Who needs theology when you have Trump?

  • @uriel238
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    83 months ago

    Note that most protestants adhere to Sola fides and Sola Scriptura, which means Kirk and other minister can only offer their stinky opinion. Your relationship to God is between you and Them, and how you personally read the bible (e.g. which passages take priority, which are literal, which are out of date.)

    If you’re Catholic, then you’re bolden to the Pope, the CDF (the Inquisition) and your hierarchy of clergy. But then most Catholics I know are laid back and will chow down steak on Friday and use contraceptives as it suits them. I’m not fully cognizant of how they do it without cognitive dissonance.

    Anyhow, this means it’s fully possible to be Christian and athiest, though most are still closeted about their atheism.

      • @uriel238
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        13 months ago

        Uriel the atheist!

        Personally, I’m a naturalist, but my process of getting here involved coming to terms with insignificance of a magnitude that was overwhelming. But the process gave me an awareness of some of the difficulties others might have confronting the stark truth of the matter, so Camus’ notion of philosophical suicide can be very attractive.

        That said, it’s better for someone to own their faith, and to go into it willingly and informed, rather than it serving as a device by which ministries and apologists use it to turn them into a cash cow or instant soldier. But the foundational doctrine of Protestantism was intended to steer the faithful back to defining truth for themselves (since the Church was glad to squeeze them for toil and coin and send them on crusades. The individual can’t blame God or scripture or even their own ministry for justifying hate through faith.

        The devil didn’t make you do it: It’s still on you.