KalMart
239-Bean Irish Chili
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2005
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Honestly, I think it's better to as a person who is deeply religious to provide yo with them, and invite you to experience them...if you're open to it. If you are, then it's a good start, I believe, towards eventually being a better place as an atheist as well.Look, all i'm asking you to do is give me some examples of what you consider the positives of religion so that I can consider them... like you said you wanted me too.
Yes, I consider that the negatives of religion outway the positives. I have never seen an example of religion doing anywhere near as much good as it has bad.
You want me to consider them fairly. See the balance of 'good' and 'bad', or 'pros' and 'cons' to religion, then can you please tell me what these pros are that you speak of. That you want to me to consider for the sake of fairness.
Again...just an example...
...if people truly believe that they find this through religion, can we dismiss religion, or not appreciate their search for it even if we don't share that same need?If your hope is simply for guidance and assistance in leading a fulfilling life here on earth, a “way of living” without firm beliefs in any supernatural being may well be all you need. But many religions, including mainline versions of Christianity and Islam, promise much more. They promise ultimate salvation. If we are faithful to their teachings, they say, we will be safe from final annihilation when we die and will be happy eternally in our life after death.
If our hope is for salvation in this sense — and for many that is the main point of religion—then this hope depends on certain religious beliefs’ being true. In particular, for the main theistic religions, it depends on there being a God who is good enough to desire our salvation and powerful enough to achieve it.
If you want to find the good in it...you have to want it...or at least respect the need for it with some, even if you don't.
And also, I think it's important to understand the ultimate blame for the atrocities you've mentioned on the people committing them and their usage of religion as an excuse or enabler, not necessarily on religion itself. I.e., it's not there to inspire war and acts of evil, but it is a powerful thing to be misused (like much in science as well) for hose very human things. So perhaps instead of calling religion a bad thing, maybe a thing that's too good at being influential and emotionally convincing....which again puts the onus on us and our usage of it.