Catholicism reverts (again)

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Post by Prebe »

Lord Mhoram wrote:I actually completely agree with that. Doesn't make it right, or even morally justifiable.
True. It might even be anoying as hell, but I tend to respect people who do it, because it shows me that they care.

Reminds me: does anyone know why "Da Wittness of Jah" are still proselytising? Haven't they met the quota by now?
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Post by emotional leper »

Lucimay wrote:Emo Leper... our valiant attempts to hijack this thread were in vain. :lol:
Shall we then start a necrophilia specific thread? Or maybe just a general 'dying related' thread? I promise not to fill it with the numb, disentegrating bits of my heart.
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Post by Cybrweez »

Lord Mhoram wrote:I believe it's morally unjustifiable. That's my opinion. There is no moral absolute there.
OK, I don't.
And nice try, but the inherent flaw I was talking about is the idea that only one faith is absolute. I believe all faiths have something to offer and it is illogical to me that only one offers salvation.
That's nice that you think so, but I think it sounds like your saying this:
There's an inherent flaw in thinking one religion is the way. Instead, there's only this way to think: that all religions offer salvation.
Which is fine to think, as long as you recognize you're no different than me. I think its my way, you think yours. Hence, its why I think the word arrogant carries no meaning in this instance.
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Post by Lord Mhoram »

Look, it is a fact that everyone so far in this discussion has acknowledged, that an inherent characteristic of all world religions is the idea that your religion offers either the ideal way, or the only way to salvation. What I am saying is, that the idea that one faith is somehow better than others, is inherently arrogant. That's a truism when considering, for example, nationalism. It's safe to say that a nation that tramples over others because they think they are the superior race is an arrogant nation. A religion that has the gall to pray for the conversion of others to their faith is an arrogant religion.

There's nothing arrogant in my suggestion that all faiths have something to offer. In fact, that's the only really inclusive way to approach religion - They've all got something to say. They might all be right, but who am I or you to pick and choose and rank?
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Post by emotional leper »

Lord Mhoram wrote:Look, it is a fact that everyone so far in this discussion has acknowledged, that an inherent characteristic of all world religions is the idea that your religion offers either the ideal way, or the only way to salvation. What I am saying is, that the idea that one faith is somehow better than others, is inherently arrogant. That's a truism when considering, for example, nationalism. It's safe to say that a nation that tramples over others because they think they are the superior race is an arrogant nation. A religion that has the gall to pray for the conversion of others to their faith is an arrogant religion.

There's nothing arrogant in my suggestion that all faiths have something to offer. In fact, that's the only really inclusive way to approach religion - They've all got something to say. They might all be right, but who am I or you to pick and choose and rank?
Maybe this is the idea that polytheisms that are accepting of other religions tend to get destroyed by monotheisms which aren't?

*Glances from the Faux Golden Apple, to a copy of 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire*

Christianity, I'm lookin' at you.
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Post by lucimay »

heh :lol:
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Post by Dromond »

Lucimay wrote:i understand LM, but here's the deal,

why does anyone WHO'S NOT CATHOLIC have anything to say about what catholics say in THEIR MASS.

far as i can see, it's none of anybody else's business(jew, muslim, atheist, etc) what catholics do or say in the sanctity of their own churches during their own services!!

how come nobody's bitching about THAT??? hmmm???
Lucimay, with all due respect, how did I twist your words or meaning here?

I was pointing out how I disagreed with it and felt the Jewish people may not agree as well.

If I did let me know how and I'll apologise if I think it's warranted.
:)
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Post by Dromond »

Cybrweez wrote:I don't know who would be offended about what would happen to their body after their death. You're dead, you wouldn't know. I think people look for reasons to be offended, now we're taking it to places where we're not even alive yet we're offended.

I heard a good message last night, which I couldn't help but think about this topic. He was talking about Ephesians 2, v1-3
AND you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins,
Eph 2:2
in which you once walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit who now works in the sons of disobedience,
Eph 2:3
among whom also we all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others.
A good way to think of 'walked according to the course of this world', is to imagine a current, and you're just swept along in it. You have no control. This current is according to the prince of the power of the air (Satan). Satan has created this current, and those who are dead are caught in this current. They may think they are in control, but are being swept along (you might say enslaved) by this current. Like the alcoholic, who thinks he's in control until he decides to try to control his addiction, then finds how strong the current is.

As a Christian, it is painful to see others caught in this current. To see the enslavement. Would I mention something to the alcoholic? Would I listen to him when he says "get lost"? If so, that's not very loving. He's harming himself, possibly others. But even if only himself, if I care, I won't stop b/c he asks me too, whether he considers it arrogant or not.

But then, verse 4 begins:
But God
What a great 'But.' By His mercy He pulls us out of the current. The pastor last night likened it to a dog on a boat, going against the current, but the dog's not doing anything, just sittin there w/its tongue hanging out.
Cyberweez, it's really not as simple to me as you make it sound.(Regarding the first part of your post, which is the part I'm addressing)

As for the rest, any one can quote the bible, and it can say things you may wish it didn't.

Anyway,there have been violations to the wishes of good people throughout history.

False deathbed recantations, submitted by people with an agenda, for example.

Why must some Christians disallow a persons whole life of spoken beliefs, desires and simple wishes? And their actions, which say, this is what I am, I am content that the answer I have within me is what I've strived for my whole life.

I believe that particular corpse doesn't care anymore, yet he did once, and those that come after do as well. I don't fear death. I know it simply as a finish to the only life I'll know. But I just don't respect the actions of people who override what's important to me, that is my beliefs, which aren't being treated with the respect they accord their own. Maybe arrogance is the wrong word here, you're right. If I can invent a better, I'll post it here.
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Post by lucimay »

Dromond wrote:And Lucimay, your saying that the Jews have no right to be critical of what the Catholics say about them behind closed doors ignores 1000+ years of anti-Semitism, what they did say about them, in secret and out in the open, and all the agony bestowed upon many of their race by this same group.
my point was (and maybe i didn't make it well enough, i am frequently inarticulate) that in my opinion, i don't see how it's any business of jews what catholics pray for inside their own churches, just like i don't see how it's the business of catholics what goes on inside a jewish temple. I DID NOT BRING UP ANTI-SEMITISM. and this discussion is not ABOUT anti-semitism.
OR....maybe it is. maybe that's what the anti-defamation league and the wiesenthal center think. that praying for jews to convert to christianity is anti-semitic.
but I DON'T.

no need to apologize. i wasn't offended. i just don't like to be misunderstood. sorry if i sounded put out. i wasn't. :biggrin:
you're more advanced than a cockroach,
have you ever tried explaining yourself
to one of them?
~ alan bates, the mothman prophecies



i've had this with actors before, on the set,
where they get upset about the [size of my]
trailer, and i'm always like...take my trailer,
cause... i'm from Kentucky
and that's not what we brag about.
~ george clooney, inside the actor's studio



a straight edge for legends at
the fold - searching for our
lost cities of gold. burnt tar,
gravel pits. sixteen gears switch.
Haphazard Lucy strolls by.
~ dennis r wood ~
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Post by Dromond »

Hey, it's all good. :)
You're right, I was the one to bring up anti- Semitism, (while responding to you.)
It was not intended to be personal, only something I felt was lacking.

Peace. :)
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Post by Dromond »

DukkhaWaynhim wrote:
Dromond wrote:Tell me the difference of praying for me alive and dead, when your experience tells you I wouldn't appreciate either.
I had actually mentioned the difference between me saying a prayer for someone at night, versus a group of people conducting a ceremony to retroactively baptize someone who is dead into a faith that they did not express a desire in life to become a part of.

The difference to me is crystal clear, but I will draw it out: one is a wishful prayer or prayerful wish, depending on how much stock you put in prayer. The other is a formal and posthumous induction of someoneinto a faith they had no part of in life. It is NOT just a difference of scale. Totally different things in my mind.

I'm not talking about whether you want to mentioned by me in my prayers. If I'm praying them, they're *my* prayers - and if I am praying for your instant death, your gradual conversion, or that you win the lottery tomorrow, well that's between my conscience and God, isn't it? Whether or not you are told of my prayers is inconsequential to the prayer itself. Do you feel your ears burning or something?

It is 100% your perception and your choice to take it as a sweet nothing, or as a heartfelt wish that (darn it) can't come true because you just don't care for my religion, or an arrogant act by someone who is lording their supposedly superior religion over you. So see it how you will.

Believe me, I know there are plenty of people out there that do believe you and I are going straight to Hell if we don't buy Jesus Brand X. These people are fervently praying their eyes out for our instant and irrevocable conversion. Some people knock door to door trying to find converts. Some people learn foreign languages and travel to distant lands to bring Jesus and food to people who have nothing. Some people have potluck dinners and invite nonmembers for some fellowship, hoping to win them over. Some people pray quietly for the conversion of others. Some people beat their breasts and wail publicly for the soon-to-be-damned souls of the nonbelievers. And some people could care less.

Would it really kill you to find out why the person who is praying for you is praying for you? Try to take it the way it was meant. Or don't. Either way, it's still your choice.

And hey, the offense you all tell us you're taking about a prayer that was made on your behalf just gives us arrogant people more of a chance to talk more about our religion - i.e., more chances to convert you :D

[Personally, I find hard-sell evangelizing very distasteful, because it's always the fundies that are doing it, and they always seem like they are working from a sales script, just like door-2-door vacuum cleaner salesmen. I think it cheapens the product to sell it that way, because to me it smacks of desperation.]

dw
Dukkha, good post.

Most I can simply agree with or disagree with, on the mild scale you placed it. ( Which I thank you for.)

The only big thing I can comment on is that I do think it's only a matter of scale.

I do believe that it's the same wrong.

And yes, I take option c as my favorite choice. :)
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Post by DukkhaWaynhim »

Which option c -- you winning the lottery? :) I didn't think you'd oppose that one.

The posthumous praying thing is something I read that Mormons have done in the past - I don't know if they still do it or not. I take offense at this ceremonial baptism of the dead (long dead in come cases, mind you). This has nothing to do with corpses, we are talking souls here. The thing about this practice is that at the end, the souls in question are counted among the numbers of the Mormons. It's like putting dead people's names on ballots voting for your party in an election. This church is claiming the souls of people as Mormon that lived and died before there was a Mormon church. It's like trying to claim that Moses was really a Christian at heart - he just didn't have the benefit of knowing about Jesus.

I don't see how that compares to a quick prayer said by a single person, informally, on the way to bed.

Yes, there is a scale difference as well, but to me, the intent is radically different. One is formal, the other informal. One is religio-politcal in nature, the other seems more genuine (again assuming that the individual isn't just fulfilling some external prayer quota)

dw
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Post by Avatar »

LMAO, LuciMay and EL.

We've had the necrophilia discussion before as I recall. :D And I'm still of the sameopinion...that if it doesn't harm anybody, that their (sick and twisted) business. :D

I see what you're saying 'Weez, but I'm still not convinced that arrogance is the wrong word. Perhaps I'm not applying it as negatively as it is usually applied, but then, I've been accused of it myself (but gods know I try). :lol:

Take a second and apply the exact principle to nationalism as LM suggested. Or to race. Is it arrogant to claim that your rae is superior? I think we'd agree that it is.

The only difference is in the ephemeral nature of belief. The principle remains.

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Post by Baradakas »

Cyberweez said:
I don't know who would be offended about what would happen to their body after their death. You're dead, you wouldn't know. I think people look for reasons to be offended, now we're taking it to places where we're not even alive yet we're offended.
Do you feel offended by hospitals secretly selling your "leftovers" to labs for experimentation? (Hospitals do this every day, and the courts have upheld that we have no right to our own DNA... might make a good topic in the Tank) I know I do. But then, you don't know it's happening, right?

The idea that someone might disrespect my remains, my wishes, and my beliefs so that they can say they followed thier beliefs sickens me. I leave you free all your life to believe what you want, but I can't be given the same courtesy in death? Sorry, but that seems a bit backwards. Whether or not I'm aware after death has little to do with the shudder I get now, while I am alive.

Also bear in mind that for many "christians" this seems to violate the free will doctrine. Any baptism that is "forced", not consented to willingly, seems to me a forceful conversion. (Yes folks, I include infants in this, the Bible says nothing about baptizing babies, this was originally a rite into manhood/womanhood, meant for those who would take their places in Judeo-christian society) And forceful conversion is morally wrong, IMO.

But then the Bible says we're not supposed to glorify our own births either, (i.e. birthdays) and most of us do that...

I just find it difficult to fathom how any of us can claim our faith is the true faith when none of us can prove it. Your faith closest to the Bible? So what? The Bible isnt even the oldest religious text. Can YOU prove that the Bible is the Word of God? No. You can't. I can't either. The fact that I KNOW God exists isnt going to help my argument.

Oddly, theologians and historians can prove, through secular recorded history, that Catholicism is little more than an aggregation or compilation of christianity and paganism, and has been for over a thousand years. With each people that was conquered, some indoctrination was required, and the best way to handle this was merging the current belief concept into Catholicism. Halos for instance, are believed to have derived from egyptian beliefs based on Ra, as crosses were from the ankh. Before that time, no crosses were used in religious context by the clergy.

But, as with all faiths, it does little good to poke holes in the fabric of thier chosen belief system. The Pope wants to claim that no other faith can lead to salvation? Fine. I'll sit back, smile indulgently, and say "Of course they can't." I just refuse to believe that God would truly limit the scope of enlightenment, which only feeds intolerence, jealousy and hate. And these abstracts are simply not God's will.

Nonetheless, one must admit that of all the faiths, Catholicism is the only one that has a little bit for everyone in it. (Despite the showy cabalistic rituals, also derived from pagan ritual.) It is, after all, as I just said, made up of a little of everything.

Sorry, couldn't help myself.
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Damn good post Barad. :D

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Post by Fist and Faith »

DukkhaWaynhim wrote:I'm not talking about whether you want to mentioned by me in my prayers. If I'm praying them, they're *my* prayers - and if I am praying for your instant death, your gradual conversion, or that you win the lottery tomorrow, well that's between my conscience and God, isn't it? Whether or not you are told of my prayers is inconsequential to the prayer itself. Do you feel your ears burning or something?
But don't people who pray believe that their prayers are answered? At least occasionally? Why would anyone pray for a particular thing to happen if they knew it wouldn't? If you pray for some specific thing to happen to me, and your God makes it happen, then it is not between your conscience and God; you are deciding what will happen in my life. I don't see how it could be more my business.

As for "a formal and posthumous induction of someone into a faith they had no part of in life," what happens next? If prayers turn me into a Christian after I'm dead, I'm going straight to Hell, because I certainly didn't do or believe any of the things necessary to get me into Heaven while I was alive.

Cybrweez wrote:
There's an inherent flaw in thinking one religion is the way. Instead, there's only this way to think: that all religions offer salvation.
Which is fine to think, as long as you recognize you're no different than me. I think its my way, you think yours. Hence, its why I think the word arrogant carries no meaning in this instance.
However, one of those ways of thinking leads to a more peaceful coexistence with the huge number of people who don't agree with the way of thinking.
All lies and jest
Still a man hears what he wants to hear
And disregards the rest
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Post by Cybrweez »

Dromond, I'm confused, are you saying Christians have a habit of doing whatever they want at someone's funeral, and disrespecting their wishes?

Av, I'm saying if you call it arrogant, but its not in a negative sense, so what really? And LM sure uses it in a negative tone, and my point is, how arrogant of him.

Baradakas, I could care less what happens to this decaying body when I'm gone. As I said, I have preferences, and I certainly wouldn't ignore someone else's preferences, but I can't believe there are people here trying to convince me I should be offended about what happens to me when I'm gone. Like I said, the search to be offended is taken to new heights, or depths.

Forceful baptisms? Don't know where that came from, sounds like another topic. Same with glorifying birthdays.

Fist, which way is more peaceful? Jesus said He is the only way to salvation, the road is narrow. Did He peacefully coexist with others? And as far as I know, I've peacefully coexisted with those around me. And if you believe Jesus is the only way, and He said love others as yourself, then you are "forced" to peacefully coexist with others.

On the other hand, if all religions are equal, the one that says martrydom guarantees salvation, you better not knock it. But, you better watch out.
--Andy

"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.

I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
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Post by Lord Mhoram »

Cyberweez,

I don't just come into this thread and say "Christianity and religion are arrogant." I offer reasons for my saying that. It is not fair in the context of this argument for you to just come in and say "LM is arrogant because his tone is negative." I'll ask again: If one country or race that says it is better than others can be arrogant, why can't one religion that says it is better than others be arrogant too? And how is saying that all religions are basically equal an arrogant stance?
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Post by danlo »

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Post by Fist and Faith »

Cybrweez wrote:Fist, which way is more peaceful? Jesus said He is the only way to salvation, the road is narrow. Did He peacefully coexist with others? And as far as I know, I've peacefully coexisted with those around me. And if you believe Jesus is the only way, and He said love others as yourself, then you are "forced" to peacefully coexist with others.

On the other hand, if all religions are equal, the one that says martrydom guarantees salvation, you better not knock it. But, you better watch out.
There will never be a time when everyone believes the same religion. I, for example, will never believe that Jesus is the only way. My point is that, with lots of people having lots of different beliefs, it would be more peaceful if everybody's beliefs incorporated the idea that the way they believe is simply the way that works best for them. Some of those who believe otherwise insist on forcing their beliefs on others. Some go to war to force their beliefs on others, killing anyone who will not convert and raise their children to believe those things. Others create hard feelings with things like, "You're gonna burn in Hell!", even if said with genuine regret and sorrow. (Which often appears not to be the case. Many seem well pleased at being one of the favored few to have found the only way to salvation, and they appear quite happy to look down on those who "refuse" to see the light.) To tell an 80 yo rabbi, or shaman, or whatever, who has tried his/her best to lead his/her people with love, joy, and tolerance for decades that they are going to Hell cannot lead to any peace.
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