was saying really belonged here, though as usual, I find topics overlap a little. I think I'll post it all here and only partly on the Bible site.)
Quote:We are in a never ending battle with the Christian community in this country to prevent them from establishing Christianity as a State religion... if and when that does happen... I think even you will be very upset... the price of liberty is eternal vigilance against all vicious fanatics.
Well the Christian community is not one entity, though it is surprising that the fundamentalist types have established such a foothold in these times. I'm not so sure Christianity was interpreted quite the same way in the 1700's or so, when the country got started. Freedom of religion mixed with freedom of speech are sometimes explosive.
I was searching for some info on the real Nat Turner one time, and came across some information indicating that around 1800, close to the time Turner was born, I think, there was a BAptist preacher in Virginia who was strongly against slavery on religious grounds. The point was made that it was the strongly held belief in freedom of speech that enabled the debate on slavery to be carried out. Slavery was not a new human phenomenon but having the institution co-exist with an active debate on its legitimacy was. The price of liberty is having to allow all this open discussion to go on. I bet that baptist preacher back in 1800 had an ornery side, but that ornery-ness probably served to keep driving the discussion forward.
That is true even here. I just wish the concepts could be argued. It ends up being done in a way that makes it feel unsafe to some people to discuss their personal experiences because they might be criticized as falling sway to some teacher who is unpopular with another board member or having an experience that is not in line with someone else's guidance. Those arguments start to sound narrow, like all fundamentalist arguments. I don't see the logic in discounting everything that Robert Bruce says because he happened to have a psychic encounter with a person who he later learned had by many accounts engaged in sex with boys. Something seems out of perspective in that. Robert Bruce does not do what he does in the name of Sai Baba.
I don't discount the veracity of the spiritual experiences people report, i.e. that they had a spiritual experience, because of what I see as faulty arguments in their analysis of that experience.
And discounting Robert Bruce does nothing to help those boys. What's the issue here, helping victims of sexual abuse? The priesthood of the Catholic Church systematically allowed far more sexual abuse of children than even Sai Baba could accomplish. Mother Teresa did everything she did in the name of the Catholic Church. To me, that is far more supportive of child abuse than anything Robert Bruce ever did, yet she is never criticised for that.
Is the issue abuse of children? How about asking how we can have spiritual development through action in the world? How many folks here are attached to their cell phones? Apparently there is a precious metal needed for the parts of a cell phone and that metal is found in the Congo region in Africa. And that metal is part of the reson for the unrest in that region. That metal could be said to be behind the rape and mutilation of women and girls that constantly goes on in that region. I think cell phone use is unspiritual for that reason. If you want to be spiritual, put that cell phone down! Oh but wait, that's girls getting machettes up their vaginas, not nearly as serious as Sai Baba having sex with boys. I almost got things out of perspective.
But I still end up wondering, is it logically consistent to avoid Sai Baba because he diddled with boys but then to use a cell phone?
(ps I don't own a cell, and of all the people I know, I should have one because of driving late at night to go to work).