- Joined
- Feb 3, 2013
So you are the worst? Who is the best Asatruar then?I am the worlds worst Asatruar. Fight me nerds.
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So you are the worst? Who is the best Asatruar then?I am the worlds worst Asatruar. Fight me nerds.
Probably this asshole.So you are the worst? Who is the best Asatruar then?
These were basically the first euphoric atheists.
I believe people should be entitled to whatever beliefs they want. Both the constitution of the United States and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in Canada (the Country I live in) both allow for freedom of religion. I am not opposed to religions I'm opposed to ignorance. I largely dislike religion for ignorance and the tendency for people to believe in things either due to needing a feeling of belonging or fear.The kids my age there were so happy. A kind of pure, non-selfish happiness and joy in caring for each other and listening to others issues and problems that I had never really seen before. It was a stark contrast to the sort of "bad christian" image that my atheist friends and I kept scoffing about privately.
Having gone to that thing really made me think.
Religion gave these people happiness, whether it can be considered "bigoted and false" or not. It allowed these teens to not feel embarrassed or lame about being good people and expressing compassion and understanding towards strangers. That's why I like where religious millennials are taking things- there are less of them , but they're not as gung-ho in their views as for example boomers and are way more laid-back and "you do you, I do me" about it.
This is one of the biggest reasons churches exist at all in the modern day. And one of the reasons why I tolerate the existence of churches. Being more of a community center allows it to engage in charity and actually use it's tax exempt status for something good.My church has definitely become a shadow of what it once was. I know more people who go to church sorely to "socialize" (hookup) than to learn about the Lord. Sad.
I largely dislike religion for ignorance and the tendency for people to believe in things either due to needing a feeling of belonging or fear.
The basic problem has more to do with religious people attempting to censor thought. Such as trying to push things like prayer in schools or intelligent design in science class. This is a problem and it has extremely long lasting consequences on society if left to fester.
As I said this is a big reason why I vastly prefer people teaching religion to people when they're much older. I believe a great deal of this ignorance stems from fear that goes back to childhood of things like sin and hell. It's a big reason why Catholic Guilt is a thing.If Christianity, and by extension other religions were more of a self-contained school of thought that didn't focus on spreading, this problem probably wouldn't crop up as often... maybe?
This is actually a big reason why I dislike teaching religion to children and why I prefer the idea of teaching religion to people when they're older. This leads to less ignorance, more tolerance and less fear of nonsense concepts like Hell.
I probably wouldn't have been baptised Catholic if it didn't happen as a kid. However, my parents took a hands off approach with religion and let me draw my own conclusions. I joined up with a Christian group when I was going through shit, but I had some disagreements with doctrine and left. There are people who turn to religion because they are going through an inner struggle and the doctrine gave them strength to persevere. Christianity, with the exception of Calvenism, does advertise itself as the religion of salvation. Join us and become saved. I could have gone down that path as well. Then again I did get exposure to some Christianity as a kid. I'm still seeking my own spiritual Truth and if I do turn back to Christianity it would most likely be through the Gnostic path.It also leads to less religion.
The large religions that currently exist do so because they were good at convincing their believers to raise their children as believers, and to keep this going for thousands of years. The main reason religious people belong to the religion they do is because their parents did and their parents before them, and so on.
You mean like God is some guy sitting on a toilet seat and we are the maggots that crawl in his excrement.Recent thought I had:
Considering all the crazy-ass theories about how the universe came about (universes colliding and breaking off), is it entirely possible we're asking the wrong questions?
Not "Is there a Creator?" or "If there's a Creator, does it care?" But rather, "If there's a Creator, does it know it has created?"
In other words, we all could be someone's bastard children.
One thing I don't get is why so many fundamentalist christian highschoolers in my town are turning to mormonism, I don't understand how it appeals to them from their perspective.