Actually, God said he'd save 144,000 Jews at the end of the world, so you might be one of the lucky few. Remember to send me a postcard if you get there.Mikey wrote:I am not in a position to defend Christianity per se, what with not being a Christian and all - and thusly doomed to eternal damnation by their definition. That's OK with me; if I end up in Hell, at least I'll be with my friends. However, here's my take in a nutshell -
I agree with you that fundamentalism is one of the major problems with religion. A few posts back, I took some quotes out of the New Testament which showed that it was pretty horific itself.and while I can't comment on the New Testament, there are certainly some horrific things in the Old Testament which I can't condone; and which I don't believe can be taken fundamentally. Fundamentalism is, after all, what has led to many of the reiligion-related problems of the world.
It's a problem with the underlying faith if it condones the murder of children. The changes made were mostly for the better.Many of the problems that were mentioned here, such as the Church changing its rules, stances, etc., are problems with an organization, not with the underlying faith. That is bound to happen, as these are organizations comprising imperfect beings - humans.
I like it.*snippy*
"What are you talking about?" said G-d. "I sent two boats and a helicopter!"
To the point though, you're right that a god's intervention may not be wholely obvious, but why be so obvious during the Old Testament, where he was blowing up cities, and such, and then go all quiet?
Well, as an atheist that's pretty much my perspective on religion. Humanity created God to explain why the sun rose, why it rained, what, earthquakes were, etc. Then they created the afterlife to explain/comfort death or those that had experienced a loss.As for G-d providing proof of himself - well that's really the antithesis of faith, isn't it? In a coldly logical light, remember: we created G-d, not the other way around. In other words, mankind created religion to fill a need; religion did not develop before man created it. As a product of mankind, religion is bound to be both flawed and malleable - but for those of us who find comfort, solace, and a sense of community, bonding, and history in it, it's what we have to go with.