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#335172 - 2010-02-15 13:07:09
Re: To believe in God or not, what's the big deal?
[Re: Tom Wetmore]
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Registered: 2002-02-22
Posts: 3579
Loc: CA
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The problem with the approach that has god going around the law is that the law becomes greater than god. This basically creates a new god of law or nature.
Plus the idea of the 10 commandments being this advance moral insight really ignores the complex ethical problems we have to face today. Law is simple a concept made up by men to establish empires and nations. If you want to look at the failure of law, simply look at our complex justice system and its failure to provide justice for everyone.
This idea that there is some universal law that solves everything is just as mythical as the idea of god.
And to suggest that the death of Jesus, which really wasn't a death, but a period of torture since he raised from the dead, doesn't really cover anything other than some technicality in the law. This is still iron age ethical thinking.
It is amazing to me that with all the technical advances we have as a human race, Christians don't consider the advances in ethics and philosophy as legitimate progress.
We know that the most atheists are highly educated, tend to be more moral than their Christian counterparts, and are more generous in their giving as a group. Obviously there are exceptions in each group. There are generous Christians and immoral atheists.
I think it is important to ask the question, "Why do the most intelligent people on the planet tend to be atheists or agnostics?" They all can't be evil plotters and possessed by the devil. I have had the opportunity to gather with large groups of unbelievers and it is alive with creativity, laughter, and hope. It is not the sad state of affairs that is often paraded out during sermons and evangelistic meetings.
It's not that I think Christians lack intelligence, but I think they tend to hide their heads in the sand and often lack a real understanding of the problems with a belief in god because they are afraid that life will have no meaning without a belief in god.
I don't believe in the god of the Bible, but I still look for other possibilities and moments of transcendence. And I still have those moments on a fairly regular basis, but it doesn't mean that the god of the Bible is providing these. My reason informs me that the most honest answer I can give is that I don't know. Meaning can come from many different approaches, including Christianity.
The main difficulty that I observe with Christianity is its insistence that it is the only way. It's difficult to believe since, in the real world, there tends to be multiple solutions to most complex problems.
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