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But all that crap is enough to make me say the hell with "organized" religion. No matter what all of you here believe, I of course respect your opinions. I hope the members of organized religion can understand the skeptics out there.
Of course, I could write this a thousand times, and people will still take away "Scott believes in superstitions, so he's a flaming subjectivist." ...
"Scott believes in superstitions, so he's a flaming subjectivist." x 1K
You do have to admit that the fundemental "premise" of Christianity is pretty far out there,
and don't even get started on the blood/body eucharist ritual. What is that all about?
It all gets pretty strange when you stand back and look at it. If it were a science fiction movie most wouldn't think the plot reasonable.
Philosophy level 101. Nice to see it here, even though this only scratches the very surface. Same old warhorses getting trotted out, but I guess it's new to someone.
One premise is that there's a God. This is a claim that is either true or false, and seen dispassionately, *either* answer is unlikely. There are difficult philosophical problems either way. More difficult, I believe, for the materialist/atheist. (Modern physics has put forward explanations of the origin of the universe which are both untestable - which is bad science - and bizarre to the point of absurdity.) ...
Another premise is that mankind is "fallen" and capable of evil. I read the newspaper and I find that claim very believeable. Fresh evidence daily, delivered to my door. Another premise is that this evilness offends God. I don't know how "far out there" that is, but I'm glad the opposite is not true. A universe in which the Author got off on random cruelty and other evils would not, I think, be a place where anyone could stay sane very long.
And the last big premise is that God is willing to forgive the evil in exchange for, what amounts to a sacrifice that He made for us and on our behalf, if we are willing to accept that forgiveness. (That's simplified, but not much.) There is nothing unbelievable about that; I know plenty of parents that chose to help their kids out of trouble, even at personal cost. It's nearly a definition of what love is.
Is this rhetorical? If not, I have to assume you have never sat down and read a theologian from the camp of this religion you seem to have rejected. Let alone the New Testament. Maybe I need to buy you a copy of CS Lewis's work, too.
So God needs to make it clear that evil is bad - you'd think it would be obvious, but if you read the papers you see it apparently isn't so obvious to a number of people. He does what every parent I know does, and He lays down consequences to reinforce this point. Little things, like, "if your nation persists in acting in that fashion I'm going to wipe it off the globe", which comes up a few times in the Old Testament. Read Amos: it can be neatly summarized as "If you keep oppressing your own poor, so help Me, you're going to take it in shorts."
And then he arranges a way that, symbolically, this death-debt can be paid off. He explained that blood would have to be shed, something would have to die, but it could be a perfect animal instead of us.
How is it that every particle in the universe simultaneously attracts every other, across distance, invisibly, using a force that cannot be blocked?
How likely is it, really, that you form a person by inserting part A into slot B and squirting? And yet it's all true.
Most of reality is just plain strange and the only reason we accept it is because we're surrounded by it day in and day out. It would seem strange otherwise.
Things you don't see every day, continue to seem strange. (Try reading up on quantum physics - it's so odd it sounds like the scientists are kidding.)
While the "definition" of GOD could be a million things, the likelyhood of the game/role playing scenario of parent/child, is beyond probability.
The accompanying "morality" that is applied to GOD is simply the extension of "parental" morals and "societal" control mechanisms
'Please it your Grace,' said the Prince, very coldly and politely. 'You see that lamp. It is round and yellow and gives light to the whole room; and hangeth moreover from the roof. Now that thing which we call the sun is like the lamp, only far greater and brighter. It giveth Light to the whole Overworld and hangeth in the sky.''Hangeth from what, my lord?' asked the Witch; and then, while they were all still thinking how to answer her, she added, with another of her soft, silver laughs: ' You see ? When you try to think out clearly what this sun must be, you cannot tell me. You can only tell me it is like the lamp. Your sun is a dream; and there is nothing in that dream that was not copied from the lamp. The lamp is the real thing; the sun is but a tale, a children's story.''Yes, I see now,' said Jill in a heavy, hopeless tone. 'It must be so.' And while she said this, it seemed to her to be very good sense.Slowly and gravely the Witch repeated, 'There is no sun.' And they all said nothing. She repeated, in a softer and deeper voice. 'There is no sun' After a pause, and after a struggle in their minds, all four of them said together. 'You are right. There is no sun.' It was such a relief to give in and say it.'There never was a sun,' said the Witch.
I can't work out what you base these "probabilities" on. You don't seem to use the word as I do. Not only are you trying to talk about probabilities when we're not talking abut something that has repeated identical trials, but you aren't even explaining what the field of possible outcomes is supposed to be. What set of analogies would you *expect* a being like God to use?Sorry: I've been an engineer for a very long time, and I'm also something of a word-freak. In a discussion like this I'm going to nit-pick. I'm going to demand very precise definitions of words. And since you're misusing this one, I'm going to try to recast your sentence into what I guess you were trying to say: - ...
While the "definition" of GOD could be a million things, the likelyhood of the game/role playing scenario of parent/child, is beyond what I think is probable.
Strangeness is a measure of ignorance, not of reality.
I'm stating that if you started with a "clean slate" (if you could) and ask what a Supreme Being (one of supreme conciousness, intellect, and existence, that would have created infinity) might be, you wouldn't end up with a parent and all this eating flesh, and drinking blood for a Son story.
I'm stating that if you started with a "clean slate" (if you could) and ask what physics should say about the properties of the material universe, you wouldn't end up with virtual pairs popping in and out of nothingness, and entangled particles, and matter attracting other matter for absolutely no discernable reason, and massless photons bending in gravity fields despite having no mass.
In fact, since we are talking about a Supreme Being, why would he need, and how would he even "get", a son? Where is the Supreme wife? I mean she is left out, and Jesus, God, and THG all have a great time, in their Trinity.
OK, Mister! (word freak) If you look up "strangeness" in the dictionary, it says not one word about "ignorance".
Passover plot...
Say a Quaker, for example, lives a wonderful and generous life, is respectful of all people and is very charitable. Where would this person end up after death, according to most Christian thinking?
Kind of a pointless exercise, isn't it? If there is no God, then making up a more believable story about one isn't helpful. Heck, if there's no God, let's insist that all fictions written about God are firmly impossible, so no one seriously believes them. And if there is a God, then your particular (and I might add, quite meaningless) views about what He "should" or "shouldn't" be like, are irrelevant. ...
fictionalJohn wrote: I'm stating that if you started with a "clean slate" (if you could) and ask what physics should say about the properties of the material universe, you wouldn't end up with virtual pairs popping in and out of nothingness, and entangled particles, and matter attracting other matter for absolutely no discernable reason, and massless photons bending in gravity fields despite having no mass. (If you don't know what these terms mean or why they are strange concepts, two hours in Google will give you a deeper understanding, and probably a massive headache. The quantum world is serious freak-out land.)
See how it works? The claims of physics are pretty damned strange, improbable, fantastic and "unlikely." Not in our expectation-set at all. Four hundred years ago, if you'd asserted any of these modern claims, people would have been trying to drain the bad humors out of your brain with corkscrews. But eventually we found out these were *all* real and even measurable phenomena: however odd and improbable it seemed, it was reality.
Anyway, I'm still kind of bemused over your hangup with a Father figure in Christianity. One the one hand you're saying it's "improbable" - that you wouldn't have written it that way, though you don't say why.
On the other, you're saying that God is just a blown up copy of the concept of earthly parents, and you probably conclude this because both God and parents create life, both God and parents establish moral frameworks, both God and parents generally claim the right of punishment (and if you've raised any children or spun off any universes recently, you'll know why.) All of which makes it a pretty *probable* kind of analogy after all, I'd say - maybe even an inevitable one. (The big surprise is that the father-analogy was such a *late* development - I don't think there is much of it showing up before Isaiah, and it was Jesus who really pushed it.)
The fact that your argument works just as well in reverse - ie, that God patterned human (and musch of animal) life, parenting and all, after the kind of relationship He intends to have with us - apparently didn't occur to you. I mean, I agree that it's unlikely that the concepts of a religious father figure and a biological father figure arose independently of each other, they are just too similiar to be fully independent, but how do *you* know which was patterned off the other?
Did you know that 'gullible' is not in the dictionary?
So we're asked to believe that Jesus was simultaneously the word's best schemer, and a moron who didn't know Romans invariably confirmed kills on those sentenced to death. We're also asked to believe that his accomplices never admitted to his little scheme, even after it failed, even after decades, even under the ostracism, eventual torture, and death of themselves and their friends. Yeah, right. And you're the one complaining about badly written fiction!
I (and other skeptics) say that all that you have presented does not offer enough info and what info there is, doesn't begin to offer enough perspective to begin to believe.
So I simply ask, what if you didn't have access to this info. There are plenty of situations where people can't receive (your) the Word.
Since I'm not using quantum physics, or big bangs as an argument, the example doesn't relate.
In fact, in my personal religion, that understanding "is" fundemental and pure, without external manifestation.
Quote from: maxwalrathSay a Quaker, for example, lives a wonderful and generous life, is respectful of all people and is very charitable. Where would this person end up after death, according to most Christian thinking?bump. I suspect I know the answer, but I'm really not sure. Religion has not been a large part of my life.
In the Medieval times, they went to Limbo -- not heaven, not hell, not purgatory. Church just set them aside until the end of time when JC comes back and offer to take them on if they accept him. Since Vatican II, Catholic church recognizes men of good standing who never accepted Jesus as the savior. Karl Rahner devised a scheme commonly known as "anonymous Christian" which states that if a good man (of any faith including none) died and went to heaven, it is because he/she accepted Christ as the savior ...
But folk who have heard the gospel and made the decision to reject it are very definitely not in that category.
accept the idea of relevation
There are are GOOD people who have heard the (Christian) gospel, have not rejected the validity of it's claim for its adherants but chose to go or stay in other GOOD ways.