(June 22, 2015 at 8:09 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:(June 21, 2015 at 9:05 pm)Jenny A Wrote: I have actually done that, but only because our youth pastor wanted to let us know that memorizing the Lutheran and much smaller version was not such a very big project. Though actually we not required to memorize it. He had been though. It was one of those walking to school uphill both ways stories.
That's pretty funny. And one more reason to be Protestant, I suppose!![]()
Quote:That, right there is what I have against religion in general and Catholic church in big capital particulars. If my thinking contradicts a recognized authority of some kind, or the opinion of someone I respect, I will listen to them and reexamine my thinking. But I would never presume that anyone, anywhere, or any institution anywhere is always right. If there is a god he gave us brains to use them. And if as I think vastly more probable there isn't one of the many things that distinguishes humans is our ability to think critically. Either way, it's a gift everyone should exercise regularly.
Let me put this in different terms to see if it makes more sense. Suppose you were a student at a major university, and you were studying some topic under a truly brilliant professor. In fact, the entire department is internationally recognized as being the best of the best. So, one day, your professor is chatting with you and a group of students about some research he has been doing, and he makes a statement that surprises you because it's counter to what you have been assuming about the topic.
Do you think, "Wow...Dr. Brightlight is the world's leading expert on this. But I can't trust what he says without verifying it for myself...even though I have no lab, no funding, no real expertise..."?
Or do you adjust your own thinking?
I myself question Dr. Brightlight, and try to verify what he taught; if I can't verify, then I continue with "I don't know" and "hopefully one day I can find out". That's what everyone should do. Thinking critically is one of the awesome things about being human, as Jenny pointed out. It's too bad you and your ilk don't practice it as much as you should.
Nolite te bastardes carborundorum.