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EADD Theology Megathread

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Radio 4 did a good series about faith, it was by the ex bishop of edinburgh Richard Holloway. He took it right back to cavemen needing to explain thunder and lightening.
Holloway was educated at Kelham Theological College, Edinburgh Theological College and the Union Theological Seminary, New York City. Between 1959 and 1986 he was a curate, vicar and rector at various parishes in England, Scotland and the United States. He was Bishop of Edinburgh from 1986 and was elected Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church in 1992. He resigned from these positions in 2000 and is now regarded as one of the most outspoken and controversial figures in the Church,[1] having taken an agnostic worldview and commenting widely on issues concerning religious belief in the modern world. His own theological position has become increasingly radical and he has recently described himself as an "after-religionist".[2]
Holloway is well known for his support of progressive causes, including campaigning on human rights for gay and lesbian people in both Church and State. He is a patron of LGBT Youth Scotland, an organisation dedicated to the inclusion of LGBT young people in the life of Scotland. He has questioned and addressed complex ethical issues in the areas of sexuality, drugs and bioethics. He has written extensively on these topics, being the author of more than 20 books exploring their relationship with modern religion.

I like that, 'after-religionist' :)

The program was in 15 minute chunks so easy to digest http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01j8n4d/episodes/guide

I only heard a couple but they were good, although I'm sure some would consider him the anti christ.
 
But what is the point of setting up such a weird, flawed and unfair system, Raas? Why prove your existence to some and not to others?

Seems He feels some individuals do not need to be included in the "Search for God", and their role becomes to help others know of his existance and aid them in their persuit of God. Your perception that the system is set up so that we'll all fail unless we've recieved divine intervention is not true. The system is set it up to so that if people are willing, they can find God. "He who seeks will find", as scripture puts it. Beauty is all around us, it comes down to the individual to recognise it.

In regards to the "eternal suffering". God doesn't put you in hell. You put yourself there. Whatever suffering you incurr in the next life is your own doing. A repercussion of neglecting truth.

various instruction manuals provided demonstrably untrue for the most part?

Well many people have been inspired and amazed by that instruction manual. So it certainly plays it's part. By saying it is "untrue" are you referring to those OT stories where God is a warmonger tyrant? Because we've been through all of that before. Did you take nothing in?

Also, there are plenty of Biblical examples where people supposedly know for a fact that this god exists and still choose to disobey him or worship some other god so the whole basis of your argument is flawed.

I think it's undeniable that the possibility of no God exposes more evil in humans. If you re-read my post I wrote "that it exposes more evil in humans... ", I was never saying there weren't those who would disobey God regardless.

If you think of the case of the "Moors murders", Brady was persuading Hindley that "there is no God" as a reason to continue with their murders. For a lot of people who want to indulge in evil, the idea that "there is no God" can become an incentive, as it was in the aforementioned case.
 
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Radio 4 did a good series about faith, it was by the ex bishop of edinburgh Richard Holloway. He took it right back to cavemen needing to explain thunder and lightening.


I like that, 'after-religionist' :)

The program was in 15 minute chunks so easy to digest http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01j8n4d/episodes/guide

I only heard a couple but they were good, although I'm sure some would consider him the anti christ.

B&W: Thanks for the linky. Interesting term that "after-religionist". Not quite sure what he means by it (will have to check out your linky) but I'd imagine it would mean something like he takes the good and sensible stuff from religion and rejects the bad, ridiculous and harmful aspects. Can see why he's an ex-bishop... especially as he "has taken an agnostic worldview". Oddly enough, the higher up the theological chain you go the more common such "non-traditional" interpretations of religious beliefs seem to get. Tends to be the rank and file preists, vicars, preachers and so on that are biggest on very basic and rigid interpretations. The drop out rate at seminaries tends to be quite high for similar reasons, I suspect - the more you learn about your faith the more questionable it becomes.

He sounds like a decent enough chap who's heading the right way. At least he's accepted that human rights and equality are worthwhile things to fight for even if it's not quite what a basic reading of scripture dictates. It's a step in the right direction but I do wonder how he can square it with Biblical teachings. I suppose that's why he "has taken an agnostic worldview" really. Halfway house. Perhaps not surprising given he's devoted most of his life to something he now appears to have serious questions and issues with. Rome wasn't built in a day and all that.

Raas: I'll work out a reply to your specific points in a bit but all you've said is basic apologetics and you've missed the point of most of what I said anyway. Thanks for taking the time to type it out but once again I am aware of standard apologetics and everything you said is paperthin stuff. I could probably refute my own arguments more robustly. Sorry for sounding a tad dismissive but I'd really prefer to know what you (and other believers) believe yourself rather than just paraphrasing stock answers from any apologetics site you care to name. At least check out some of the more sophisticated ones in future maybe ;)<3
 
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^ last time I get blaimed "These ramblings are just your own interpretation", this time I give you the answers by the book and I get "I'd rather believe what you think yourself".

I can't win.
 
Don't think I said "these ramblings are just your own intepretations" did I? If I put it like that I can only assume I was drunk and stroppy so apologise.

I presume what I meant was that I didn't see how you arrived at your interpretations - why you chose to accept some parts of scripture and not others. Having it both ways, as it were. Saying that the "bad" OT stuff must have been altered or interpolated (them bleedin' pharisees at it again :!) for example. How do you know? Basically, what is your interpretation/answer/belief to the questions and objections raised by myself and others, how and why you chose those particular interpretations/answers/objections over others and why those alternatives are wrong. Is perhaps asking a bit much, I realise, but am interested cos I just don't see it no matter how hard I look. In fact the harder I look the harder it is to make any sense out of.

Raas said:
Seems He feels some individuals do not need to be included in the "Search for God", and their role becomes to help others know of his existance and aid them in their persuit of God. Your perception that the system is set up so that we'll all fail unless we've recieved divine intervention is not true. The system is set it up to so that if people are willing, they can find God. "He who seeks will find", as scripture puts it. Beauty is all around us, it comes down to the individual to recognise it.

I didn't say it was set up so we'd all fail, I said it was set up heavily skewed to making failing "the test" almost inevitible for anybody who really looks into this stuff. Expecting faith in the face of all evidence to the contrary. That's perverse.

Beauty and horror are all around us, yes. And... ? How is that relevant? Neither are evidence for anything but aesthetic appreciation and the brutality of nature.

In regards to the "eternal suffering". God doesn't put you in hell. You put yourself there. Whatever suffering you incurr in the next life is your own doing. A repercussion of neglecting truth.

Yes he does. He didn't have to create such a place (obviously I don't believe he did anything due to lack of existence but we'll take that as read, eh? ;)). It was a choice and he apparently decided that eternal torment was the best option and make it incredibly easy (by many interpretations anyway - I know there is a very wide range of beliefs about Hell and precious little actually said about it in the book) to be sent there too for good measure. Infinite punishment for finite crimes as it's often succinctly put. By definition this is unjust.

Well many people have been inspired and amazed by that instruction manual. So it certainly plays it's part. By saying it is "untrue" are you referring to those OT stories where God is a warmonger tyrant? Because we've been through all of that before. Did you take nothing in?

And many people have been inspired to acts of horrific inhumanity - argument works both ways and the horrendous stuff vastly outweighs the good deeds imo. You don't need me to list the evils various religions have committed in the name of their god(s) nor the good deeds done by believers.

When I spoke of large sections of the Bible being demonstrably untrue I was talking about the obvious stuff: Garden of Eden, The Flood, The Exodus and so on. Probably the majority of the OT can certainly be shown not to have ever happened. Or if it did all traces of evidence have been miracled out of existence so it looks that way (which would again be rather perverse to say the least). Some of this stuff is absolutely fundamental to the theology so is not just a few unimportant quibbles. Not even the standard response that such sections must be metaphorical, allegorical, poetic and so on really cuts it either. How is it determined which parts are not to be taken too literally? If there was no Adam and Eve there was no Fall, no Fall no need for the Crucifiction. That's fairly fundamental stuff. And if most of the... more "out there" OT stuff is meant as metaphorical lessons then why are they such bad lessons? Why is wickedness and immorality so frequently rewarded and held up as something to aspire to?

If you think of the case of the "Moors murders", Brady was persuading Hindley that "there is no God" as a reason to continue with their murders. For a lot of people who want to indulge in evil, the idea that "there is no God" can become an incentive, as it was in the aforementioned case.

I have to assume that's a joke? Disbelief makes people more inclined to evil acts? Really? Cos believers are so well behaved in comparison, I'm sure :D

I'll skip the blindingly obvious stuff (Crusades, Inquisitions, genocides, etc) and stick to a modern example not a million miles from your own - Andrea Yates. Difference being that she did what she did as a direct result of her religious convictions. Ian Brady was a deviant in many ways and Myra Hindley was easily led and probably somewhat sociopathic. I'm sure it might help a bit to lack belief in a vengeful god to do shit like that but I'm guessing he'd have done it anyway. The charming Ms Yates did what she did because she totally believed in a vengeful god and a Fallen world and genuinely thought she was doing the only sane thing out of love (I'm assuming some degree of mental illness must've been involved too but she wasn't just another psychopathic killer like Brady/Hindley - mental illness + strong religious beliefs = trouble). Not saying one is worse than t'other, just that to say disbelief makes one more prone to evil acts is just so far wide of the mark it's untrue. People do terrible things for any number of reasons and religious reasons are worryingly common.
 
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I have indeed, Ms Halo :)

I fukkin <3 William Blake. Oddly enough, I was watching a documentary about him just t'other day that emphasised that interpretation of the pic. Other interpretations are available that are quite different but we're used to such contrariness in the theology thread by now, eh? =D

I do see what you're getting at though. It's possibly one of Blake's weakest analogies unfortunately. Newton was a devout believer - he wrote far more about Christian theology (from his standpoint as an ardent believer) than he ever did about physics - his belief was the inspiration for his science in many ways. Why is it that nobody ever quotes or references Newton on theology but he is legendary for his physics? Because his physics were a real positive advance for mankind. He changed the world for the better with his science, his theology is almost certainly not even in print anymore and is barely a footnote (and maybe was just shite theology too - dunno, never read it).

Blake really was an incredible artist and poet. I truly adore his work. As I said earlier, art is the only good thing religion has ever brought us as far as I can see. But that doesn't help me to see anything special in any particular religion though. There's amazing art inspired by all religions - and by artists with no religion too. What I see is human imagination and psychology in all its grandeur. It's a beautiful and precious thing... but it ain't divine it's human. And that's what makes it so special <3
 
Newton was also inspired by his beliefs and very much a devout Christian. He believed he was proving gods existence by showing how intricate and perfect his creation was. Other interpretations of his work are available ;)

And ya, humans get old and die. Is tragic. But such is life sadly. Some humans live forever through their achievements though. Blake and Newton are perfect examples <3
 
life and death and the universe n everything is fascinating, our own lives, every time i try my tits off i get told "its all about love"
 
Am talking about the bits when the bossman is talking directly or being quoted by whoever wrote the books, Jess. God is eternal and unchanging, no? Is a fairly standard Christian view anyway. And he certainly does like to bigup his evil side sometimes =D

"I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things." --Isaiah 31:1-2

That kinda stuff :)
 
partime crackhead..

you know sometimes mate your a stupid cunt ja know that. how fuckin dare you come on here and show such disrespect me and others with strong beliefs.
u have a lot to learn about basic manners. ur internet grumpy persona is a joke.guarentee u woulnt have the bottle to disrespect me or my mates with ur weak ignorant chat in person haha get sone fuckin sense.what the fuck is you stupid or what
 
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you showed respect to me even though we are poles apart.
i never fuckin once tried to lecture u or ptch about being atheist
i never insulted u or him and let on ur dumb for being unbelievers i have got abuse personal insults ftom every direction not u mind
 
Probably, Jess. Who isn't sometimes? Pretty sure I can be too. Sometimes it's hard to make oneself understood in the way it was intended. I do like the way you often seem to take somewhat unconventional approaches to questions raised sometimes so enjoy most if not all of your posts so far in here <3
 
The quote you posted is not in any way abusive to anybody though :?

no it wasnt but other posts by him where.are you saying he has respectly peoples religious beliefs consistantly

bollox...hes rude arrogant confrontational and disrespectful and im finished putting up with him.
i dont dislike him..i dislike his attitude
 
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