Actually, the Inquisition tortured and executed thousands who DID follow the Bible to the letter - just not the Dominicans' Bible. And people who fell under the definition of "witch" - which definition was arbitrarily and maliciously created by Fr. Spengler in Malleus Maleficarum in order to include everyone who didn't follow Dominican dogma...Rochey wrote:What about the Inquisition, who tortured and executed hundreds who didn't follow the Bible to the letter?
Don't forget the pogroms... or the colonization of Asia, Africa, and of the New World...
Of course, Peabody meant (I hope) "believe in Jesus" to mean "truly follow and practice his teachings." Wearing a cross on your tabard while you slaughter thousands of innocents does NOT make you a Christian by this standard.
One of my biggest problems with Orthodox Christianity - the Catholic rites, Eastern orthodox, and the more conservative Protestant sects - is the idea of original sin, and the subsequent idea that an infant will not be allowed into their heaven if it dies before baptism. And succeeding from this belief come all the rule-bendings of convenience. Catholicism is a mystery religion - it has priests, who are able to perform things that the laity is not, such as transubstantiate the host and perform rites such as baptism or extreme unction (last rites.) But, if an infant is dying, well then we don't need a priest because it's inconvenient. If someone is dying suddenly, well, then anyone can hear their confession because it's inconvenient to get a priest in time.What about all the people in third world countries who have never heard of christianity? Or people who live in countries where they'd be killed if they were christians? They didn't choose anything. What would happen to them?
If you don't need a priest in every situation, then you don't need one in any situation, and should logically do away with the idea of extreme unction or original sin.