aliantha wrote:rusmeister wrote:When I said "If... then there is no truth", what I meant was (according to the public philosophy as it is put into practice) there is no absolute scheme as described by anyone that can possibly be the actual and correct description (so I'll capitalize the 't' in 'Truth' to distinguish). No one can possibly be right.
But that's not correct. I acknowledge that you might be right. But I don't want to hedge my bets, because there's an equal chance (as far as I'm concerned) that one of the other players might be right. And there are a *lot* of other players. You gotta admit, from my point of view, the odds in your favor are kinda crappy.

So the only sane thing I can do is to pick the viewpoint that feels most true to me -- and hope that either: 1) the Universal Spirit is not as vengeful or jealous as that guy in the Old Testament; or 2) I'm right that there *is* no right answer.
And the only sane way to pick the one that feels most true to me is to base my choice on two things: 1) the dogma that speaks most closely to my morality; and 2) the behavior of those who believe in that dogma. So if I see a whole bunch of people who profess to be Christian, but who lie and cheat and steal and kill, I'm less likely to buy the "<shrug> well, we're all imperfect humans" line and more likely to believe that the religion just isn't very effective at policing its members -- and/or that the dogma is too easy for believers to warp in order to justify despicable behavior.
And I'm *really* not going to be kindly disposed toward that religion if its followers try to harass me into joining them Because They Know The Truth. Because common sense tells me there's no possible way they could.
But I have zero problem with you following any religion you want. So your restatement:
rusmeister wrote:aliantha wrote:So we're all allowed not to believe in your God, but we all have to act as if everything you claim He wants us to do is true? Some freedom.
Precisely what I am complaining about. To me, it looks like:
So we're all allowed to believe in your God, but we all have to act as if nothing you claim He wants us to do is true? Some freedom.
is, to use one of your favorite words, non-sense.
Hi Ali,
(This seems kind of OT, but it's how the conversation seems to be going...)
I wouldn't expect you to turn to something else - unless/until you first became dissatisfied with paganism. The only thing I could hope to do is show you that there is a form of Christianity that is quite different from your experience of it, and I believe it likely that you would find at least some of its answers more satisfying than what you left. (In short, I would validate your experience while insisting that you didn't get the whole picture - or likely even a very big part of it. (That's partly because both general ignorance, especially in the West, both of Church history and Eastern Christianity - it's nothing personal. In Protestantism, in particular, Church history pretty much starts with Martin Luther.) I'd ask if you have ever been harassed by Orthodox people coming to your door...
Yes, of course I admit that any one claim out of a thousand would seem poor odds (especially on a surface view), so I understand what you mean there. Also, that you seek out the one that seems most true is of course the right thing. From my POV, that is something that gives me hope for all of us - that God's mercy is greater than we can comprehend. I'm not a universalist, though. As Lewis said, we have to admit that even our Lord said that it's possible to lose. But neither do we claim to know who will be saved.
And there's the rub. You've rejected Christianity in general because of your experience. I rejected it, too, when I was 19, because of my experience with the Baptists. It really was unsatisfying in the long run - both my personal experience and holes in their theology that I had, even at that age, thought my way to. And after 20 years of agnosticism, when I came to Orthodoxy, it was (at first) largely due to luck - being married to a woman who had become Orthodox several years prior. But in exploring it, it just got deeper and deeper - and as GKC put it, it was right not only where I was right, but more importantly, where I was wrong. I find it to be radically different from everything I know about in western Christianity, and it is deeply satisfying, even though there are things that I long for and have not grown to the point of achieving yet.
One thing I do not do, though, is judge a faith merely by the behavior of its believers. That seems to make sense on the surface, but frankly, I do not find that behavior is a reliable barometer at all. Intense atheists are sometimes very moral and self-sacrificing. Some Christians, even Orthodox Christians, are very very far from the ideals set by their faith. (Of course, if we take nominalism into account, that clears out the deadwood, but still, people who do seriously practice a faith can be bitter, nasty, do dirty deeds, etc.)
The Christian doctrine of the Fall - more importantly the Orthodox understanding of it - clears up all of the contradictions. Everything stands in its place and is explained. It is no simple "we're all imperfect humans" line. It is far more than a line - the doctrine is based on deep thought and is consistent with human experience. The behavior is NOT justified - but it is explained.
A brief intro to that concept:
www.oca.org/OCchapter.asp?SID=2&ID=16
On your comment on my restatement, I did say "To me, it looks like..." You'd have to put yourself into my POV for it to make sense.
Also, I think it is your reason, rather than common sense, which tells you that nobody could possibly know the truth. And isn't that the charge I made about pluralism in general?
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)
"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton