rusmeister wrote:Lord Foul wrote:Man. Being an atheist is so much easier. I can't figure why people write eight-bazillion block paragraphs about a 2,000 year old text, which had it never existed we'd still have the main apparatus of moral prerogative that common sense and our natural inclination to develop a social universe creates. Now. Back to girl-on-girl pr0n.
I agree. It IS easier. And it is easier to be an uneducated redneck than to really learn , say, an academic discipline. The truth is not about what is "easy".
You're right. I only just realized this
despite making a 3.8 GPA in college and studying history, English and
still doing those things for pleasure. I do find religion interesting, don't get me wrong, and I study its place in culture and history much as any other discipline; perhaps even
more disciplined than the lack of research and tit-for-tat I see on this topic here.
For my money, my observation of the Bible is the most open and least emotional after seeing the dense, brain-numbing series of posts between you and Fist. As a piece of literature, I find the Bible tough to swallow, its myths surpassed by the
Odyssey (it doesn't even have to try), and again, my point; it's teachings don't have a patent on good and normal human behavior, which requires civilization first (hell; Christ wouldn't have even been born had there been no civilization).
Good and moral behavior comes as quality of life improves, as well as a natural, evolutionary principle of what's good for our biological survival as a group of people.
So ignoring the Bible altogether? Hardly. I'm more than considering it. I think my view of it is the most realistic in a world that is Beatlemania about it.
rusmeister wrote:And yes, the pagans DID have those things without Christ, and they built the very best that paganism could possibly develop, and we called it "Rome". And YET, it fell. It wasn't enough.
The ancient philosophies and religions came to a dead end; the religions in worshiping an obvious mortal as a god (which IS a form of atheism) and the philosophies in crashing and burning in their logical conclusions which few of their adherents thought out to the end, and the arenas, gladiators, Christians and lions, etc, was the ultimate result.
The hedonists probably said the same thing about porn. And they wound up screaming at the Colosseum, some jaded and glutted on death, others seeing no point even in living, and then, finally, some of them seeing in the Christian martyrs people who had something both to live for and to die for that they didn't have. And so the conversion of Rome began.
The one thing the neo-pagans forget, when they set out to do all the old pagans did, is that the last thing the old pagans did was to get baptized.
You speak of academic discipline and yet this is a slide-show in primary colors--"The World According to Rus" perhaps? Rome fell for a number of complex reasons (much of which was political corruption and an economic downfall similar to our own, which they tried to spend their way out of).
Yes, Christianity won. But there was no Christianity at one point, and logically there could be another religion to answer society's needs in the future. Why look at it as an intrinsic, scientific fact that it's right? That's hardly academic. In a more reasonable light one would conclude that Christianity evolved to success because it answered what people needed in the fall of Rome--reassurance in a world that seemed to be ending. Perhaps something else will transpire, thousands of years from now, that brings us to need some other tract or precepts of faith?
The religions of Rome and Egypt were not wrong. They were a
reflection of those eras. The ancient Mesopotamian religion focused on death and the wrath of the Gods because the Fertile Crescent was frequently flooded by heavy rains
and warring states. Egypt suffered little invasion and had regular, predictable flooding that renewed their crops. They had much nicer Gods and an after-life. Approximately, our God of the past 200 years has been less wrathful and more merciful with the advent of the unparalleled convenience we've come into.