So basically, 'quick they are figuring it out! we need more bullshit!'Youth is also when you can start to critically and honestly accept the intellectual validity of Christianity. It's an excellent festival to celebrate the journey, the pilgrimage, to faith. I see it as almost a coming of age ritual, when you first fly your colours up your mast
1. When you come to a point where you have a pretty decent grasp of how stuff works, and at the end of it still cant deny the possibility of ChristianityKwayera said:Wow I didn't see that.
Intellectual validity of Christianity? Plzexplayn.
It's the old bait and switch, I address your comments then you say "oh well I was trolling", it's a bit of a defense mechanism sometimes.I think that we should get over trolling. Maybe I am. Does it matter?
Rainbow serpent? Amun-Ra? Jumala? Odin? Xenu? My point is that you've latched onto the largest, most established church that has by far the greatest academic record for reasons that appear to potentially apply to any number of believes.but I like to think that any belief in intelligent design, as long as it is expressed in 'good' faith and good deeds, is valid.
Because it makes you happy for that to be so?And goodness is necessarily universal, absolute, (not cultural, relative) and is located in the conscience.
Agreed. I wont be going and am tossing up how much my trip in to work will be disrupted and if its worth while going in, although its a bit frustrating that it might make it hard for me to go in to the city as I need the moneyRafy said:What i do strongly resent however is the use of taxpayer funds to help pay for such an event. Last time i checked the Catholic Church was not exactly poor, and in any case government should not be subsidising religion.
Are you trying to say you cant deny that Christianity may be true? If so, it is foolish (even though i hate that word) to believe that there is any truth in Christianity.1. When you come to a point where you have a pretty decent grasp of how stuff works, and at the end of it still cant deny the possibility of Christianity
No believe in ID is intellectually valid, its intellectually absent.any belief in intelligent design, as long as it is expressed in 'good' faith and good deeds, is valid.
Even if there was a heaven, why wouldnt good deeds get you in instead of blind faith? The chance that your religion happens to be the correct out of all of them is very slim, so if you are religious i hope that good deeds do get you into heaven.im not going since the pope claimed it adds to ur good works to get into heaven when good works dont get you into heaven faith does
I think you need a better source for great thinkers, they have had what.. 3?Christianity; it's one of the largest and has included many great thinkers.
Just because we dont know these fundamental questions doesnt mean it becomes a religious one, that is simply filling the gap. If you need faith to believe in something, then that somethings chance of being true is greatly diminshed.we can still say that the fundamental question of existence, of faith, truth and meaning, is still a very religious question and need not, but certainly can and sometimes must, conflict with today's truths.
Sorry to tell you this, but God isn't going to let you into heaven if you're a fucked up asshole who likes to burn kittens and babies just because you believe he exists. I'm sure that telling yourself otherwise helps you sleep at night, but believing it won't make it real.emytaylor164 said:im not going since the pope claimed it adds to ur good works to get into heaven when good works dont get you into heaven faith does
I accept that there is no truth or absolute reason yet I still find religious faith totally abhorrent to critical thinking, mainly because I see no way to be consistent in your faith in God without fucking that up elsewhere in your day to day logic. Your thinking on the face of it seems to leave it wide open for people to pray to god to cure their child's illness.Iron said:First, lets try and keep this to the other thread.
But I will repeat that the fundamental questions i've mentioned do require faith, and always will - from religious nutters to soviet atheist. They can never be discovered by peering through a microscope.
The concept of faith isnt so daunting when you accept that there really is no truth or absolute reason.
You will notice that I dispute no scientific discovery. Christianity should not be anti-intellectual - there is no beef with knowledge.
If there is no truth or absolute reason then it calls into question scientific discovery... In fact I would say the example of belief in God/Supernatural entities necessarily (without some sort of double think) harms a belief in scientific truths.The concept of faith isnt so daunting when you accept that there really is no truth or absolute reason.
They don't stop being hedonistic or self centred... the religious text just becomes a filter/justification for otherwise concieved ideals. Personally I worry a lot more about people who believe they have discovered 'transcendent truth' than those who accept they have a 'faltering' uncertain conception of truth.This festival is not an invitation for debate. It is a celebration for those who believe that they have discovered real, tangible, transcendent truth. It is something far deeper, far richer, far more significant than any other faltering, hedonistic, self-centred, vulgar, barbaric ideology on offer.
Enteebee said:I accept that there is no truth or absolute reason yet I still find religious faith totally abhorrent to critical thinking, mainly because I see no way to be consistent in your faith in God without fucking that up elsewhere in your day to day logic. Your thinking on the face of it seems to leave it wide open for people to pray to god to cure their child's illness.