MrFarFromRight
Banned
a) Stating that Christians have doubts is not Christian-bashing. You yourself say that and you're not a Christian-basher.This is one of the things I'm talking about when I say Christian BASHING. I fully agree that most Christians also have doubts. Most human beings at some point question their beliefs. This is normal.
But you make a generalizations and assumptions that 'most' Christians (and that's 2.1 billion, about a third of the world's population) both that they suppress those doubts, and about why they suppress those doubts.
Perhaps you've known Christians like that, but I have never in my life met or read a Christian who never had doubts, or who suppressed them, or who suppressed them only for fear of going to hell.
[...]And this is another instance of what is Christian BASHING: simply assigning 2.1 billion people as emotional, unable to think rationally. [...]
b) If Magdlyn makes assumptions about the whys of others' beliefs, she is - as you point out - wrong to do so. If she makes generalisations based on close observation of the Christians she has come across, she's also wrong. But it's perhaps understandable.
c) If you make the assumption that all of the 2.1 thousand million people who are CENSUSED as Christians are bona fide believers, you are also mistaken. These numbers often come from ethnic / cultural considerations. In Spain (where I live now) and Germany (where I used to), one is attributed a religion at birth (taking into account the parents [alleged] religion). In both countries - and (I would guess) in others - a portion of your income tax goes to the church that you've been assigned to. There are sincere Christians who protest at this practice, believing - as they should do - in the separation of Church and State.
In both countries it is a difficult bureaucratic process to officially divorce yourself from the religion that you are censused with. My German (ex) girlfriend did so... then, years later, considered attaching herself officially to a church because - in her line of work - it would have made getting a job easier. They didn't mind if she was Protestant or Catholic... as long as she had SOME religion. She could probably have become a Muslim. The important thing was to have FAITH.
I have never had this problem because - although I CHOSE to be baptised - I am not originally from either country and have therefore not entered the census as a believer.
All this means that there are millions of people (and who knows just how MANY millions?) who are officially Christians without being so in reality.
d) There are many, many Christians who question, keep an open mind, analyse... There are also many, many, many who feel that any kind of questioning is doubting God's Word and is therefore a SIN. I shouldn't limit this to Christians: Religion - in general - is perhaps the only arena in which CERTAIN SECTORS teach that thinking for yourself is negative, that the greatest virtue is BLIND FAITH, absolute submission. Well, OK: Religion and the Armed Forces. And the school system. And many hospitals. But Religion - from an early age - paves the way for all the others. One isn't born a soldier... or a woman in childbirth.
e) Again I quote you:
It's obvious that you haven't met many of the Christians that I have.Perhaps you've known Christians like that, but I have never in my life met or read a Christian who never had doubts, or who suppressed them, or who suppressed them only for fear of going to hell.
It is possible to "Deeply Love Jesus" without being a "Christian"... or even being convinced that Jesus ever existed. I gave up being a "Christian" long ago, but I love his (note the small-case h) teachings - or those attributed to him - AS I UNDERSTAND THEM TO HAVE BEEN (which doesn't always square with the version in the Bible). And if there was a man in that time and place who taught what he did, I love him deeply for that. (As I hate how his teachings have been twisted and distorted to mean THE EXACT OPPOSITE of what he was really saying. "Love your neighbour AS YOURSELF" does NOT mean "Wallow in self-loathing" or "Put everybody else before your own interests".)Yeah but Magdlyn, the thread title is "For Those Who Deeply Love Jesus" and I just don't get the impression somehow that that describes you. [...] I figure let them have a thread to go to town in if it makes them happy. Cool historical and mythological discussion can happen elsewhere.
Leetah
I once had a discussion with one of my fundamentalist-Christian brothers, in which I said:
"If I had to choose between sharing Heaven with Bush, Cheney, Pinochet, and Maggie Thatcher or hobnobbing in Hell with Gandhi, Bertrand Russell, and Emma Goldman, I'd go for the latter, no question, no hesitation.
"And do you know what?
"I bet that Jesus would come and sit at OUR table."
He probably thought me guilty of blasphemy.