Åzurε
Shi-shi-shi-shaw!
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- Seen Jun 2, 2013
Whoops, I missed a chunk of text intended for me. I tend to take silence as surrender, and while I can't always respond to everything, I have the opportunity to respond to this.
What is so immutably incredible about the faith of Christ that you pass it off like you do? Unless your position is that Christianity is on par with all other religions, in which case I direct you to the Greek pantheon, as an example of a religion concerned with the physical world whose assumptions were found to be fundamentally flawed, and thus rendered untrustworthy. Christianity has yet to be so deeply disproved that people cannot trust it's core tenants.
Of course, you do have a point- structure and background doesn't mean much if I can't show people something else, but agreeableness is a selfish standard. It has effects on a person's life- changing them for the best, providing real freedom from guilt and giving the passion and cause to continue the rest of their lives in the way, and to spread it around. It's a religion of the mind and the heart.
Well, pardon the redundancy, but I trust that you can make that particular sentence out. I don't believe I said "no other religion makes sense", although it is my stance that Christianity makes sense, practically, spiritually and historically. Most of my knowledge of other systems of living pertains to secularist thought and worldviews. I'll admit to not having intimate knowledge about other religions, but I know internal contradiction and ignorance of reality when I see them. Buddhism is more in tune with Christianity in terms of conduct, and I don't have evidence against it at the current time.It seems like you're saying no other religion makes sense and that Christianity does (though perhaps I'm misunderstanding, given your unusual wording and seemingly irrelevant tautology). If that's the case, surely you must have an understanding of every other religion that exists (or even every other major religion)? Perhaps you could tell me the basic ideas behind them, for instance?
What reason have I to believe if it's not more credible than anything else I know? Truth is harmonious with truth, regardless of anyone's opinion on it.I can tell you right now that Christianity is no more credible than any other religion. I find it especially laughable that any Christian would outright reject Islam as implausible when it is to Christianity what Christianity is to Judaism. If you believe in Christianity, so be it, but don't try to pawn it off as somehow more credible than other religions. That's just foolish.
What is so immutably incredible about the faith of Christ that you pass it off like you do? Unless your position is that Christianity is on par with all other religions, in which case I direct you to the Greek pantheon, as an example of a religion concerned with the physical world whose assumptions were found to be fundamentally flawed, and thus rendered untrustworthy. Christianity has yet to be so deeply disproved that people cannot trust it's core tenants.
I'll never know where this stuff stems from. Faith is not belief without precedent. It is Biblically defined as assurance of the things not seen. I can sit in a chair and have faith that it will hold me up, because I can see that it's strong enough to do so. In the same vein, we have records of the existence of the core of our faith and no true reason to doubt them, and the visible effects of applying the teachings of Jesus Christ in our lives speaks to their power and harmony with reality. Evidence is never irrelevant- Every shred of God's designs, natural or personal, we can use to bring Him glory is worth it's existence and a credit to our faith.Besides, one of the main ideas in Christianity is "faith." If there was evidence, there would not need to be faith; to a believer, evidence should be irrelevant. If you want to convince people, you should try to show them that the ideals of Christianity are better (which I argue they are not; I find Hinduism to have the most agreeable ideals).
Of course, you do have a point- structure and background doesn't mean much if I can't show people something else, but agreeableness is a selfish standard. It has effects on a person's life- changing them for the best, providing real freedom from guilt and giving the passion and cause to continue the rest of their lives in the way, and to spread it around. It's a religion of the mind and the heart.