RE: Four questions for Christians
June 23, 2013 at 4:40 pm
(This post was last modified: June 23, 2013 at 4:56 pm by Consilius.)
(June 23, 2013 at 3:23 pm)LeoVonFrost Wrote:Religion has been used many times to control people with large-scale results. That does not take away from the integrity of religion or its ability to do good.(June 23, 2013 at 7:09 am)Consilius Wrote: Why should it be his fault if a cognitive being misinterpreted or bent to his own purpose words that were meant to enforce something good? You are still suggesting "God made me do it."
I see things a little different, with a bit of a wider view than others. In this instance I feel that taking a step back we can see that those people that were under the influence of a statewide religious fervor are indeed acting by the will of god (Gott Mit Uns - "god with us" on nazi belt buckles for instance) I can agree that if there were no religion to whip the masses into frenzy, these monsters would have found something else to control them with, but you have to agree that religion has been the most effective tool of control used by bad people. In realizing this you will see that in a larger scope it definitely is "gods will" when these bad people use your god to attain land and gold and power.
Quote: For the thing with Cortez, this was a political conquest, not a Crusade. The missionaries came to evangelize the people after the Spanish had forced them down.
You are wrong.
{{from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_col...e_Americas
- Colonial expansion under the crown of Castile was initiated by the Spanish conquistadores and developed by the Monarchy of Spain through its administrators and missionaries. The motivations for colonial expansion were trade and the spread of the Catholic faith through indigenous conversions.}}
The missionaries came along with the Spanish conquistadors in 1942.
Quote:The Pope's primary intention was to keep the surplus of knights in Europe from ravaging the countryside by giving them something to do.
You are wrong again. The first crusade was in 1096 and was actually called "the people's crusade" and it involved 20,000 lower class peasants and knights who along the way to the holy land killed 10k jews. The crusade was a disaster and most of the crusaders that pope urban ii had sent to do god's work were killed. In the Albigensian crusade in 1209 hundreds of thousands of cathars (women children priests) were slaughtered in the name of christ because they posed a threat to the catholic church. These are just two examples that prove the fallacy of your statement.
Quote:So the whole Holocaust thing is reduced to racism backed by religion, because when you bring religion into it, people have been proven to do anything without actually thinking about what their religion prescribes.
The holocaust wasn't about religion? That is the most nonsensical statement I have heard so far. You can't murder over 10 million people of a certain religion and then call it racism. I have already stated the fact of the belt buckles, every nazi soldier was acting with gods will or at least that's what they were told. I don't want to be a part of something that can convince people to do that, it is poisonous to the human race.
Quote:There are many more examples. These were just two.
Those examples were wrong. Can I please hear the others?
To say that the first thing the Spanish monarchy thought of when she heard of an enormous landmass full of people across the sea was turning them into Christians would be like saying that the goal of the Crusades was to evangelize. They were weak labels that were given to get people's support.
"H.E.J. Cowdrey, a well respected scholar whom I often look to for council, claims Pope Urban II saw the defense of the Byzantine Empire as a primary reason for calling for the First Crusade. If our Christian brothers to the east can see how strong our faith is in the Lord, then they will be persuaded to adopt our views and be brought back into the light."
In the end, more people were killed by Cortez than converted, and more killed by Crusaders than evangelized.
"Let none of your possessions detain you, no solicitude for your family affairs, since this land which you inhabit, shut in on all sides by the seas and surrounded by the mountain peaks, is too narrow for your large population; nor does it abound in wealth; and it furnishes scarcely food enough for its cultivators. Hence it is that you murder one another, that you wage war, and that frequently you perish by mutual wounds. Let therefore hatred depart from among you, let your quarrels end, let wars cease, and let all dissensions and controversies slumber. Enter upon the road to the Holy Sepulcher; wrest that land from the wicked race, and subject it to yourselves.'—Pope Urban II, speech to Clermont
This could be another crusade, but it shows that the Pope had a few more motives than he regularly let on.
Notice how the word 'Jew' applies both to a race and a religion. They are generally in the same demographic, but not completely. Hitler claimed Aryans "the master race". Becoming a Christian didn't save you from belonging to an "inferior" race. That is why the Holocaust is termed "racial genocide" and not "religious persecution".
However, Hitler did have some Christian motives. He drew back on his Catholic upbringing and his German heritage to become an antisemite. It's not hard to use the Bible that way. But Jesus didn't advocate for taking revenge, and neither should have they. Notice how Hitler didn't tell anyone to 'evangelize' the Jews, like Martin Luther in his book "The Jews and their Lies", but simply to kill them. That's becuase they couldn't be preched out of seizing to be Jews.
(June 23, 2013 at 3:40 pm)Rhythm Wrote:For whatever reason 'eye for and eye' existed in the ancient world, you can take that up with an ancient law court.(June 23, 2013 at 1:55 pm)Consilius Wrote: This Bible story did not take place in a democratic 21st century society. This is ancient Egypt. Rulers all around the ancient world killed kids because of what their parents did. It was the common practice. The Egyptians had no reason to expect anything other than the very punishment he had dished out to others. That would be unfair: God judging people by his own unique law code that just so happens to match our particular time and place and not theirs is arbitrary judgement and would be illegal all around the world.Regardless of whether or not it was common practice, or who did it, we would consider this a very base sort of immorality. If I am to apply this sort of standard, and if it is to be relevant than you must bring something to the table which amounts to more than a singsong TQ. "Pharoah did it, kings did it, it was common" - is simply more of the same and is as unacceptable now (for the very same reason) as it was the previous two times. I will not explain this again. Does your gods unique code of law match our own, do you figure? Because it seems to me, that this whole genocide bit is part of that code - and not part of ours. Lets not pretend that the code you're talking about belongs in the "now", as opposed to the "then". You like to imagine a fair god, perhaps a more pleasant or just god, good for you, I suggest you ditch this tale for what it is. Fiction. Then you might not feel compelled to defend such horrid shit in such a breathtakingly incompetent way.
Quote:You just condemned war itself. You can't ask an entire nation to forgive an aggressor because the leader of the country says we should be forgiving. That would be endangering the lives of millions of people. The leader of the nation can get martyred on his or her own, but he or she shouldn't expect the citizens to do so as well.No, I've repeatedly condemned the actions of a character in a narrative, and further explained why you have failed to defend them in the manner you clearly wish to do. This is the second time I'll remind you that I have not brought this (hippies, war etc) up, nor have I implied anything of the sort. If you cannot defend the claims made by the narrative - and lets be clear, it doesn't appear that you're capable of doing so....then that's that. You can continue to voice the same defense, I will continue to remind you of it's inadequacy. If there is a way that this narrative (and particularly the characters in this narrative) can be reconciled, you have not found it. So perhaps, and this is just a suggestion - take it or leave it- you should cut "god" a break and stop dragging it's "good name" through the mud of your own ill-conceived justifications?
If you want to bicker with someone over the morality of conflict be my guest, start that thread, find someone who's even remotely interested in engaging you in that conversation.
The reason the Tenth Plague disturbs you is because you see God killing children for what their parents did. Yes, God did kill children, and their parents bore the consequences of no longer having their firstborn child.
You would argue that killing the parents would have been a better idea. But the Egyptians didn't destroy the lives of grown Israelite men and women, but killed their children. You can imagine a parent wanting to die in place of a child. He or she would have to live with the grief. In the ancient world, it was a double blow because the propagation of a family name, which was much more important to them than it is to us (sleeping with slaves serious), was rendered hopeless. The Egyptians hadn't granted the Israelites death, but rather a much more painful blow. God followed their example.
In the very same ancient law, reciprocation of offenses was well understood as a punishment to the parents and not the children. The flaw with this is that the children will still feel pain, and therefore be punished for nothing. If God is a perfect judge, why wouldn't we expect that he punish everyone exactly accoriding to their sins? For the Egyptian boys, no punishment at all. For their parents, exactly what they had been giving Israelite parents for the past 80 years or so. The Egyptians died in their sleep and went to heaven. The Israelite babies were drowned in rivers.
And yes, the Egyptian boys still died, and God killed them.