tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1170345318491016282.post340787360244785262..comments2023-10-27T07:54:12.473-05:00Comments on DisComforting Ignorance: Wikipedia Is a GodsendDisComforting Ignorancehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04279112381253209661noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1170345318491016282.post-78186925467726441342008-07-10T22:54:00.000-05:002008-07-10T22:54:00.000-05:00Hi!"If my mother were true to the Bible, she would...Hi!<BR/><BR/>"If my mother were true to the Bible, she would shun me."<BR/><BR/>Somehow, someway you have been greatly deceived about the Bible. <BR/><BR/>If your mother was indeed true to the Bible, she would NOT shun you.<BR/><BR/>Why!<BR/><BR/>The Bible, the Old and New testaments, basically focus on our Savior, Jesus Christ.<BR/><BR/>Jesus, instead of shunning the sinners, embraced them. He is an example of how we Christians should treat sinners. We should love the sinner, but hate the sin. <BR/><BR/>Thanks for commenting!<BR/><BR/>In Christian Love,<BR/>BrittanyAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1170345318491016282.post-27747472580552753442008-07-10T16:23:00.000-05:002008-07-10T16:23:00.000-05:00Hey Brittany,It's not a loss for believing, per se...Hey Brittany,<BR/><BR/>It's not a loss for believing, per se. It's everything that goes along with it in Christianity. I'll list a few examples that I think are applicable to most:<BR/><BR/>* The constant belief that most people are going to Hell. This applies a lot to family. For example, my mother knows that I am an atheist, and I have seen her cry about it several times. The night I told her when I was visiting will forever be seared into my mind. It caused her great pain and she cried the entirety of the several hours.<BR/><BR/>I have a gay sister who has a five year old daughter. She is constantly in fear that she will end up in Hell and not be there for her daughter in the afterlife.<BR/><BR/>The many families who were told that their unbaptized children weren't going to Heaven, but instead Limbo.<BR/><BR/>* The sexual repression demanded by Christianity (and most religions). Again, just a personal story, my gay sister. Now that she has a daughter, she is so concerned about it that she completely abstains. She not only abstains from sex, she abstains from relationships altogether. This leads to a rather miserable and depressing state for her, as she's quite lonely. She also tries to stay away from her old circle of close friends as they are all gay and she can't risk the temptation.<BR/><BR/>There are many teenagers who are taught that what they are feeling and thinking is sinful, immoral, and displeasing to their Father. Boys are taught that masturbation is sinful. They must either live miserably by refraining from such a natural actions, or live with the guilt by engaging.<BR/><BR/>* Guilt. As has been the theme with above examples, there's a great deal of guilt intrinsic in Christianity. Guilt not just for actions, but for mere thoughts.<BR/><BR/>* Certain ideas in Christianity require hatred/dislike/mistreatment/distancing of individuals, specifically women, gays, and atheists. In families, this causes great problems. Many families have to lose certain individuals as they disown them due to their sexual and intellectual predilections. If my mother were true to the Bible, she would shun me. I am sure this has crossed her mind as she knows the Bible, which compounds the guilt by her not doing so. If my father ever knew, he indubitably would.<BR/><BR/>* Conflicts with science and technology. While I am not of the camp of religion-science incompatibility, there are costs the individual encounters for belief when it conflicts with science. The evolution-creation "controversy" is the most obvious and needs not any elaboration, except that people like Ray make people think it is either God or evolution. <BR/><BR/>There's conflicts with contraception. Via onanism, contraception (including coitus interruptus) is seen as immoral. So, sex requires that it is done without contraception, which bears the burden of a larger family, or abstaining altogether.<BR/><BR/>There's also a cost of not accepting scientific advances if they conflict with Scriptures, such as evolution, heliocentricity, cloning, principles of geology and cosmology, and future advances in understanding.<BR/><BR/><BR/><BR/>These are just some costs to the individuals with Christianity alone. There's of course the cost to society such as influences on public policy, on foreign policy, hate crimes, mistreatment of women, miseducation of sex/human health and evolution, and so forth, which are the cost to the society from the individual believing.<BR/><BR/>- JTDisComforting Ignorancehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04279112381253209661noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1170345318491016282.post-53514653574934736222008-07-09T06:02:00.000-05:002008-07-09T06:02:00.000-05:00Hi,"There is a great toll to pay if you believe an...Hi,<BR/><BR/>"There is a great toll to pay if you believe and are wrong. You do not simply "lose nothing." You lose, by virture of having only one life, everything. There is a serious price to pay for compliance."<BR/><BR/>Could you maybe explain this a little more? What does a Christian lose by believing?<BR/><BR/>Thanks!<BR/><BR/>In Christian Love,<BR/>BrittanyAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com