The same goes for any major religion too.
No, no not really, and especially not on a global scale anywhere near approaching Christianity.
The same goes for any major religion too.
I'm sorry, but I don't believe you're comment is true. Most established religions have been founded upon or benefited from armed and/or political conflict.No, no not really, and especially not on a global scale anywhere near approaching Christianity.
Islam was spread by the sword on a level that rivals, or even surpasses, Christianity depending on the metrics used.No, no not really, and especially not on a global scale anywhere near approaching Christianity.
Tenet.And the big one was "is Jesus the Messiah as foretold by Jewish prophecy?" The central tenant of all Christian denominations is that yes, he is.
Thank you.Tenet.
All of this is rooted in Jesus' role as the Messiah though. If you accept that he is, then all of this comes with it.And I disagree. The central tenet of Christianity is "Jesus died to 'save' people from the hell he'll send you to if you don't believe this".
With the belief that he didn't stay dead and him being the son of God being the next most important ones.
Believe what you want, disagree with what you want, but this is a topic I've got a lot of scholarly background in.I disagree wholly with large sections of both of your comments, but I frankly don't care enough about any of this to continue.
Sure.believe what you want, disagree with what you want, but this is a topic I've got a lot of scholarly background in.
sighSure.
It wasn't a hot take, it's clearly not drive by as I'm here, but leaving don't worry, and I'm 'bailing' because frankly I got tired of having these scholarly arguments years ago after this topic was my own special interest for a decade.sigh
I legit don't know what you hope to accomplish with drive-by hot takes and then bailing the moment anyone provides even a hint of an opposing opinion, but you do you.
My apologizes for assuming that your position was based on something so shallow. That's my bad and I'm sorry I implied it.I disagree because of my own research and scholarly work. Not because I'm punching up or trying to be the cool nonbeliever type.
...........part of me felt more drawn to my mother's side of my family.......simply by virtue of being around my mother's side. So I considered converting to Anglican Christianity for a bit.
.........He was also a Catholic. And a devout one............But that's how I felt.
The first one was a matter of theology. I was questioning my identity as a Jewish person,.........And Anglican Christianity seemed to "fit."
......I had to ask myself theological questions. And the big one was "is Jesus the Messiah as foretold by Jewish prophecy?".....And I worked on it, I thought about it. I considered it, and it just didn't click for me.
The second time? Well... I would have converted out of love. Funnily enough what my mom did......
Funnily enough I'm dating another Catholic guy now......
Christian history is fascinating to me- both the good and bad- and I have friends and family who are Christians......and I admit that as a moral standard Jesus does pretty well for himself. If you actually listen to what he himself says it's a good set of lessons to live by, by and large.
I have a historical interest in it all, and had a theological interest at key points in my life,......
Or maybe, just maybe, and hear me out here, someone who belongs to two minority groups is gonna have a hard time meeting other people who happen to be in those same two marginalized groups. You also don't get to choose your parents, and his mother, while raised Anglican, had converted to Judaism.It sounds like the universe is trying to tell you something (e.g.. Catholic boyfriend, Anglican Christian mother, being drawn, feeling, Christianity seeming to fit, having an innate fascination and interest in it, etc.). And God seems to be sending the Hound of Heaven for you, to bring you home.
Great advice.Empty your mind, make it totally blank. Park your brain at the door, if you will.
The original statement was that Christianity spread by and was enforced by violence, not merely that its history contained violence.Hinduism is such a tough nut to crack because it's just so old and doesn't so much have a founding narrative as much as it just sort of emerged from Vedic beliefs, but even Hindu scriptures tell of wars between gods and the Hindu princely states were always fighting each other and others.
Buddhism, which in the west has a very peaceful image, was the religion of the upper class elites in much of East Asia (funnily enough Catholic Christianity, with its emphasis on a personal relationship with the divine, was seen as the egalitarian option) and had inter-faith feuds.
Both Buddhism and Hindusim are older than Christianity, and Hinduism has about half as many followers (while Buddhism has half that many); "sheer volume" cannot account for a difference in the amount of violence on the scale of what actually exists.Attacking Christianity is the ultimate "punching up" move in the West, but it's about on par with other faiths when it comes to conversion through conquest, with it and its major rival Islam only really so far ahead of everyone else due to sheer volume.
Couldn't turning it down so many times despite the unavoidable barrage of "chances" indicate the exact opposite?It sounds like the universe is trying to tell you something (e.g.. Catholic boyfriend, Anglican Christian mother, being drawn, feeling, Christianity seeming to fit, having an innate fascination and interest in it, etc.).
You are literally saying "be gullible".Empty your mind, make it totally blank. Park your brain at the door, if you will. Don't let your ego get in the way. Shut off your brain and listen to your heart.
Yes, you are your brain. Consciousness is an emergent property of the brain. There is no such thing as a "soul".You are not your brain, or your body, or your accumulations, or your achievements.