Sad news, boys, I have an extremely busy month ahead of me. As this thread has turned into "Bluelight Vs Raas", putting thought into all the replies becomes very time-consuming. Though I enjoy it and feel it is productive in sharpening my own understanding of religion, I must put it aside for now and concentrate on other important affairs. It's a shame because I felt a couple of the posts... were getting sorta half-decent..
I've given one last mega-post, but after this I must vanish from BL for a month.
How anyone can really literally believe the creation story I don't know. In saying that of course everyone is entitiled to believe what they want. The bible seems to be a big book of myths and stories that has survived and been heavily promoted.
Shambles said:
Garden of Eden? Never happened.
The Flood? Never happened.
The Exodus? Never happened
Thing with the Garden of Eden story...
Whoever was writing it, has a job to explain to us why we're on this planet, why we encounter curses, our sinful nature, temptation and obediance to God.
Now, as a method of purporting this important information to us, the author illustrates his supposed knowledge, by means of a story. The book tells a story to demonstrate all of these points.
Was there an
actual garden of Eden where eve was talking to a Snake? I highly doubt it. But that is not the purpose of the story - it's not meant to be a biography of Eve and Adam life - but a story to teach others why we're here. Genesis is one of my favourite OT books, before I was a Christian I enjoyed several verses.
A modern-day equivalent would be a fictional film, made to teach a point. The actors, story's and plot never really happen... but the film is made to create awareness of an issue (EG - The film - "Who's life is it anyway", not a true story, but created to raise awareness of euthanasia beliefs) and the film director uses the cast and plot as an avenue to express his beliefs and knowledge.
Same goes with Noah really. The story doesn't make much sense. If God wanted to kill off all the wicked, in his omnipotence, he could have just created a mass plague, or given all the evil ones heart attacks. Saves Noah all the stress of making a boat and having to find all the animals. I doubt it really happened, but the story serves it's point in teaching a lesson or 2 about God.
Creationalism
I've always dismissed creationalism as it doesn't make sense in the face of scientific evidence. Only recently however, I'm starting to realise it could have been a lot more accurate than we first believed:
Think what a day actually is. It is the sun orbitting around the planet for one cycle.
Now, considering the sun wasn't actually created until "Day 4", the creation of earth in "7 Days" can in no way be the 24-hour period days that we are familiar with.
In reality (or extra-reality, or something) If the planet we live on was created, the creation could be comparable to a computer programmer making a world on your favourite computer game (of course, a trillion times more complex)... The variety of animals, lands and elements of the earth we know... would have been predesigned.
Now evolution
may well have been the method of implementation for bringing all these designs into fruition. But do you really think God and his angels would sit around for millions of years for the plan to slowly take effect? Of course not. Time in heaven... would run differently than time in this realm.
When we speed up the frame rate of a computer game, press fast forward on a video player... skip the boring, long, introduction on your favourite song on youtube... So God, I imagine, Could have watched "millions of years of evolution" in our time, in a matter of seconds.. in heaven... on his uber-complicated PC system after millions of years of processor updates.
CornishMan said:
Like Sir Richard Branson, or Bill Gates?
I imagine they're struggling to find sense and fairness in their lives as we speak
Yeah I guess so. They're obviously a bit chuffed at how the cookie has crumbled for them, but if they saw no logical sense in the crumble of that cookie,it could lead to atheism, for sure..
raas_2012 said:
At this point I have to respectively discontinue. Never really spoken in depth to Bhuddists/Muslims and their experiences.
Shambles said:
And nor do you need to. Followers of all religions obviously believe what they believe for a reason. Or several reasons. In most cases it's simply an accident of birth - if your parents were Jewish you would be a Jew and accept that nasty ol' OT as being the divinely inspired word of god and see the NT as little more than misguided at best and heretical at worst. If you happened to be born in Pakistan you would most likely see Jesus as just another prophet - almost (but not quite) as good as Mohammed. If you were born in Egypt three thousand years ago you would worship Ra, Set, Thoth et al. Odin, Thor, Loki and chums if a Viking. Just so happened that you live in a predominently Christian (well, primarliy agnostic/atheist in truth) country so naturally gravitated toward one of the 35000+ Christian denominations.
If you were born Jewish, in a Muslim, Buddhist or Hindu country, in an ancient foreign land, or any one of a gazillion other possibilities you would follow a different religion. And you would know you had it right cos you would see interventions, miracles, signs and wonders which were clearly caused by whichever deity or deities you were arbitrarily assigned by happenstance. You would have direct personal spiritual experience of this arbitrarily assigned deity/deities. Your prayers would be answered. Except when they weren't. They move in mysterious ways these deity thingies apparently so any action - or lack thereof - is further proof of what you already know to be true because it's all so very obvious that surely everyone must see it. And most do see it. Because you see what you want to see and find ways to make it fit with your pre-existing beliefs.
Nice surmise. And a popular arguement against religious faith; I've had this one argued at me before and it's something I have considered. Though there is clearly a lot of truth in that your place and time of birth can determine your religion, I don't feel it's applicable to myself.
I was bought up in a Christian family, and was Christian as a child. At this point your surmise holds true. However I rejected it all in my early teens. By the age of 17 I was quite confident Christiannity would be something no longer asociated with myself. And I too, was laughing contemptuously at those creationalists. If I could pick a religion i probably would have gone for Bhuddism... I love that discipline of those Shaolin monks and their cool martial art tricks. Puts the Christian monks to shame. And have you ever see Bruce Lee replicate the stuff they do??! [I'm rambling now...]
At the age of 21 I found God. Wasn't a while later until I considered myself Christian. Sadly it gets highly personal/subjective from this point, but I feel God lead me to this religion, and the more I became involved in it the more it made sense and rang of truth. It wasn't a case of picking a convenient religion...
coors light said:
besides your intuition how is your god real? also seen as the Jewish, Muslim and Christian religions are all abrahamic religions would you agree that all worship the same god in a sense the one creator of all religions??
It's a very good point. All these religions are worshipping the same God. I tried to get onto spirituality-forums.com, to discuss with those of other religions their experiences....would be mightily interesting to see what they say, and if it was comparable to my own experiences. Sadly the forum is full with members and won't let you register any more.
As my involvement with those of other religions is still non-existant, I don't really feel in a position to give you a good response.