You are not. As I've said, my position is that I have been respectful and have not been bashing Christians, and it is my intention to continue as I have been doing, should I be permitted to continue posting in this forum. As moderator of this forum, do you so permit me? Yes or no?
Greetings, Dave.
I noticed by looking at the panel on the left that you're a new member. Welcome to CR!!!
After a while you'll get used to CR, the way people see things, and perhaps even notice that we don't all believe the same thing or see things the same way. Yet many of us identify with the label of "Christian."
Post #109 is my observation and analysis of what's been happening with Christianity.
Creeds and doctrines taught by the various denominations in Christianity often put many limits and boundaries on the notions and concepts of "hell," "Christian," "heaven" and "God." Rules are made on what people are to believe to give them a sense of comfort in that they are "in the safe zone."
This is what causes much of the disgust over Christianity and the New Testament. The people who can't follow the rules are sent to hell because they're heretics. The rest God accepts.
This obviously doesn't sound very just. Some of the people who are able to follow the rules might be really rule, arrogant, conceited people. Some of the ones who can't follow the rules, on the other hand, are really decent, polite, loving, kind and generous people. So God throws away nice, dignified, innocent people who couldn't follow the doctrinal rules taught by the different denominations.
Much of the time, we don't think that the stuff we're being told to believe are rules. But that's what they are -- rules. You have to believe what you're told, because otherwise you're denying the truth. Besides, that's what everyone else in the church does.
The thing is, it's one thing to believe something because that's what you were told, because that's what the pastor or priest said, and to appreciate why you do it.
There is a difference between doctrine-based beliefs and experiental beliefs. Doctrine-based beliefs have to do with traditions -- they're basically what I described above -- you believe what you are told. Experiental beliefs -- obviously derive from your life experiences. You believe in something because you've worked out for yourself that that is the way it was meant to be. My personal view is that if you really want to adhere to tradition, it is important to have some affirmative experiences associated with those traditions -- experiences that are compelling reasons to believe in them.
Beliefs have to be experientally affirmative, not drilled into our minds without a reason with which we can identify -- indoctrinated.
Christianity is not limited to traditions. Traditions are just a starting point. People often learn about Christianity from their Christian friends, and whatever notion or concept they have of Christianity is limited to what their Christian friends tell them. Whatever notion you have of Christianity is then limited to the church you go to. If your first experiences are bad, you might then decide it's not for you.
If having a Christian identity is important to you, then search high and low. I assure you, there is more out there. Read a lot of books. Raid the church library. Surf the Internet. Discover the "Christian" in you. It all depends whether or not you want to be Christian. Just like Jews, Christians don't like it when their religion isn't taken seriously. It's seen as disrespect. They take it personally.