It seems this is one issue where I think much like the majority of Americans.
See here.
"(RNS) When asked about Christianity's recent contributions to society, Americans cited more negatives than benefits, according to a new survey."
-Don-
It seems this is one issue where I think much like the majority of Americans.
See here.
"(RNS) When asked about Christianity's recent contributions to society, Americans cited more negatives than benefits, according to a new survey."
-Don-
One of the many problems with Christianity, of course, is that Christians can't seem to agree on what Christianity actually is!
Some say it demands the sort of violent, exclusionary treatment mentioned in the article; others say not. No one can "prove" who's right, though, because the Bible itself is so vague and contradictory. It can literally mean almost anything the person reading it chooses to "believe" it says.
This is part of its evil genius!
I suppose that one of the problems for 'Christians' is that so many people have generated so many different versions of the original texts - each written by a person with his own particular agenda - that the current bastardised scripts bear little or no relationship to anything that previously existed and defy belief anyway. Or something like that.
Ken.
Die dulci fruimini!
Ken.
Wolds Bikers, Lincolnshire, England.
Exactly.
And of course the basic doctrines themselves (such as a monotheistic God who has a son; who is omnipotent but can't find Adam and Eve hiding in the garden, etc. etc.) are contradictory and incoherent.
Reason and logic have no place, which is why religious people tend hold such irrational, illogical views.
Just beeeeeee-lieve!
You mean like this cute example?
-Don-