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Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here (Read 44893 times)
recoverer
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #75 - Jan 9th, 2013 at 7:25pm
 
I believe what's important is "can a person think freely?" If a person can, will he or she find it necessary to be overly involved with any particular approach that has been defined by others?  It seems to me that every Religion has its shortcomings.

If a person wants to be involved with a particular religion that is his choice, but I don't feel the need to be overly protective of any thought system that has limitations and inaccuracies.

If Jesus lived today and was asked what religion or denomination to follow ("or denomination" since Christians often disagree with each other), he would probably answer, "follow your heart."

I once had a dream where I was in a classroom and people were talking about how can we change the World for the better. I sugggested that some Christian Fundamentalists be included in this meeting. Suddenly an angry Jesus said, "Impossible!" Perhaps this means that they don't represent what he was and is about.
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Berserk2
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #76 - Jan 9th, 2013 at 8:10pm
 
I have posted on this site intermittently for many years and have gotten to know some posters quite well (e. g. Rondele, Kathy, Matthew, and recoverer).  They differ in perspectives and strength of belief, but are more open to change tjan most people, and have had fascinating paranormal experiences to share.   

Let's play a game. What's thr first word that comes to mind when I say...Evangelical?  Anti-gay!  Hindu?  Rapists India)!  Buddhists?  Persecutors of Christians (Nepal)!  Muslims?  Terrorist sympathizers!  Judaism?  Anti-Arab!  New Agers?  Gullible!  Atheists?  Close-minded! All of these stereotypes are commonplace and apply to a certain number of people in each group.  But we need to rise above such stereotyes and focus on each tradition at its best to see what we can learn.  For example, I encounter anti-Catholic bias among many Evangelicals and unchurched people.  But at its best, Catholicism provides spme the best attested evidence for the paranomral  (EVPs, bilocation, OBEs, genuine exorcisms) and methods of meditation.  Also, our local Catholic church does more to help poor and hurting unchurched people than any other ideological group I know. 

Afterlife research is greatly inhibited by the presuppositional network through which experiences are filtered.  The distinction between fact and interpretation will always be a barrier in any assessment of afterlife evidence.  Our best hope for filtering out bias is to discover shared insights that emerge from the paranormal experiences of those with widely different perspectives. 

Fon
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recoverer
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #77 - Jan 9th, 2013 at 8:42pm
 
Don (Berserk):

Since you're a part of a church that does a lot of good and know of other Churches that do the same, it must be annoying when people speak of Christiantiy in a blanket-statement-negative way.

When it comes to some people, I don't believe they do so because they are awful people.  Rather they are turned off by the negative things that "some,"  "not all" Christians do. 

I don't like it when "some" Christians make Jesus seem like a dictator that people can't be happy about when they hear his name.  I don't believe that a person can fully put his heart into his spiritual practice if he feels as if he better or else.  It's important to know what negative choices will lead to, but positive inspiration needs to be the main thing.

This being the case, people are bound to feel resistive and defensive, if they feel as if somebody is trying to force them to believe in a particular way, by saying "you better or else."

Perhaps John 3:16 and the verses that follow are more about what happens when people call out for Jesus' help after they die. They receive it! Examples we know about are NDEs such as Howard Storm's NDE.  I read and listened to the accounts of other NDEs where a person started out in a hell like realm, called for Jesus' help, and received it.

John 3:16 might've played a role in their thinking to ask for Jesus' help.  Perhaps it simply means that if you believe that Jesus will help you after you die, he will in some way do so.

It could be that I am being too liberal with what John 3:16 etc say. Nevertheless, I think Jesus is too reasonable for what Evangelicals say about John 3:16 to be true.

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PauliEffectt
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #78 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 1:57am
 
Hi, Fon!

Berserk2 wrote on Jan 9th, 2013 at 8:10pm:
But at its best, Catholicism provides spme the best attested evidence for the paranomral  (EVPs, bilocation, OBEs, genuine exorcisms) and methods of meditation.

Fon

Those "evidence" are not evidence at all. Religion and science are two different things.

For example, Catholicism found the "evidence", of Blacks being mere animals.
Thus Black people were slave traded from Africa to America.

The slave trade was not the work of the Devil. The slave trade of Black people,
was the work of Catholicism, by the use of Catholicism's "evidence".
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Lights of Love
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #79 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 12:00pm
 
Berserk2 wrote on Jan 9th, 2013 at 8:10pm:
Afterlife research is greatly inhibited by the presuppositional network through which experiences are filtered.  The distinction between fact and interpretation will always be a barrier in any assessment of afterlife evidence.  Our best hope for filtering out bias is to discover shared insights that emerge from the paranormal experiences of those with widely different perspectives. 


What Don states here gets to the crux of the matter.  All interpretation is subjectively based on our own personal ego, fears, beliefs that have accumilated in our personal consciousness throughout our life.  Holding onto these helps no one. 

Only by letting go of fear and belief and searching with an open, yet skeptical heart and mind can we improve our consciousness and therefore improve ourselves and how we relate to others.  It's only by being fearless that we can discover evidence for truth.
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Tread softly through life with a tender heart and a gentle, understanding spirit.
 
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #80 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 2:05pm
 
Rondele,
If the crux of all religion, and spirituality for that matter, is to love others as you would be loved and to reach out to help those in need, what is there to learn from the gospels (gnostic or canonical) beyond that most simple of rules? I ask in all sincerity. Every time I go to read the Bible, I come back to that question. What do you seek when you read the gospels?
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Rondele
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #81 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 8:51pm
 
Bardo-

Over the years I have repeatedly said that the Golden Rule and helping others is the bottom line we should all seek for.  And if we are true to that, to me it doesn't matter what organized religion or denomination to which we belong.

I just happen to be inspired by many of the things Jesus said.  One of my favorites is "Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal."

"But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal.

"For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also."

R
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Rondele
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #82 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 8:59pm
 
<<The slave trade was not the work of the Devil. The slave trade of Black people, was the work of Catholicism, by the use of Catholicism's "evidence">>

Pauli- slavery was going on way before the Catholic Church was founded.

R
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #83 - Jan 10th, 2013 at 9:30pm
 
Yes, and Pauli, to see how unfair your generalization really is, get the DVD of the movie that the British Film Academy rates as the greatest movie on a spiritual theme ever produced--Robert DeNiro in "The Mission."  I agree with that lofty assessment and would only add that it depicts the most moving spiritual conversion ever seen on the screen.  It didn't get such high rave reviews in the USA--too slow paced for shorter American attention spans.  But even the Hollywood Screen Actors Guild rated the musical score the 17th best ever--and it's not even a musical.  Based on a true story, the movie depicts the Jesuit efforts to convert Amazon Indians during the era of Spanish and Portuguese slave traders.  These Catholics give their lives to protect these Indians from slavery!  The movie also features Liam Neeson and Jerermy Irons. 

Don
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PauliEffectt
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #84 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 6:44am
 
rondele wrote on Jan 10th, 2013 at 8:59pm:
<<The slave trade was not the work of the Devil. The slave trade of Black people,
was the work of Catholicism, by the use of Catholicism's "evidence">>

Pauli- slavery was going on way before the Catholic Church was founded.

R


I don't think your statement changes anything, please prove me wrong.

In the early days, when the first American-Europeans settled, they
exterminated millions of native Americans. The American-Europeans also
enslaved native Indians. The unfair killings and enslavements caught the
attention of some Catholic priests, who went to Catholicism's center,
to at least stop the unfair capture & enslavement of free Indians.

I don't know what exact century this was, but after Catholicism had pondered
matters over, Catholicism came to the conclusion that Black people could be
considered animals, and thus be used for slave trade, while the fine stone
sculptures of the Indians (Toltec) proved them to at least too some degree
have human properties, thus being unsuitable for use as slaves.

It would have been so much simpler for the American-European field owners
and farmers to just capture native Indians as slaves. Instead they had to go
the bothersome and dangerous way of kidnapping women and children in Africa.
Then using expensive ships, they had to go over the Atlantic Ocean. Millions of
Africans died this way.


That's Catholicism's true face.

So yes, the slave trade of Black people from Africa to America was the
work of Catholicism.

Prove me wrong, please.
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #85 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 7:56am
 
Pauli,

You are confusing matters of religion with matters of politics and man.  There is nothing in the gospels that mentions the right to enslave others.  Yet people who are members of any organization (religious or political) can find reasons to justify any earthly misdeeds that they want to rationalize.

What is more important is what is actually in the NT (gospels).  All the teachings of Jesus seem to point to being loving, non-judgmental, and not injuring another.  Paul, who founded the church, was living during the Roman empire, when slavery was a fact of life.  Slavery was never specifically supported, but if one was a slave, there was a way, according to the early church founders, to worship God and be a good person.

Man and societies have used whatever suited their interests over the years to justify ego-driven self satisfying actions.  So to talk about the church itself, the Inquisition, etc. speaks more to what did a group of self-appointed men do with the NT, not what do the gospels teach us. 

Just saying.

Matthew
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #86 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 9:41am
 
DocM wrote on Jan 11th, 2013 at 7:56am:
You are confusing matters of religion with matters of politics and man.

Catholicism is Catholic people. Not aliens, not ETs, not angels from Heaven. People.


Catholicism started the slave trade of Blacks from Africa to America, in the Name of God.

Catholicism started the slave trade of Blacks from Africa to America, based on
the Words of the Bible. God's own Words, Hallelujha. The Lord, Praise His Words.



DocM wrote on Jan 11th, 2013 at 7:56am:
What is more important is what is actually in the NT (gospels).

All over the world in all Catholic churches, Catholic priests read from the OT,
God's Words. Catholicism doesn't give you the option to throw away one part.
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #87 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 9:43am
 
Another point Pauli-

You focus on slave trade.  I wonder, however, if you are aware that the countries who were trading in slaves had slaves of their own even before sending any of them overseas?  It wasn't Catholics who initiated slavery.

Slavery is an ancient practice.  There is even evidence that Egyptians used slave labor to build the pyramids.  That was, I think you'll agree, before the time of the Catholic Church.

R
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #88 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 10:41am
 
rondele wrote on Jan 11th, 2013 at 9:43am:
Another point Pauli-

You focus on slave trade.  I wonder, however, if you are aware that the
countries who were trading in slaves had slaves of their own even before
sending any of them overseas?  It wasn't Catholics who initiated slavery.

Pointing fingers at others, doesn't make Catholicism stand out better.

It still doesn't make Catholicism "divine" or bear any proofs of a "god".
The opposite rather, it speaks against Catholicism.

Also, only 4 written texts of the Toltec Indians remain, all other documents were
burnt by Catholicism. The whole heritage of the Indians were destroyed by
Catholicism, in the Name of God. Praise His Words. Hallelujha. The Indians
who protested were killed by the order of Catholic priests.


rondele wrote on Jan 11th, 2013 at 9:43am:
Slavery is an ancient practice.  There is even evidence that Egyptians used
slave labor to build the pyramids.  That was, I think you'll agree, before
the time of the Catholic Church.

R

That's possible that they used some slaves, but since the 1980ies the main idea
is that it was either paid workers or farmers also skilled in stone cutting, who
built the pyramids during the time when the Nile was flooded and they couldn't
work on their lands or crops. They worked of religious reasons and had quite
high craftmen skills many of them. Some of the workers' names and work
tasks are (poorly) documented. It would have been difficult to feed all
those slaves otherwise. The same goes for the many Egyptian
temples and regular buildings in stone.

But regardless of Egypt using forced slave labour or skilled stone cuttings workers,
nothing changes about Catholicism or the Bible.

In the Name of a non-existing god, Catholicism bears its blood on its hands.
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Re: Confused by Traditional Religious Content Here
Reply #89 - Jan 11th, 2013 at 11:22am
 
Do Americans living today bear the blood of the slaves some Americans held in the past? Does the sin of the institution devolve to its descendents, even if they are pure themselves (as individuals)? If the institution today still carries the policies or prejudices that marked the ancestral entity, then those who willingly associate themselves with it bear the mark, I think.  However, if the current organization has changed, recognized the sin of their past behavior and is now "in the light", then should the current adherants be tarred with the same brush?
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