Religion - a respectful discussion, for those interested

Discussion in 'BS Forum' started by Truth4U2, May 2, 2015.

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  1. BrowningNagle

    BrowningNagle Well-Known Member

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    Uhhhhhhh Good god that's definetely not all you said. Are you being obtuse on purpose? Or are you that dense that I had a problem with the dates and not that other bullshit?
    You said a half sentence starting with that and then you went on a bullshit anti-Christian tirade where you actually made the claim that "everyone" was happy with the church. That the Catholic Church is the only authentic Christian church... That the only reason the church split was so people could fuck whoever...etc.

    That's why I said you should be ashamed of yourself. Im catholic too but it's anti Christian to say that stuff. For all your talk about being a welcoming church those certainly aren't welcoming words.

    That and your comment to tommy about how he won't find happiness in his life.. About how he's fine now until he finds inevitable strife? Wtf is that? That's not Something a man of God should say. It doesn't serve to shine Catholicism in a nice light and certainly not in a welcoming light.

    I'm sorry to be harsh but fuck! You are striking a personal nerve because Catholics like you are the reason I can't get my wife to go to church with me on Sunday's. Judgmental folks who snub their noses at others but yet want to claim they are welcoming to others
     
  2. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    The Catholic Church today is the opposite of welcoming.

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  3. BrowningNagle

    BrowningNagle Well-Known Member

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    Unfortunately I have to agree in many ways, especially at the local level because there's too much reliance on individuals and individuals, we all can be hypocritical and judgemental..as we've seen in thread.

    There are shining light places where there are exceptions to that assessment fortunately. And I think Pope Francis is helping matters
     
  4. TommyJ

    TommyJ Well-Known Member

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    wrong. it's God as "you" understand god to be, not what another mans perception of what god is and then told to you that this is what god is. and are you seriously kidding about "we cause our own addictions when we ignore god's teachings"??? it's a disease, a sickness, an allergy if you want to call it that.
    nobody chooses to be an addict or an alcoholic, holy smokes man, seriously????? do you honestly believe that stuff you're spouting? it's eye poppingly alarming.
     
  5. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    He honestly believes it because it's what's been drilled into his head for decades.

    It's how the Catholic Church operates.

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  6. TommyJ

    TommyJ Well-Known Member

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    it's seriously frightening Mr. Stokes.
     
  7. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    It's Reverand Stokes to YOU!

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  8. joe

    joe Well-Known Member

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    [​IMG]
     
    #268 joe, Jun 5, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 5, 2015
  9. TommyJ

    TommyJ Well-Known Member

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    Bless me Stokes for i have obviously sinned in this thread.
    please forgive me, i dont think i could bare it if you don't! save my ass so i can get
    a better deal in the next life, which is the only reason i am good to people at all in this life.
    for a better life the next time around ya know? of which not one person knows anything about haa haa!
     
  10. The Waterboy

    The Waterboy Well-Known Member

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  11. slimjasi

    slimjasi Well-Known Member

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    Good argument. I'm convinced.

    You evidently have no interest in providing any substantive reasoning/or evidence to support your rather theatrical assertion that: "If you follow yourself and your own great wisdom, you will die in your own sins. You will have rejected the only acceptable sacrifice for your sins, and will have to answer for your own life. You can accept him as savior or you can continue to reject him and then face him as judge. There is no in between."

    Your moral certitude is amusing, though.


    Where is the evidence and/or logic to support this fundamentally scientific assertion?

    Actually, I know precisely what I mean by optimize . . . I mean optimize . . . I mean "to make the best of" (Obviously, the specifics of "making the best of" something are highly subjective, but the concept of optimizing a situation is quite straightforward). Apparently, you don't know what optimize means.

    Right. Because, quite obviously, I'm the one on the "crusade." Just to remind you, even with "HIM" already in your life, you were the one who felt the need to initially quote one of my posts (in response to someone else) and tell me how badly I needed Jesus in order for my life to have ultimate meaning. Maybe, just maybe, "HE" doesn't make you feel quite as fulfilled as you claim.

    It's a common sentiment because it naturally resonates with people. It's true. So, yeah, a lot of people say it. Do you have any logical argument to suggest that it is incorrect?

    So, by your "logic" (I'm being awfully kind here), believing in God and accepting Jesus as one's lord and savior somehow affords more meaning to the (obviously trivial) endeavor of debating the merits of religion on an internet forum? Interesting.

    I do believe God is imaginary . . . I also believe the remaining hours of my life are no more precious than the remaining hours of yours.
     
    #271 slimjasi, Jun 5, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 8, 2015
  12. Truth4U2

    Truth4U2 Well-Known Member

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    WOW talk about twisting my words! .... it seems it doesn't matter what I say, because you will just twist it to attack me. That's not being open-minded, that's pre-judging someone and then finding a way to twist his words in an attempt to discredit him.

    BTW, you only highlighted that one sentence I said in your reply, and called that "bullshit", so don't try to change it now, after I called you out on it. Own up to what you said, and if you made a mistake then admit it...that makes you human. No shame in that.

    I said that "nobody had a problem with the Catholic Church for the first 1000 years of its existence", which is true, since nobody split with the Church until the Protestant Reformation in the 1500's......but you just claimed that I said that "everyone is happy with the church", thus taking only a part of what I said, twisting my words, and then attacking me for something I never said. Nice. .... and I never said that "the only reason the church split....", but I was referring to just one example, again you twisted my words.

    And all of my comments are welcoming people to the Catholic Church, by pointing out all of the wonderful benefits that devout Catholics enjoy. I couldn't be more welcoming! So for you to claim the opposite is just plain untrue!

    Again, you are reading my posts, then twisting my words, misquoting me, and then attacking me. Please stop with your personal agenda and try and respond to what I actually said, then maybe we can have an intelligent debate.

    You said you are Catholic, so why don't you start by talking about why you made that choice, and what you like about the Catholic Church. Something positive, instead of picking apart my posts and attacking me...
     
    #272 Truth4U2, Jun 6, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 6, 2015
  13. Truth4U2

    Truth4U2 Well-Known Member

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    "wrong. it's God as "you" understand god to be, not what another mans perception of what god is and then told to you that this is what god is."

    So what you are saying is that there are billions of "gods" out there, each one corresponding to what an individual "understands God to be"....yeah that makes a lot of sense lol. So I should stop with this silly talk of one absolute God, one Supreme Being that created the one universe we all experience and live in...in other words, we all experience the sky as blue, clouds as white, trees, grass, birds, etc, that all look the same to all of us, but this common universe is the result of countless "gods" that is different for each of us ...... see how ridiculous what you just said is when you really think about it? There is one objective reality, one universe that we all live in...to claim that each of us is the center of our own personal "universe", that what is all around us is only the result of our own subjective experience, of our own unique brain, is the most egocentric and narcissistic thing anyone could possibly say! That is, what you are arguing is that there are billions of competing "realities" out there, that there is no common universe but only us human beings and our senses, each different because our brains each work completely differently so that we each experience something different and unique, and have our own personal "gods".....yeah that makes a lot of sense! That's totally different than what science teaches us, btw, so if you really believe that then that's your own personal fantasy.

    "and are you seriously kidding about "we cause our own addictions when we ignore god's teachings"??? it's a disease, a sickness, an allergy if you want to call it that.
    nobody chooses to be an addict or an alcoholic..."


    That's not what I said....I never said that anybody "chooses to be an addict or an alcoholic"....what I actually said is that people become addicts as a result of their choices.
    Nobody is born addicted to alcohol or heroine (unless maybe their mother was drinking or abusing drugs during her pregnancy). People may be born with a genetic tendency to eventually become an alcoholic, but they only become an alcoholic if they start drinking. If they never take a sip of alcohol, they will never be addicted to it and crave that next drink (same thing for drug addiction). And with hard drugs, there's less of a need for a genetic predisposition, so it's almost entirely the free choice of the individual to experiment with drugs. Same with pornography addiction; if pornography did not exist, or if the individual did not view it, he would not become addicted. The same could be said for any addiction; they result from the choices that we make.

    Religion, in its timeless wisdom, helps us to avoid these addictions, keeping us free to enjoy true happiness and joy, as opposed to the shallow and fleeting pleasures that addictions ensnare us in. Religion helps us to make healthy choices in our lives, both physically and psychological. This is well-documented by secular, scientific sources, btw. Just research the emerging field on the science of happiness, and you will find the sources of what I'm saying. I'm not making any of this stuff up.
     
    #273 Truth4U2, Jun 6, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 6, 2015
  14. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    It's funny when somebody says "nobody had a problem with the Catholic Church for the first 1000 years of its existence" but fail to mention what started happening less than 100 years later.

    This seems pretty welcoming:

    1096 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter half the Jews in Worms, Germany.

    1098 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter almost all of the inhabitants of the city of Antioch.

    1099 Roman Catholic crusaders massacre 70,000 Muslims and Jews when they capture Jerusalem.

    1208 – 1226 The Albigensian Crusades in southern France. Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter approximately 20,000 citizens of Beziers, France, on July 22, 1209. Albigensian Christians and Catholics were slain. By the time the Roman Catholic armies finished their “crusade,” almost the entire population of southern France (mostly Albigensian Christians) has been exterminated. During the six centuries of papal Inquisition that began in the 13th century, up to 50 million people were killed. Read what J. A. Wylie's The History of Protestantism has to say about the Crusades against the Abigenses

    1236 Roman Catholic crusaders slaughter Jews in the Anjou and Poitou regions of western France. The Catholic crusaders trample to death under their horses 3000 Jews who refuse baptism.

    1243 Roman Catholic mobs burn alive all the Jews in Berlitz, Germany (near Berlin).

    1298 Roman Catholic mobs burn alive all Jews in Rottingen, Germany.

    April 26, 1349 Roman Catholic mobs burn to death all Jews in Germersheim, Germany.

    1348 – 1349 The Jews are blamed for the bubonic plague. Author Dave Hunt tells us, “Accused of causing the ‘Black Death’ Jews were rounded up [by Roman Catholic mobs] and hanged, burned, and drowned by the thousands in revenge.”

    1389 Roman Catholic mobs murder 3000 Jews in Prague when they refuse to be baptized.

    1481 – 1483 At the direction of the Roman Catholic inquisitors, authorities burn at the stake at least 2000 people during the first two years of the Spanish Inquisition.

    1540 – 1570 Roman Catholic armies butcher at least 900,000 Waldensian Christians of all ages during this 30-year period.

    1550 – 1560 Roman Catholic troops slaughter at least 250,000 Dutch Protestants via torture, hanging, and burning during this ten-year period.

    1553 – 1558 Roman Catholic Queen Mary I of England (aka “bloody Mary”) attempts to bring England back under the yoke of papal tyranny. During her reign, approximately 200 men and woman are burned to death at the sake. Her victims include bishops, scholars, and other Protestant leaders.

    [​IMG]
    1572 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre. French Roman Catholic soldiers begin killing Protestants in Paris on the night of August 24, 1572. The soldiers kill at least 10,000 Protestants during the first three days. At least 8000 more Protestants are killed as the slaughter spreads to the countryside.

    1618 – 1648 The Thirty Years’ War. This bloody, religious war is planned, instigated, and orchestrated by the Roman Catholic Jesuit order and its agents in an attempt to exterminate all the Protestants in Europe. Many countries in central Europe lose up to half their population.

    1641 – 1649 Eight years of Jesuit-instigated Roman Catholic butchery of Irish Protestants claims the lives of at least 100,000 Protestants.

    1685 French Roman Catholic soldiers slaughter approximately 500,000 French Protestant Huguenots on the orders of Roman Catholic King Louis 14 of France.

    Circa 1938 – 1945 Catholic dictators such as Adolf Hitler and Monsignor Tiso slaughter approximately six million Jews in Europe prior to and during World War 2.

    1941 – 1945 The Roman Catholic Ustashi in the fascist state of Croatia butcher up to one million Serbian Orthodox Christians. Roman Catholic killer squads are often led by Franciscan priests, monks, and friars. This genocide is choreographed by two Jesuit prelates: Aloysius Stepinac and Ivan Saric.

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  15. Truth4U2

    Truth4U2 Well-Known Member

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    Um, link? Most of that is just plain untrue, like when it actually refers to Hitler as a "Catholic dictator"....WOW, that's just laughable! No wonder there are people so confused about the truth of history when clowns post things like that on obscure websites that look official. smh. ... And I love how some people attack the Church for the Crusades, but ignore the fact that it was an attempt to defend Christians from attack by Muslims, and from Muslims seeking to take over Christian lands.

    I suppose you would also claim that the U.S. and its allies "brutally slaughtered" millions of Nazis in Hitler's Germany? Or that we "brutally slaughtered" the Japanese who were attacking us at Pearl Harbor? LOL....your attempts to change history, and twist the truth, is shameful and ridiculous. But then again, you also claim that you can just say what you want about the Jets or the NFL without backing it up with any facts, which you call "talking points" lol...

    "Islam threatened more than Byzantium. From the time of Jesus' death, Christians had made pilgrimages to the Holy Land, and Frankish knights had defended Christian pilgrims on the dangerous journey. In the later chaos of the Dark Ages, the Arabs ravaged and destroyed the
    Holy Sepulchre and every Christian institution in Jerusalem. In 1027 the Byzantines intervened to guard Christian holy sites and pilgrims. It lasted less than 40 years, before Jerusalem was again submerged under Islam. Islam had a creed of Holy War that attracted the nomadic tribes of the desert, who could now raid and pillage in the name of God and of divine conquest. Under Islam, a man was allowed as many as four wives at a time, and any number of concubines. Divorce was allowed if any of those wives were deemed "undesirable". The afterlife promised to Muslims was a 'Trump Tower of luxury', with a virtually inexhaustible supply of houris to satisfy one's every sexual desire, even a heavenly overflowing of intoxicating liquors. Islam spread by the sword, but it also found converts - which, given its promises and its simplicity, is not surprising." ~H.W. Crocker III

    So that is what Christianity had to deal with....persecution by attacking Muslims. The Crusades were an attempt by Christians to defend themselves and their territory.
     
    #275 Truth4U2, Jun 6, 2015
    Last edited: Jun 6, 2015
  16. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    Do your own research. Google the Bloody History of Papal Rome and then refute what's untrue.

    But I love the way you excuse the Inquistion and rationalize the slaughter.

    Sheep with talking points.

    _
     
  17. Truth4U2

    Truth4U2 Well-Known Member

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    This is the "History of the Catholic Church" from Wikipedia, which you seem to respect more than any potentially biased sources:

    "Christianity spread throughout the early Roman Empire, despite persecutions due to conflicts with the pagan state religion. In 313, the struggles of the Early Church were lessened by the legalisation of Christianity by the Emperor Constantine I. In 380, underEmperor Theodosius I, Christianity became the state religion of the Roman Empire by thedecree of the Emperor, which would persist until the fall of the Western Empire, and later, with the Eastern Roman Empire, until the Fall of Constantinople. During this time (the period of the Seven Ecumenical Councils) there were considered five primary sees (jurisdictions within the Catholic Church) according to Eusebius: Rome, Constantinople, Antioch,Jerusalem and Alexandria, known as the Pentarchy.

    After the destruction of the western Roman Empire, the church in the West was a major factor in the preservation of classical civilization, establishing monasteries, and sending missionaries to convert the peoples of northern Europe, as far as Ireland in the north. In the East, the Byzantine Empire preserved Orthodoxy, well after the massive invasions of Islam in the mid-7th century. The invasions of Islam devastated three of the five Patriarchal sees, capturing Jerusalem first, then Alexandria, and then finally in the mid-8th century, Antioch.

    The whole period of the next five centuries was dominated by the struggle between Christianity and Islam throughout the Mediterranean Basin. The battles of Poitiers, and Toulouse preserved the Catholic west, even though Rome itself was ravaged in 850, and Constantinople besieged. In the 11th century, already strained relations between the primarily Greek church in the East, and the Latin church in the West, developed into the East-West Schism, partially due to conflicts over Papal Authority. The fourth crusade, and the sacking of Constantinople by renegade crusaders proved the final breach.

    In the 16th century, in response to the Protestant Reformation, the Church engaged in a process of substantial reform and renewal known as the Counter-Reformation.[7] In subsequent centuries, Catholicism spread widely across the world despite experiencing a reduction in its hold on European populations due to the growth of Protestantism and also because of religious skepticism during and after the Enlightenment. The Second Vatican Council in the 1960s introduced the most significant changes to Catholic practices since the Council of Trent three centuries before."

    "Monasteries became major conduits of civilization, preserving craft and artistic skills while maintaining intellectual culture within their schools, scriptoria and libraries. They functioned as agricultural, economic and production centers as well as a focus for spiritual life."
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Catholic_Church


    So despite being persecuted, the Catholic Church survives and preserves intellectual culture and the arts in its monasteries. In the 16th century, the Catholic Church reformed itself of corrupt practices such as the sale of indulgences, and consequently spread widely across the world. And no word of any of the "bloody history of the church" that you claim, despite the fact that this is Wikipedia, edited by people outside the church. Interesting.
     
  18. Truth4U2

    Truth4U2 Well-Known Member

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    And the Catholic Church is rarely given the credit it deserves for opposing Hitler's Nazi regime, and helping to save Jews from execution. ...again, an unbiased account from Wikipedia:

    "After repeated violations of the Concordat, Pope Pius XI issued the 1937 encyclical Mit brennender Sorge which publicly condemned the Nazis' persecution of the Church and their ideology of neopaganism and racial superiority.[236]

    After the Second World War began in September 1939, the Church condemned the invasion of Poland and subsequent 1940 Nazi invasions.[237] In the Holocaust, Pope Pius XII directed the Church hierarchy to help protect Jews and Gypsys from the Nazis.[238] While Pius XII has been credited with helping to save hundreds of thousands of Jews.[239] the Church has also been falsely accused of encouraging antisemitism[240] Albert Einstein, addressing the Catholic Church's role during the Holocaust, said the following: "Being a lover of freedom, when the revolution came in Germany, I looked to the universities to defend it, knowing that they had always boasted of their devotion to the cause of truth; but, no, the universities immediately were silenced. Then I looked to the great editors of the newspapers whose flaming editorials in days gone by had proclaimed their love of freedom; but they, like the universities, were silenced in a few short weeks... "Only the Church stood squarely across the path of Hitler's campaign for suppressing truth. I never had any special interest in the Church before, but now I feel a great affection and admiration because the Church alone has had the courage and persistence to stand for intellectual truth and moral freedom. I am forced thus to confess that what I once despised I now praise unreservedly." This quote appeared in the December 23, 1940 issue of Time magazine on page 38.[241] Other commentators have accused Pius of not doing enough to stop Nazi atrocities.[242] Debate over the validity of these criticisms continues to this day.[239]"
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Catholic_Church
     
  19. JStokes

    JStokes Well-Known Member

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    Quoting Wikipedia, the last bastion of the idiocracy of America's youth.

    I weepz for the children.

    _
     
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  20. RuJFan

    RuJFan Well-Known Member

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    So.....
    I believe in little green men.
    They are not really green, more like grayish, but those dudes been around for a while, smarter than us and can also answer prayers from time to time.
    Older than God, books are writer about them, multiple witnesses ... I should start a church.

    Speaking about... What bible says about aliens? Or better yet, which verse will be interpreted as clear statement of Devine design if/when we learn that ET is real?
     
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