Tuesday, August 12, 2008

The chosen?

I have been told by Christians in the past that only those with a personal relationship with Jesus will gain entry into heaven. I have also heard more outlandish claims of Rapture and tribulation. I often asked myself if the Christian view is true, then what happened to the multitude of humans that appeared before Jesus? Did they go to heaven? Hell? Purgatory? Of course these people would include Moses, Abraham, David, Solomon and all of the other 'non-Christians' . You cannot change someone's religion posthumously just because they were in a religious book.

If the Christian propaganda is to be believed, Noah (even though he spoke to God and did his bidding) should now be residing next to Satan himself. I am sure few Christians would admit to this but I would like to hear their reasoning.

I was brought up a Christian but am now an atheist, but I am surprised how Christians presume I am going to hell because I don't believe what they believe. Now I have to say i don't care because I don't believe in heaven or hell but the fact they believe they are more worthy than me kind of bothers me....I don't know why. I guess I always wondered who would get preferential treatment: the good hearted Atheist, or the murderous Christian? Where are the lines drawn exactly?

Religious stupidity

I am sorry, but I didn't know what else to call this. I am going to make a recurring theme of showing some of the ignorance and hatred that religion creates in ordinary people. I just want to show how the 'scripture' of religions are often taken so literally as to turn people into nothing more than ignorant morons.

My first example is this guy:

Alternate life style or Perversion?

And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.
John 8:32

Leviticus 18:22-24

Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination. Neither shalt thou lie with any beast to defile thyself therewith: neither shall any woman stand before a beast to lie down thereto: it is confusion. Defile not ye yourselves in any of these things: for in all these the nations are defiled which I cast out before you: KJV

Contrary to what the gay community wants to believe, people are not born gay or lesbian. God did not make you that way and he does not think it is ok. God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve!! Lets look at some scripture and see what God has to say.

No I am not a bigot, nor homophobic. I am a believer in the Holy word of God, and If the bible says its wrong, It is wrong. If you are read this and thinking hate you will feel hate.

Answer
Yes you are a bigot sir, and a homophobe and it is obviously your outdated religion that has made you so. I will just say (not that it matters) that I am not homosexual but I abhor any kind of bigot, especially those that feel they have a divine right to be so.

Which religion is true?


In today’s modern world we have over 10 major religions with substantial followings, hundreds of minor religions, and literally thousands of denominations of each-- each one with a slightly different belief system to the last. Christianity alone has over 18 major branches, some with decidedly different ideals. And this is just today.

The history of the human race is filled with many different religious beliefs, each one taken extremely seriously by its adherents-- just as seriously as people take their religion today. Be it Roman, Greek, Egyptian, or Nubian, the people who followed these religions believed in them completely. Even with the multitude of different beliefs held in the past and today every religious follower believes theirs is the true religion. They will all agree that every religion cannot be true. They will all agree in fact that only one can be true. They will not agree, however, on which religion that is.

Most religious people will dismiss the religions of the past as simple ‘mythology’ as though this dismissal automatically claims them false. They look on people from the past as having ‘quaint legend based belief systems’ although many of them were formed alongside, or even after their own religions.

If an objective individual were to look at the thousands of different religions that have peppered the history of the human race and look at their origins and mythology, would he be able to choose a definitive religion from the masses, one that stands out above the rest—the true religion. I doubt it. Each religion can claim to have the ultimate prophet, the ultimate truth, but really they are very much all the same. Religion has changed so little in thousands of years that its study can reveal only one conclusion: It is in man’s nature to want a creator. The creator will always be in the image of the believer, and its adherents will adamantly believe that theirs is the only way to salvation.

Ring a bell?

Comparing Science and Religion

What is it that makes the fundamentals of science and religion so incompatible with each other? Well to answer this I think we first need to know what science and religion are. Without diving into a dictionary or Wikipedia I would generalise science as being any process that follows the steps of the scientific method. The scientific method is simple: In its most basic form it comprises the steps of 1) determine a problem or question to be asked 2) Make an educated hypothesis as to the answer 3) test with experiments and observation 4) revise the hypothesis and retest if necessary 5) Conclude results in a legible and meaningful fashion for others to follow and repeat.

These steps are so simple that everyone does science everyday without realising it. For example: 1) What is the fastest way to work? 2) Hypothesis: taking the train 3) Test the time to work on the train 4) Train takes 1 hour, maybe the bus is faster- test the bus. Test all modes of transport. 5) Bicycle turns out to be fastest; tell your friends.

Okay, this is not exactly rocket science, but I believe it is science nontheless as it follows a logical path along the scientific method.
Religion on the other hand, in its basic form, is a belief system usually handed down from person to person with precise rules on how to live life or how to properly worship the chosen being or entity.
For one thing, as Socrates said in my very first post, this hardly stands up to the scrutiny of the scientific method. If religion were looked at through the scientific method it would come under the knife immediately. It doesn’t even pass Occam’s razor.

I know that religious people claim their religion as faith and often see science as the enemy to their path. However as I showed earlier, science in essence is the basis of every intelligent person’s everyday decision making process. What happens to the intelligent decision making when it comes to religion?

The main problem is the way it is transferred. One of the most important parts of the scientific method is the reporting of results so others can repeat it. This encourages a collaboration of minds which gives science its general path. If science begins to head in a questionable direction (which it will invariably do) there will be enough checks and balances from other scientists to disprove falsehoods, correct errors, and realign any misguided ideas. Basically science itself evolves through minute changes (some greater than others) by a myriad of scientists and their helpers testing and retesting hypotheses until general laws can be formed (and even then these can be thrown out).

To the religious this is the weakness of science. It can never know everything and is often wrong or unsure of itself. That is its nature. However this is where the strength of science and the weakness of religion lie. Science is open to scrutiny: in fact it welcomes it. Anyone, from any walk of life can contribute to the ideas that make up scientific understanding, and although they may not like it, scientists are always open to the idea of being wrong. Religion, however, never appreciates scrutiny. You will never find members of different religions discussing ideas, and using the evidence to discount parts of their own belief. Religion relies on written or verbal accounts passed down by ancestors, and is considered indisputable; any evidence to the contrary is disregarded out of hand with no sense of investigation. Religion never even entertains the idea of being wrong.

Herein lies the crux of the point: Science strives for truth by the evolution and selection of right from wrong over many generations. Religion just claims to be right.

Which one makes the most sense?

Friday, August 01, 2008

Standing idly by

'In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies but the silence of our friends.' - Dr Martin Luther King

It seems to me that many Christians lay the fate and events of the World as a whole on the heads of two beings: namely God or Satan. Of course it is always noticed that whenever something marvellous happens in the World it is attributed to the miracle and love of God. If, however, something horrific or terrible happens it is obviously the work of Satan. I can understand the distinction here as God and Satan are supposed to be on opposite sides of the Good-evil coin.
What I do not understand is the Christians' ease at blaming everything bad on Satan and letting God completely off the hook. I always thought that God was the supreme being and therefore had the power to do anything that he set his mind to. If this is the case then surely this would make God guilty of doing evil through omission. If God is more powerful than Satan and he loves his people so much, then his sitting idly by and doing nothing as Satan runs amok with his evil doings makes God just as responsible for the outcome as his sinister nemesis. If you could stop evil wouldn't you do it? Then why doesn't God? Is it because he can't? Or because he doesn't want to?

'Evil prevails when a few evil men collaborate and good men do nothing'