Whats your opinion?

durangodawood

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You are still referring to the innocent right? Are you saying the death penalty is deliberately design to kill innocent people? Justice and freedom has a heavy price tag.
I'm not ok with murdering people, thats all.
 
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bhsmte

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How so? Jesus also said He came not to bring peace, but a sword. What are we to do with the sword? We are to KIll the enemies of Jesus.

According to the NT, did Jesus ever say anything that would be completely contradictory to what you just said?
 
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You are still referring to the innocent right? Are you saying the death penalty is deliberately design to kill innocent people? Justice and freedom has a heavy price tag.

No,I'm not saying the death penalty is deliberately designed to kill innocents. I'm saying that it is inevitable that it will since all human institutions are imperfect. We are capable of having a system of justice that does not include the death penalty and we therefore remove the issue entirely.
 
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Cactus Jack

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An enemy of Jesus is anyone who threatens or attacks Christians. They must be killed.

As the earth's only superpower, we police the earth. Our weapons bring hell and death to the enemies of Jesus.

What's your problem? We are clearly commanded to kill the enemies of Jesus, and that's what the US does. The point is, Jesus is OK with the death penalty.

How so? Jesus also said He came not to bring peace, but a sword. What are we to do with the sword? We are to KIll the enemies of Jesus.

Since 312 AD when the sign of the Son of Man appeared in the clouds, Jesus has ruled the world through His followers. Jesus does not kill anyone. His followers do.

I feel so sorry for you...you're thinking that WE need to decide who lives and who dies, in the name of Jesus? That's wrong!

I ain't gonna kill no one. It's not my place. I have spent far more time alive, training to save lives than I ever will in taking them. It's not my place. And those of you that feel it is your place to decide who lives or who dies based on religion, you need some serious mental help.

Welcome to America, where Freedom of Religion ain't just for Christians.
 
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interpreter

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I feel so sorry for you...you're thinking that WE need to decide who lives and who dies, in the name of Jesus? That's wrong!

I ain't gonna kill no one. It's not my place. I have spent far more time alive, training to save lives than I ever will in taking them. It's not my place. And those of you that feel it is your place to decide who lives or who dies based on religion, you need some serious mental help.

Welcome to America, where Freedom of Religion ain't just for Christians.
I gave you scripture that says I'm right and you are wrong. Christians rule the world and sometimes have to do some killing. I did my share of killing the enemies of Jesus in the Viet Nam war.
 
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revanneosl

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I gave you scripture that says I'm right and you are wrong. Christians rule the world and sometimes have to do some killing. I did my share of killing the enemies of Jesus in the Viet Nam war.

May God have mercy on your soul.
 
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Ironically, that parable would, arguably, make the least religious nations on the earth (Scandinavia) the most christian ones.

Scandinavia is heavily culturally Christian, and Christians still come out as the majority in censuses. Just very few Scandinavians take religion that serious any more is all.

Not ironically at all, IMO.

As Supreme wisely notes, Scandinavia or at least the Nordics, are still very heavily culturally Christian. Scandinavian/Nordic Christianity, imo, is often underestimated -- i.e. tends to be heavily personal, coupled with our non-talkative culture, at least here in Japanese-like "keeping social face" Finland -- especially when compared to more "showy" or "social/talkative" Christianity type of nations. Since you're a Norwegian yourself, obviously, here it's not just an interpretation and cultural barrier question.

I'm still a bit undecided and unsure how to call our Nordic societies re: religion though. "Cultural Christian" (pro-Christian heritage but no personal Jesus) became a tainted term when Breivik used that term to describe his beliefs. The Archbishop Emeritus of Canterbury recently introduced the term "post-Christian", but that doesn't sound quite right either. And of course, we the Nordic countries (or "Scandinavian" in popular parlance) are the same yet individual nevertheless. Denmark is not Norway is not Iceland is not Finland is not Sweden, yet we all have our common Lutheran heritage and our Nordic welfare state model and our common Nordic mind, sensibilities, attitudes, values. Hard to pinpoint yet whatever those are, I think we all *know* they are something we Nordics seem to share and agree on, something that sets "us" vs "them" the rest of the world, do you agree, TheReasoner?

I think that when it comes to the parable of Matthew 25, no other nations in the world comes closer than the Nordic Five. And I also do believe it has to do with those mysterious Lutheran ethics, considering that Finland, for examply, was part of the Orthodox Russian Empire for a century yet still managed to retain that certain something Nordic at heart, never becoming like other Russian next-door-neighbour states.

Before our first class Nordic "cradle-to-grave" welfare states that makes us # ones in the world in any and all categories of good life possible, we had the Lutheran Church-states doing the same job. From my Christian POV, before we had the Nordic welfare state model, we had the Lutheran Church basically doing the ground work: basic education, literacy, health care and health education, agri education, small loans, empowerment of women and moms, poor houses, pensions, raising general awareness.

Now, I realize that the (Lutheran) Church does not have a monopoly of morals. I think it is very much a chicken/egg question, looking at it from the POV of Finland's history; Norway has her own history, of course. We now know that there was never a point of history where the land of the Finns, Swedish or Russian, was "Christian" in a sense that almost 100% of the folks had "personal Jesus". Now as in "back then" (a.k.a. "the good old times"), it seemed to be more of matter of "cultural Christianity", if that makes sense. Folks went to the established church because they were expected to, as a certain number of church attendance was mandatory: too many AWOLS would elicit a "fire & brimstones" kind of public humiliation. No marriage license, for example, which for the young men, especially, was pretty harsh.

The reason why many opted to drop out, however, back then was the same as it remains today: they were too busy to attend a public ritual. People had personal faith, a yarning for spirituality, yet the rather rigid (not to mention) mandatory state church rituals, especially in the harvest time when it become a guestion of concrete food vs. spiritual food (i.e. attend the mandatory church service half a day's travel away or stay and harvest your crop so your family doesn't starve come winter), did not appeal to people. Yet a farmer could go into the woods or fells and have a chat with God, it just did not register as established religion.

In a way, I think our Nordic societys still have that same old "woodsman spirituality". Come Christmas, Easter, All Saints' Day, our churches -- even the 1000+ seat grand cathedrals -- are packed, standing room only. On ordinary summer Sundays, however, Finns head to the woods and their cabins on the lakes, to have a chat with their Maker, if they so choose.

Yet here in Finland, 90% of kids choose to participate in the confirmation training & camps. The majority still want Church wedding and baptism for their children. Not to mention Christian fiunerals for themselves after it's over. We teach religion at school. Our conscription army employs Christian chaplains. Our National Parliament starts and ends it semester with a Christian church service, as do our schools. A friday morning prayer service is still the norm not only in our public schools but in many workplaces as well (including mine). We can't have a military parade or Independence Day without "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God". We can't end our schools semesters without "Hosanna" and "Suvivirsi" Summer Hymn.

Sure, they are part of our national Christian cultural heritage, but at the same time, they are also something more. As a Christian, I'd say "soul"; an atheist might say "national soul".

At the end of the day (and my long post :)), what do we have under the bottom line? Whether it is our (Personal Jesus) soul or our (Christian Cultural) National Soul, does it really matter?

I mean, does it really matter and has it ever?

The good ethics, if you will, are there, whether they arise from Jesus or from liberal humanism-something-whatever, as long as we Christians, "post/cultural-Christians" and conscience objectors/non-Christians together "do no harm" but respect every single one of our neighbour's dignity. I personally am more willing to work with a non-Christian who shares my values of unconditional human dignity than with an aggressive, intolerant Christian extremists with exclusive views of our common, shared, and inalienable human dignity.

Christians come out ahead in censuses in large part because of the cultural heritage. Furthermore, other countries have longer and far more deeply engrained christian culture and heritages than Scandinavia

Well, yes and no. Partly, I agree, partly no.

Generally, the rule of a thumb seems to be that the richer (materialistically the country) the less there is personal Jesus. Although I'm a Lutheran, I'm willing to admit that the Catholic-majority churches in second/third-world countries fare better in this, especially the Latin American as well as the Protestant-majority African countries such as Namibia and Ethiopia. They are where we were 150 years ago.

I don't know what's your personal experience with the token (at least) statistically "more Christian" industrialised liberal western democractic coutries like the United States of America. Mine is that in the US, "Christianity" is a) a political "must" regardless of "personal Jesus" or lack thereof, b) a similar societal "must" nevermind the possible lack of "personal Jesus" c) and therefore, very much an emperor's new clothes thing: a public self-delusion where everyone believes the others are more "pious" and therefore they must be very loud about their beliefs for appearance's sake. Now, the vast majority of the (US) congregation I got invited as a guest felt honestly delighted of the opportunity to offer me the token Lutheran their hospitality, yet a couple of them flat out asked about our financial situation and ability to contribute, with $$$-pictures in their eyes. Left really a bad taste in our mouth, being seen as nothing but a lucrative $$$, $$$-milk cows.

I want to stress this: that is not what our Lord Jesus Christ stand for. Just no. Thankfully, these were a minority.

You (TheReasoner) say/claim that Christianity is just another man-made religion with no basis in a divinity or spiritual reality. Jesus may have been real, and his teachings (Not Paul's) are quite good.

As a Christian, an inadequate follower of Jesus Christ, I say that Jesus Christ was all that and his teaching were good, really good. The problem is with us mainstream, avarage Christians: we fall short every step of the way. The very reason why we need our Jesus, after all. We have this Gold Standard, most of us even have our Good Intentions, but we fail, over and over again. But we try, and try, and try. We try being better persons every single day. I know I do. And I think that's still better than throwing your hands up, giving into to the lowest common denominator and just giving the finger at yours neighbours.
 
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Supreme

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Not ironically at all, IMO.

As Supreme wisely notes, Scandinavia or at least the Nordics, are still very heavily culturally Christian. Scandinavian/Nordic Christianity, imo, is often underestimated -- i.e. tends to be heavily personal, coupled with our non-talkative culture, at least here in Japanese-like "keeping social face" Finland -- especially when compared to more "showy" or "social/talkative" Christianity type of nations. Since you're a Norwegian yourself, obviously, here it's not just an interpretation and cultural barrier question.

I'm still a bit undecided and unsure how to call our Nordic societies re: religion though. "Cultural Christian" (pro-Christian heritage but no personal Jesus) became a tainted term when Breivik used that term to describe his beliefs. The Archbishop Emeritus of Canterbury recently introduced the term "post-Christian", but that doesn't sound quite right either. And of course, we the Nordic countries (or "Scandinavian" in popular parlance) are the same yet individual nevertheless. Denmark is not Norway is not Iceland is not Finland is not Sweden, yet we all have our common Lutheran heritage and our Nordic welfare state model and our common Nordic mind, sensibilities, attitudes, values. Hard to pinpoint yet whatever those are, I think we all *know* they are something we Nordics seem to share and agree on, something that sets "us" vs "them" the rest of the world, do you agree, TheReasoner?

I think that when it comes to the parable of Matthew 25, no other nations in the world comes closer than the Nordic Five. And I also do believe it has to do with those mysterious Lutheran ethics, considering that Finland, for examply, was part of the Orthodox Russian Empire for a century yet still managed to retain that certain something Nordic at heart, never becoming like other Russian next-door-neighbour states.

Before our first class Nordic "cradle-to-grave" welfare states that makes us # ones in the world in any and all categories of good life possible, we had the Lutheran Church-states doing the same job. From my Christian POV, before we had the Nordic welfare state model, we had the Lutheran Church basically doing the ground work: basic education, literacy, health care and health education, agri education, small loans, empowerment of women and moms, poor houses, pensions, raising general awareness.

Now, I realize that the (Lutheran) Church does not have a monopoly of morals. I think it is very much a chicken/egg question, looking at it from the POV of Finland's history; Norway has her own history, of course. We now know that there was never a point of history where the land of the Finns, Swedish or Russian, was "Christian" in a sense that almost 100% of the folks had "personal Jesus". Now as in "back then" (a.k.a. "the good old times"), it seemed to be more of matter of "cultural Christianity", if that makes sense. Folks went to the established church because they were expected to, as a certain number of church attendance was mandatory: too many AWOLS would elicit a "fire & brimstones" kind of public humiliation. No marriage license, for example, which for the young men, especially, was pretty harsh.

The reason why many opted to drop out, however, back then was the same as it remains today: they were too busy to attend a public ritual. People had personal faith, a yarning for spirituality, yet the rather rigid (not to mention) mandatory state church rituals, especially in the harvest time when it become a guestion of concrete food vs. spiritual food (i.e. attend the mandatory church service half a day's travel away or stay and harvest your crop so your family doesn't starve come winter), did not appeal to people. Yet a farmer could go into the woods or fells and have a chat with God, it just did not register as established religion.

In a way, I think our Nordic societys still have that same old "woodsman spirituality". Come Christmas, Easter, All Saints' Day, our churches -- even the 1000+ seat grand cathedrals -- are packed, standing room only. On ordinary summer Sundays, however, Finns head to the woods and their cabins on the lakes, to have a chat with their Maker, if they so choose.

Yet here in Finland, 90% of kids choose to participate in the confirmation training & camps. The majority still want Church wedding and baptism for their children. Not to mention Christian fiunerals for themselves after it's over. We teach religion at school. Our conscription army employs Christian chaplains. Our National Parliament starts and ends it semester with a Christian church service, as do our schools. A friday morning prayer service is still the norm not only in our public schools but in many workplaces as well (including mine). We can't have a military parade or Independence Day without "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God". We can't end our schools semesters without "Hosanna" and "Suvivirsi" Summer Hymn.

Sure, they are part of our national Christian cultural heritage, but at the same time, they are also something more. As a Christian, I'd say "soul"; an atheist might say "national soul".

At the end of the day (and my long post :)), what do we have under the bottom line? Whether it is our (Personal Jesus) soul or our (Christian Cultural) National Soul, does it really matter?

I mean, does it really matter and has it ever?

The good ethics, if you will, are there, whether they arise from Jesus or from liberal humanism-something-whatever, as long as we Christians, "post/cultural-Christians" and conscience objectors/non-Christians together "do no harm" but respect every single one of our neighbour's dignity. I personally am more willing to work with a non-Christian who shares my values of unconditional human dignity than with an aggressive, intolerant Christian extremists with exclusive views of our common, shared, and inalienable human dignity.



Well, yes and no. Partly, I agree, partly no.

Generally, the rule of a thumb seems to be that the richer (materialistically the country) the less there is personal Jesus. Although I'm a Lutheran, I'm willing to admit that the Catholic-majority churches in second/third-world countries fare better in this, especially the Latin American as well as the Protestant-majority African countries such as Namibia and Ethiopia. They are where we were 150 years ago.

I don't know what's your personal experience with the token (at least) statistically "more Christian" industrialised liberal western democractic coutries like the United States of America. Mine is that in the US, "Christianity" is a) a political "must" regardless of "personal Jesus" or lack thereof, b) a similar societal "must" nevermind the possible lack of "personal Jesus" c) and therefore, very much an emperor's new clothes thing: a public self-delusion where everyone believes the others are more "pious" and therefore they must be very loud about their beliefs for appearance's sake. Now, the vast majority of the (US) congregation I got invited as a guest felt honestly delighted of the opportunity to offer me the token Lutheran their hospitality, yet a couple of them flat out asked about our financial situation and ability to contribute, with $$$-pictures in their eyes. Left really a bad taste in our mouth, being seen as nothing but a lucrative $$$, $$$-milk cows.

I want to stress this: that is not what our Lord Jesus Christ stand for. Just no. Thankfully, these were a minority.

You (TheReasoner) say/claim that Christianity is just another man-made religion with no basis in a divinity or spiritual reality. Jesus may have been real, and his teachings (Not Paul's) are quite good.

As a Christian, an inadequate follower of Jesus Christ, I say that Jesus Christ was all that and his teaching were good, really good. The problem is with us mainstream, avarage Christians: we fall short every step of the way. The very reason why we need our Jesus, after all. We have this Gold Standard, most of us even have our Good Intentions, but we fail, over and over again. But we try, and try, and try. We try being better persons every single day. I know I do. And I think that's still better than throwing your hands up, giving into to the lowest common denominator and just giving the finger at yours neighbours.

A very good post, I just have a couple of issues with it on the technical side:

-Is Finland part of Scandinavia? I always got the impression that Scandinavia was Denmark, Norway, Sweden and often Iceland, as these countries speak very similar languages.

-Ethiopia is not Protestant majority. Most Ethiopians belong to the Ethopian Orthodox Church, which is *very* different from the Pentecostal Christianity you see in other parts of Africa.

Anyways, I think your post was a very interesting read.
 
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-Is Finland part of Scandinavia? I always got the impression that Scandinavia was Denmark, Norway, Sweden and often Iceland, as these countries speak very similar languages.

Yes, Scandinavia is the Scandinavian Peninsula's three Scandinavian-speaking monarchies Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.

If you want to talk about the "continental Scandinavia" and want to include Finland, but have a specific reason not to include the "islands" (Faroe Islands and Iceland) then you could use Fennoscandia or Fenno-Scandinavia, though you rarely see that used.

The Nordic countries covers the Lutheran Nordic welfare states and social-democracies and the geopolitical entity of Nordic Council: Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden + Faroe Islands, Greenland and Åland.

A rule of a thumb is that if you're talking about ancient vikings or the Scandinavian monarchies, use Scandinavia. Otherwise and especially if you are thinking about the Nordic goodies and the Nordic welfare state model, play it safe and call us the Nordic countries and you can't go wrong.

If you talk about the prosperity associated with our social-democractic welfare states, and you refer to it as the Scandinavian model, Danes, Swedes and Norwegians probably won't even notice, but for us Republican Finns and Icelanders it's a little slap in the face for being excluded from the royalty club, even when we know that outsiders tend to use Scandinavia when they mean Nordic, not unlike how we in turn tend to confuse British and English.

-Ethiopia is not Protestant majority. Most Ethiopians belong to the Ethopian Orthodox Church, which is *very* different from the Pentecostal Christianity you see in other parts of Africa.

My bad. I had the large and fast growing Namibian and Ethiopian Lutheran churches in mind. Lutherans are the largest Christian groups in Namibia, and their largest Lutheran church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Namibia, is a "godchild" of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland. Whereas the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus has outgrown her Nordic Lutheran "godparents" to become the largest Lutheran church body in the world with 6.5 million members and counting. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania also has some 6 million members, surpassing the Church of Sweden. A "mission accomplished"! :)

Anyways, I think your post was a very interesting read.
:)
 
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TheReasoner

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Not ironically at all, IMO.

As Supreme wisely notes, Scandinavia or at least the Nordics, are still very heavily culturally Christian. Scandinavian/Nordic Christianity, imo, is often underestimated -- i.e. tends to be heavily personal, coupled with our non-talkative culture, at least here in Japanese-like "keeping social face" Finland -- especially when compared to more "showy" or "social/talkative" Christianity type of nations. Since you're a Norwegian yourself, obviously, here it's not just an interpretation and cultural barrier question.

I'm still a bit undecided and unsure how to call our Nordic societies re: religion though. "Cultural Christian" (pro-Christian heritage but no personal Jesus) became a tainted term when Breivik used that term to describe his beliefs. The Archbishop Emeritus of Canterbury recently introduced the term "post-Christian", but that doesn't sound quite right either. And of course, we the Nordic countries (or "Scandinavian" in popular parlance) are the same yet individual nevertheless. Denmark is not Norway is not Iceland is not Finland is not Sweden, yet we all have our common Lutheran heritage and our Nordic welfare state model and our common Nordic mind, sensibilities, attitudes, values. Hard to pinpoint yet whatever those are, I think we all *know* they are something we Nordics seem to share and agree on, something that sets "us" vs "them" the rest of the world, do you agree, TheReasoner?
We have our Lutheran heritage, yes. We also have our pagan heritage, which you later note, is also very strong once you think about it. This does not mean we can attribute the social boons our culture has created with either as a source, at least not a sole source. I am not a sociologist, but from what little I know of our cultural history many of the factors which built up our society to what it is came from the fairly areligious left side of the political spectrum. Sure, plenty also came from christian believers. But virtually any religious belief may have instilled the same compassion. This is not an argument for christianity's validity. Even if it had been the sole undisputed reason why our cultures have advanced to where they are this would not validate the belief as anything more than morally sound.
I think that when it comes to the parable of Matthew 25, no other nations in the world comes closer than the Nordic Five. And I also do believe it has to do with those mysterious Lutheran ethics, considering that Finland, for examply, was part of the Orthodox Russian Empire for a century yet still managed to retain that certain something Nordic at heart, never becoming like other Russian next-door-neighbour states.

Before our first class Nordic "cradle-to-grave" welfare states that makes us # ones in the world in any and all categories of good life possible, we had the Lutheran Church-states doing the same job. From my Christian POV, before we had the Nordic welfare state model, we had the Lutheran Church basically doing the ground work: basic education, literacy, health care and health education, agri education, small loans, empowerment of women and moms, poor houses, pensions, raising general awareness.

Now, I realize that the (Lutheran) Church does not have a monopoly of morals. I think it is very much a chicken/egg question, looking at it from the POV of Finland's history; Norway has her own history, of course. We now know that there was never a point of history where the land of the Finns, Swedish or Russian, was "Christian" in a sense that almost 100% of the folks had "personal Jesus". Now as in "back then" (a.k.a. "the good old times"), it seemed to be more of matter of "cultural Christianity", if that makes sense. Folks went to the established church because they were expected to, as a certain number of church attendance was mandatory: too many AWOLS would elicit a "fire & brimstones" kind of public humiliation. No marriage license, for example, which for the young men, especially, was pretty harsh.

The reason why many opted to drop out, however, back then was the same as it remains today: they were too busy to attend a public ritual. People had personal faith, a yarning for spirituality, yet the rather rigid (not to mention) mandatory state church rituals, especially in the harvest time when it become a guestion of concrete food vs. spiritual food (i.e. attend the mandatory church service half a day's travel away or stay and harvest your crop so your family doesn't starve come winter), did not appeal to people. Yet a farmer could go into the woods or fells and have a chat with God, it just did not register as established religion.

In a way, I think our Nordic societys still have that same old "woodsman spirituality". Come Christmas, Easter, All Saints' Day, our churches -- even the 1000+ seat grand cathedrals -- are packed, standing room only. On ordinary summer Sundays, however, Finns head to the woods and their cabins on the lakes, to have a chat with their Maker, if they so choose.

Yet here in Finland, 90% of kids choose to participate in the confirmation training & camps. The majority still want Church wedding and baptism for their children. Not to mention Christian fiunerals for themselves after it's over. We teach religion at school. Our conscription army employs Christian chaplains. Our National Parliament starts and ends it semester with a Christian church service, as do our schools. A friday morning prayer service is still the norm not only in our public schools but in many workplaces as well (including mine). We can't have a military parade or Independence Day without "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God". We can't end our schools semesters without "Hosanna" and "Suvivirsi" Summer Hymn.
Yes, in Norway too the majority are members of the church. I am, I am even active. But I am most certainly not a christian, not anymore.

Sure, they are part of our national Christian cultural heritage, but at the same time, they are also something more. As a Christian, I'd say "soul"; an atheist might say "national soul".

At the end of the day (and my long post :)), what do we have under the bottom line? Whether it is our (Personal Jesus) soul or our (Christian Cultural) National Soul, does it really matter?

I mean, does it really matter and has it ever?
I would say that it does. Truth matters, it is never good to embrace untruth as it can lead to serious repercussions down the line. I realize this in itself is a slippery slope fallacy, but I do find Kant's imperative approach to be sound in this regard. As an ideal approach I do think it might benefit us all to minimize ignorance, bias and superstition.
The good ethics, if you will, are there, whether they arise from Jesus or from liberal humanism-something-whatever, as long as we Christians, "post/cultural-Christians" and conscience objectors/non-Christians together "do no harm" but respect every single one of our neighbour's dignity. I personally am more willing to work with a non-Christian who shares my values of unconditional human dignity than with an aggressive, intolerant Christian extremists with exclusive views of our common, shared, and inalienable human dignity.


I have no problem whatsoever with believers of any sort. Provided, and this is an important clause, they are also rational and compassionate. Sadly, many believers of any faith are anything but. Statistically speaking, if we discuss christianity, there is the matter of the inverse correlation between faith density and humanitarian trend/tendency if you will. True, this does not imply causation but I do think it is something social scientists really should look into, even if it is more or less a PC suicide.
Well, yes and no. Partly, I agree, partly no.

Generally, the rule of a thumb seems to be that the richer (materialistically the country) the less there is personal Jesus. Although I'm a Lutheran, I'm willing to admit that the Catholic-majority churches in second/third-world countries fare better in this, especially the Latin American as well as the Protestant-majority African countries such as Namibia and Ethiopia. They are where we were 150 years ago.

Yes, there often is that connection. And it makes sense, in adversity cognitive abilities shut down. Poverty may in fact reduce your IQ by around ten points, that is the difference between a normal person and a heavy alcoholic. You cannot think straight, and you are far more prone to make mistakes. Religion offers hope where reality may not. Belief in the supernatural is comforting, when life is hellish and hope is lost, belief in immortality and a greater cause can let you keep going past your threshold. This does not, in any way, mean those beliefs are right. But they can be beneficial to your survival and coping. Reduce strain on a human mind and rationality may get the upper hand in our inately irrational minds, conquering superstitions of yore.

I don't know what's your personal experience with the token (at least) statistically "more Christian" industrialised liberal western democractic coutries like the United States of America. Mine is that in the US, "Christianity" is a) a political "must" regardless of "personal Jesus" or lack thereof, b) a similar societal "must" nevermind the possible lack of "personal Jesus" c) and therefore, very much an emperor's new clothes thing: a public self-delusion where everyone believes the others are more "pious" and therefore they must be very loud about their beliefs for appearance's sake. Now, the vast majority of the (US) congregation I got invited as a guest felt honestly delighted of the opportunity to offer me the token Lutheran their hospitality, yet a couple of them flat out asked about our financial situation and ability to contribute, with $$$-pictures in their eyes. Left really a bad taste in our mouth, being seen as nothing but a lucrative $$$, $$$-milk cows.

I want to stress this: that is not what our Lord Jesus Christ stand for. Just no. Thankfully, these were a minority.
Yees, people say they are a minority, but is that accurate? Do you have hard numbers or is this your personal belief?

You (TheReasoner) say/claim that Christianity is just another man-made religion with no basis in a divinity or spiritual reality. Jesus may have been real, and his teachings (Not Paul's) are quite good.
Nope. I say I consider that the most likely nature of christianity. Prove it is true and I will spin on a dime.
As a Christian, an inadequate follower of Jesus Christ, I say that Jesus Christ was all that and his teaching were good, really good.
The same is the case with many others. Buddha for example. Also, I am not so sure the whole "I come not to bring peace, but a sword" is good.
The problem is with us mainstream, avarage Christians: we fall short every step of the way. The very reason why we need our Jesus, after all. We have this Gold Standard, most of us even have our Good Intentions, but we fail, over and over again.

Most humans have good intentions. Even Breivik thought his intentions were good. We fool ourselves all the time. And our intentions may be pristine, that does not help much if we are severely off target. And frankly, I do think much of the core teachings in christianity is pretty twisted. Hell is a prime example. The all loving, all knowing, all powerful god made a place of eternal torture where he puts human beings for the crime of not believing in him? Then he proceeds to seed such truth as... Well, nothing. All there is is a collection of texts from a nomadic, later settled deeply religious desert tribe(s). What other evidence is there? Well, if you read the bible literally (or parts of it at least) you can test some parts of it. For example the origin of the human species. The bible is dead wrong on it if read literally. The age of the earth, too. Dead wrong. Biology - the bible makes several claims with regards to the digestive habits of some animals, for example the mountain badger which according to the bible chews cud. It does not. The bible also claims the earth does not move, if read literally. It does. I could go on, but I assume you are not a literalist. Most moderate, sensible christians are not. So that brings us to the fruits of the spirit, and the supposed answers to prayers. The first seems to be inversely correlated with belief density as mentioned. The second is, and yes I agree you can't really study that very well, found to be nonexistent whenever studied. Incidentally, the belief in answered prayers do line up perfectly with human tendencies with respect to confirmation bias and self-trickery.

Point is: You believe something. Alright. That is your prerogative. But where is your evidence?

But we try, and try, and try. We try being better persons every single day. I know I do. And I think that's still better than throwing your hands up, giving into to the lowest common denominator and just giving the finger at yours neighbours.
Yes, it is. But others try too. I try, I do not really know many who do not. Christian or otherwise. I do not see that being a point in christianity's favor, this is a human trait more than anything else. We try. Mostly.
 
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