Eveleivibe
Ex-Bluelighter
Of all the deck one would presume Raas is The Joke at best...
EDIT: Joker I meant The Joker. Obviously.
hahahahahahaha
I miss Raasy, tbh.
Evey
Of all the deck one would presume Raas is The Joke at best...
EDIT: Joker I meant The Joker. Obviously.
Well, the same as before - if religion was involved in any arena it was as a way to mobilise the masses for some goal related to power. Hitler's anti-semitism wasn't about religion as much as racism and bogus race 'science' - invented and grown by us and america to justify our own genocides and imperialism. In this general sense of the worldview of society, science and politics do the same job as religion - it's just the current set of ideas which has to be twisted to sell the aims of power to the masses.
... it was quite easy to use propaganda in those days to persuade the masses as there were no multimedia as there is now thus people were more ignorant.
Yup. Multimedia certainly prevents the use of propaganda and thwarts ignorance at every turn nowadays.
Shambles: 'Even' tibetan buddhists end up sounding rational most of the time because the simple message at the core of the religion is quite rational (desire leads to suffering, be compassionate) - and also i quite like the spicy edge given to tibetan buddhism by its shamanic heritage (as a non-buddhist) - the pitcures are well cool, and the book of the dead is trippy (through a leary lens).
I enjoyed reading this. I tend to agree. And it was quite easy to use propaganda in those days to persuade the masses as there were no multimedia as there is now thus people were more ignorant. It is very interesting how you say that science n politics can have the same persuasion powers as religion, very interesting indeed.
Anyone has anything to add?
Enjoying this![]()
Evey
Oh I completely agree (and on Quakers too) but Buddhism does tend to get a bit of a free pass on the "weird shit" side of things cos most folk tend to only think of it in terms of meditation and koans and general "inscrutable but sounds kinda kewl" factors without actually delving any deeper. I am well aware this does not apply to you but - like Issy was also wont to do - feel it worth pointing out less familiar (to some) aspects of things. Issy's personal fave was all that stuff about Buddhist fuedilsm and ISIS-style treatment of those essentially enslaved to an all-powerful theocratic overlordship. There are also incidents of Buddhist Terrorism. True story.
To be clear, I'm not picking on Buddhists any more than any other religion - or indeed any pseudo-religious fundamantalist worldviews like the far-right and far-left of the political spectrum) - I just have a deep distrust of any fundamentalism which does beg the question why those that apparently hold closest to the fundamental tenets of the texts of their religion also tend to be the furthest from the spirit of said religions (or political views and the like).
There are definite bad bits in tibetan buddhist history, not least their oppresion of the very Bon-Po that influenced them. And in other buddhist history, there was a pretty bloodthirsty thai buddhist female leader if i remember (plus the modern racist ones in burma). Just as with christianity, that sort of horrible stuff is only possible by ignoring/reinterpreting improtant parts of the religion.
Issy's personal fave was all that stuff about Buddhist fuedilsm and ISIS-style treatment of those essentially enslaved to an all-powerful theocratic overlordship. There are also incidents of Buddhist Terrorism. True story.
I agree, but i suspect that it's only really when religion gets heavily tied up in the social/political/economic stuff that it gets problematic in the infamous ways it does, so i hesitate to ascribe the problems solely to religion in itself in the manner of new athiests.
As for doctrine, i just think it's self evident which bits are the core parts of those religions with a bit of thought; when people give over the judgement to some priestly authority who can then bamboozle them with juju/theology to tell them why up is down, why the 'eye of a needle' is some gate in jerusalem, or just keep the bible in a language no one can read, the self evident obvious message can be twisted and diluted in the interest of those authorities (or their sponsors in the state). The truth at the heart of those religions is plain to see to me - the peripheral details can be argued over, but you can't really argue with 'desire leads to suffering; be compassionate' (or 'love your enemy/turn the other cheek/do unto others..'). It takes quite an effort to make anything bad fit with those messages (they've had centuries of trying now though) - Sure that process of centralisation seems so inevitable in religious history to be inherent in some way to 'organised' religion, but i won't blame/reject the original core message for that (i suppose that as soon as a religion is 'organised' it's sort of part of the state anyway).
rickolasnice said:http://www.bluelight.org/vb/threads/...1#post11877888
rickolasnice said:Ok raas.. here's a few you still haven't answered: (Not that you've really answered any of them in any way other than making excuses)
According to Matthew, Jesus was born during the reign of Herod the Great (Matthew 2:1). According to Luke, Jesus was born during the first census in Israel, while Quirinius was governor of Syria (Luke 2:2). This is impossible because Herod died in March of 4 BC and the census took place in 6 and 7 AD, about 10 years after Herod's death.
In Matthew, Mark and Luke the last supper takes place on the first day of the Passover (Matthew 26:17, Mark 14:12, Luke 22:7). In John's gospel it takes place a day earlier and Jesus is crucified on the first day of the Passover (John 19:14).
There are literally loads, loads more (There's around 4 different accounts on 3 different points about what happened at the tomb).. but i won't bury you in them just yet.
Rickolasnice said:Did you ever find out why there are so many contradictions and impossibilities with the story of Jesus?
Hope all are well.
http://www.comereason.org/roman-census.asp said:The Governorship of Quirinius
In studying this problem, there are two main solutions that Christian scholars offer, and each has some good merit. The first point is the terminology Luke uses when writing about Quirinius' governorship over Syria. In stating that Quirinius controlled the Syrian area, Luke doesn't use the official political title of "Governor" ("legatus"), but the broader term "hegemon" which is a ruling officer or procurator. This means that Quirinius may not have been the official governor of Judea, but he was in charge of the census because he was a more capable and trusted servant of Rome than the more inept Saturninus.
Justin Martyr's Apology supports this view, writing that Quirinius was a "procurator", not a governor of the area of Judea.6 As Gleason Archer writes, "In order to secure efficiency and dispatch, it may well have been that Augustus put Quirinius in charge of the census-enrollment in Syria between the close of Saturninus's administration and the beginning of Varus's term of service in 7 B.C. It was doubtless because of his competent handling of the 7 B.C. census that Augustus later put him in charge of the 7 A.D. census."7 Archer also says that Roman history records Quirinius leading the effort to quell rebels in that area at exactly that time, so such a political arrangement is not a stretch.
If Quirinius did hold such a position, then we have no contradiction. The first census was taken during the time of Jesus birth, but Josephus' census would have come later. This option seems to me to be entirely reasonable
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14341a.htm said:The defenders of this opinion claim that there is only an apparent contradiction and that the differing statements may be reconciled. For the Jews calculated their festivals and Sabbaths from sunset to sunset: thus the Sabbath began after sunset on Friday and ended at sunset on Saturday. This style is employed by the synoptic Gospels, while St. John, writing about twenty-six years after the destruction of Jerusalem, when Jewish law and customs no longer prevailed, may well have used the Roman method of computing time from midnight to midnight.
Religions are based on books and I really don't see how it's self evident which bits are the core parts.. Who decides?
Religions are based on books and I really don't see how it's self evident which bits are the core parts.. Who decides?...
But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence.
Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection
To be discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that the word of God be not blasphemed.