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Re: These things I believe, 1 year later
Posted By: Speedball, on host 207.10.37.2
Date: Friday, October 27, 2000, at 19:35:14
In Reply To: Re: These things I believe, 1 year later posted by Wolfspirit on Friday, October 27, 2000, at 18:58:57:

> > People from several schools of thought say that's the same thing. The basic theory is that as a creation (or a part of nature, or whatever you happen to believe in), a person has within them aspects of the Sacred, which may be understood if/when that person develops to a certain point. Note that there are plenty of further ways of looking at *this*
>
> I notice C.S. Lewis hints particularly at this aspect of the Sacred in his fictional works. All of us, he suggests, have within ourselves a sense of the Creator merely because He created us with his imprint. A person may not know what that "sense of the Sacred" is *pointing to*, but nevertheless the *perception* of it is ever present. It is like a thorn in the unconscious mind; or an itch that can never be properly scratched.
>

I know, I read his 'Space Trilogy' good stuff.

> >
> > The real question comes down to whether you believe there is *one* way of knowing the Sacred (eg, through what is revealed in a particular religion) or more than one.
>
> A question indeed that has led to a great deal of tears and blood being shed over the issue. I will not pretend that a Christian is not a 'fanatic', in the sense that s/he insists there is only ONE gateway to knowing the Sacred through Christ. Our insistence on that one path, of course, brands us as intolerant, and offensive, to those seeking consensus through the luxury of "relative religious pluralism", which is promoted to smooth over difficulties in our common Westernized culture. Few people seem to know that outside of North America, many Christians in the developing world today are dying pretty HORRIBLE deaths from persecution -- that is, paying the heavy price for believing and insisting that Christ alone is the way to life. It seems insane, doesn't it. I see your point. It would be so easy to just say there are "multiple paths" to knowing the Sacred, but here we are seeing 'fanatics' willing to give up their lives to say otherwise. Are they (and I) being deceived?
>

Depends how you look at it. For *you* and other Chrisitans there is only one path, you have chosen Christ and that is fine. What is the problem for 3rd world sufferers is they have chosen a path that other people are aginst, so they become the vicitms of fanatical intolerance.
Being a member of an illegal minority religion can always be dangerous.

The people giving uo their lives arn't dieing because they say Christianity is the only path, but because they ARN'T saying local faith (be it Muslim, Hindu, what ever) isn't the only path. If they were trully living in a country that supports "multiple paths" then no one would bother them. Tolarance, above all else, tolarance.

I myself belive that finding a connection to the Sacred is a personal thing, and we are all on the same Path, it just looks diffrent if you are riding on the Catholic Bus, the Hindu Bus, the Mormon Bus, the Jewish Bus, the Wiccan Bus, and so on.

Now some people think that having multiple busses on the road slows everybody down, that the Path is to narrow for more than one bus (and deffinatly to narrow for pedestrian, ie agnostics and others trying to find their way down the Path on their own).

Myself I think the multiplicity of Busses is a good thing. It provides variety and creates debates, which stimulate thinking and soul searching, which is key to spiritual advancment.


>
> > Brunnen-"the most useful and wise precept is Never Get Involved In A Religious Discussion, and I just broke it"G
>
> No, I especially enjoy hearing what you have to say. Accepting and considering the fruitful observations of an honest skeptic are necessary to keep faith from going crooked. A belief that strays too far -- from historical fact, and from factual aspects of currently-observable reality which any fool can objectively agree upon -- is frankly a belief in nothing but a lie. People often have a vested interest in shielding deeply cherished beliefs from outside attack; and so they get very touchy about this (which of course is why you suggest Never Get Involved in a Religious Debate, heh. ;-)
>
> To put it bluntly: if Christ did not arise from death, then my faith is worthless. It would be nothing but a colorful though pernicious superstition which does not have the grace to give up, grow up, and disappear under the fine light of reason. Should I ever find good cause to believe that Yeshua was NOT who he says he was, then I *will* drop Christianity instantly like the hottest potato. This is what's at stake. For now, though, I find -- to my amazement now that I think of it -- that I spend almost all my free time with the Scriptures and thinking and discussing about God.

No, your faith wouldn't be pointless. Even is Christ was just a carpenters son, and a wise Rabbi, his leasons still hold true 2000 years later. Love thy neighbor as thy self, love thy enemy, do unto others as you would have them do unto you, these are all true statements.

> Wolf "Nothing is so shocking as seeing the Christian faith doubted, or seeing it practiced" spirit

Speed'The trouble with Christianity, they took a good idea and built a belife stucture on it.--- What JC can't stand is the s*th that get carried out in his name---Dogma, Kevin Smith'ball

P.S.
As you can see, I think a sense of humor is also key to keeping to the Path, if you can laugh at something you are less likely to get in a fight over it. I'd rather share a good belly laugh with a Muslim, a Jew and a Hindu than kill each other.

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