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Author Topic: Religion Poll  (Read 871 times)

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AUTiger1

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #90 on: March 10, 2010, 03:40:50 PM »
I am an agnostic in the fact that I have no idea whether god exists or not. I'm not going to deny the existence of god, just like I am not going to say that he certainly exists. I don't have a clue.

I believe that IF there is an "all knowing, all loving" god, like many religions claim, surely he won't send 2/3rd's of the world to hell for not believing in the correct religion. I have no idea which religion is right, or if any of them are right.

If there is a god, I would like to think that I will get into heaven by living a good life and adhering to the golden rule, and other basic rules of humanity.

Thanks for the answer. I have a co-worker who will get extremely pissed if you call him an atheist and he will tell you that he is agnostic.  He will also vehemently deny the existence of a deity of any kind. In his mind "poop just happened" and there is no arguing with him that is the stance of a hardcore atheist not an agnostic.
Courage is only fear holding on a minute longer.--George S. Patton

There are gonna be days when you lay your guts on the line and you come away empty handed, there ain't a damn thing you can do about it but go back out there and lay em on the line again...and again, and again! -- Coach Pat Dye

It isn't that liberals are ignorant. It's just they know so much that isn't so. --Ronald Reagan

Aubie16

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #91 on: March 10, 2010, 03:41:13 PM »
This also begs the question that if there is a God in the most basic sense, as in an intelligent design, does that necessarily mean there is a heaven and hell? To me, the concept of a good place you go when you're good and a bad place you go when you're bad, that was previously believed to be in the sky and below the earth's crust until that was proven to be scientifically impossible, and is now believed to be some other dimension outside of this universe, is a little Santa Clausish.


Yes...I've often wondered if these were originally invented (similar to Wes's thinking) in order to get men to behave in a civilized manner and control them. Kind of a scare tactic. Who knows.
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Aubie16

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #92 on: March 10, 2010, 03:42:50 PM »
Thanks for the answer. I have a co-worker who will get extremely pissed if you call him an atheist and he will tell you that he is agnostic.  He will also vehemently deny the existence of a deity of any kind. In his mind "poop just happened" and there is no arguing with him that is the stance of a hardcore atheist not an agnostic.

I think the problem could be that, in certain areas of the country, atheist has such a negative connotation that it almost stirs up images of satan worshipping, etc. He may be trying to avoid being associated with that.
"Auburn is so much more than a city, school, team, or degree. It is something that, once you have experienced it, will live inside of you forever and become a part of what makes up who you are."

1913 ♦ 1914 ♦ 1957 ♦ 1958 ♦ 1993 ♦ 2004

Ogre

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #93 on: March 10, 2010, 03:47:34 PM »
This is an interesting topic for me, as I have struggled with my faith over the past few years.  I was raised a Southern Baptist.  I believe in God, and I believe that Jesus is the Son of God.  I believe that God sent Jesus to earth to die for my sins (and boy have I sinned) so that I may be saved from sin and spend eternity in Heaven.

All that said, I will be the first to admit that although I am a believer in Christ, based on how I currently live my life I am not a follower of Christ.  Just look at my avatar if you need proof.  I know that I am not living my life like I have been called to, and yet I don't do anything to change myself.  That's probably worse than being an atheist in some Christians' eyes.

I know that a lot of my actions are not considered moral or acceptable in God's (or society's) eyes, but I continue to go down that path.  I'm not sure why that is - but in the back of my mind I think that one day I will get back on the straight-and-narrow.  Then again, I'm 30 years old with a kid.  If not now, when?  

I hope science will progress enough so that the Bear is revived only long enough to be raped and shot.

AUTiger1

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #94 on: March 10, 2010, 04:00:32 PM »
If you're not, then you didn't answer the poll.

The point is that I don't believe Chad was intending "indoctrination" in a pejorative sense.  Only that most people will accept the religion of their childhood or reject religion entirely.  There doesn't appear to be a lot of religion-jumping.

I took what he said to be a snide little swipe at one's belief in a higher power.  True enough that a lot of people believe what they believe b/c of their cultural upbringing.  It is also true that some people don't.  Koas may or may not be one of those.  I work with a guy (well he is on a different contract, but sits down the hall) that was a Muslim until he was converted by a missionary in his twenties.  Something was said to him that made him question his faith and he began to ask questions and look for answers. He is a perfect example of someone who came to his own conclusions.  It doesn't happen everyday, but it does happen.  I just thought it to be a broad brush he was painting with.

I marked Christian in the poll, although I don't consider myself to be one.  

Courage is only fear holding on a minute longer.--George S. Patton

There are gonna be days when you lay your guts on the line and you come away empty handed, there ain't a damn thing you can do about it but go back out there and lay em on the line again...and again, and again! -- Coach Pat Dye

It isn't that liberals are ignorant. It's just they know so much that isn't so. --Ronald Reagan

AUChizad

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #95 on: March 10, 2010, 04:02:44 PM »
I took what he said to be a snide little swipe at one's belief in a higher power.

I'm sorry you took it that way, as that was not what was intended. I haven't corrected Wes in his assumptions, because he is exactly correct.

Quote
I marked Christian in the poll, although I don't consider myself to be one.  
Interesting. So what would you consider yourself? Why mark Christian when you are not?
I'm telling you now (and you can write it down) that if he sustains that level -- seven or eight games -- next season, you should consider that a successful effort on his part.  Of course there are qualifiers depending on which games he loses and how dreadful AU looks in those losses, but just maintaining the position would be a win.
You can take the ten-win predictions and file them with the wolf-boy pictures from The Globe.

AUChizad

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #96 on: March 10, 2010, 04:17:17 PM »
Because everyone loves a good pie chart...


Only Christians and Muslims are more popular than "nonreligious" people. And even those are divided into sects whose ideologies are at odds with each other. Of course in fairness, "nonreligious" is segmented as well.
Back to this for a moment...

I find it fascinating that Judaism is the least popular religion of those charted, including Sikhism (0.36% vs. 0.22%).

There's shockingly almost twice as many Sikhs as there are Jews.

I guess that's because many ethnically Jewish people fall into the "nonreligious" category when it comes to religion. Still that's far lower than my misconception prior to looking up the numbers.
I'm telling you now (and you can write it down) that if he sustains that level -- seven or eight games -- next season, you should consider that a successful effort on his part.  Of course there are qualifiers depending on which games he loses and how dreadful AU looks in those losses, but just maintaining the position would be a win.
You can take the ten-win predictions and file them with the wolf-boy pictures from The Globe.

Kaos

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #97 on: March 10, 2010, 04:17:56 PM »




This can't be right.  How can 0.22% of the population control all the major television networks and movie companies?  

More than 0.22% of the people in show business are Jewish.  

And how do you explain all those bagels?

AUChizad

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #98 on: March 10, 2010, 04:49:03 PM »
« Last Edit: March 10, 2010, 04:51:23 PM by AUChizad »
I'm telling you now (and you can write it down) that if he sustains that level -- seven or eight games -- next season, you should consider that a successful effort on his part.  Of course there are qualifiers depending on which games he loses and how dreadful AU looks in those losses, but just maintaining the position would be a win.
You can take the ten-win predictions and file them with the wolf-boy pictures from The Globe.

Kaos

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #99 on: March 10, 2010, 05:14:49 PM »
Theodore Roosevelt wasn't a founding father. Neither was Lincoln. Or Susan B.  But I digress. 

The quotes you referenced actually don't support your position at all. 

Nothing in Jefferson's quotes indicated that he didn't believe in Christ or Christianity, only that he lamented the manner in which some chose to express it. 

Same with the others. 

Is that really any surprise considering that this country was first populated (white populated) by refugees from religious persecution? 

When Jefferson says ""The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as His father, in the womb of a virgin will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter." " is that his hope or his dread?  There's no context there. 

I believe that the day will come when followers of Jesus are mocked and his worth given little credence (Flying Spaghetti Monster anyone?).  Does that mean I wish for that day or am comforted by it?  No, only that I feel it is inevitable.

Are you seriously surprised that the leaders of a nation founded on religious freedom would be hesitant to hand authority over to a sovereign church since that was the life their fathers had fled to establish this country?  To conclude that in doing so these men rejected the tenets of Christianity is a completely illogical leap. 

Their position was against a church state -- the type of government they fled in England -- not against the moral values of Christianity. 

When Madison says "The divinity of Jesus is made a convenient cover for absurdity." of course I agree. People throughout history have used the robe of Jesus to shield their absurd acts.  Oral Roberts locked himself in a tower and said Jesus would kill him unless he raised several million dollars.  That was absurd and done in Jesus' name.  But you can't extrapolate that to mean that everything associated with Jesus or Christianity is absurd. 

Adams questions the acts committed in the name of Christ.  How did we get to the point where we are willing to kill because someone believes differently?  I ask the same question today.  Why do we fight against Muslims -- and they us -- because we choose to worship the SAME GOD in a different manner?  Does my question somehow make me less a Christian or mean that I reject Christian values?  Hardly. 

I know I give you a hard time about comprehension, but in this instance I don't think you really understand what the founding fathers were saying.  You're taking their words and using them to create a position that I'm positive didn't exist.  Nothing you quoted shows in any way shape or form that any of the men rejected Christianity or its values. 

The "church" yes.  But you also have to understand the context of church as it existed in that time. 

I have no interest in a church state.  Doesn't mean I'm anti Christian.


AUTiger1

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #100 on: March 10, 2010, 05:26:22 PM »
I'm sorry you took it that way, as that was not what was intended. I haven't corrected Wes in his assumptions, because he is exactly correct.
No biggie.  A wise man once told me when talking politics, you need to learn to check your feelings at the door ($1 to wes)  Same rule applies to religion as well.


Interesting. So what would you consider yourself? Why mark Christian when you are not?
Pretty much read Ogre's response.

I have read and studied for years.  I have asked many questions along the way.  Yes, I believe in God, too much going on all at the same time for it to be just one big coincidence in my mind.  I believe that the same God wants me to do what is right, live a good moral life, obey his commandments and try my best to live "the straight and narrow".  I believe that we are a creation of his image and that he loves us and wants us to love him.  Do I do those things?  Not even close. I do some things that are acceptable, I donate to charity, I genuinely try to help people that are in need and when they need it.  I try to be polite and courteous to everyone most of the time. I go to church from time to time (more often that not). I do a lot of things that make me look good in others eyes.......but.......

Those things are not enough though. I believe that one has to try and live a Christian life before they can even consider to call themselves Christian. My wife is a good example of this.  She tries her hardest, she lives her life in a good Christian way 90% of the time.  Just b/c she might say poop, hell, damn, ass and bitch from time to time and have margarita from time to time, doesn't meant that she is a bad person or not a Christian. When she messes up, as she like to call it, she knows that she has to ask for forgiveness.  She understands as well as I do that the bible teaches that we are not perfect and will sin.  She chooses to let it bother her and do what her teachings tell her in order to make it right.  Me, I don't ask and most of the time I don't care, nor does it bother my conscious.  

The bible, the "inspired word of God" (not his literal word, man had his hand in it so you know some things got screwed up along the way) if you choose to believe it will tell you that many will hear the word and many will believe the word, but many will not accept word.  Now when I was early teens I was baptized into Christ, but now that relationship is pretty much non-existent b/c I no longer follow his teachings.  I don't believe in the once saved always saved doctrine that some do.  

I am too lazy to look it up, but in Peter's (II Peter I think) teachings he says be holy in all you do, that if you escape worldliness and accept Christ only to fall back in, you are worse off in the end than you were at the beginning, and it would have been better to have not known the way of righteousness than to have known it and turned your back on it .  (Paraphrase)  That leads me to believe that one can lose their salvation. Like Ogre said that could be far worse than being an atheist in some Christian's eyes.  I may choose to follow that path again someday, I may not.  I can't say with certainty.  

In short, I marked it, b/c I believe in the Christan God and Christian views, but that doesn't mean that I consider myself a Christian.  I don't live my life according to Christian teachings nor do I even pretend to try.  

 
EDIT: These are my personal beliefs, if someone else looks at being a Christian differently, that is up to them and their right.  I don't claim to be right, just stated what I believe.  I will not judge you nor bash you and your beliefs.
« Last Edit: March 10, 2010, 05:28:49 PM by AUTiger1 »
Courage is only fear holding on a minute longer.--George S. Patton

There are gonna be days when you lay your guts on the line and you come away empty handed, there ain't a damn thing you can do about it but go back out there and lay em on the line again...and again, and again! -- Coach Pat Dye

It isn't that liberals are ignorant. It's just they know so much that isn't so. --Ronald Reagan

Aubie16

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #101 on: March 10, 2010, 05:38:01 PM »
If we're quoting Jefferson...here is my favorite:

Quote
Question with boldness even the existence of a god; because if there be one he must approve of the homage of reason more than that of blindfolded fear.
-Thomas Jefferson, letter to Peter Carr, August 10, 1787
"Auburn is so much more than a city, school, team, or degree. It is something that, once you have experienced it, will live inside of you forever and become a part of what makes up who you are."

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Kaos

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #102 on: March 10, 2010, 05:49:37 PM »
If we're quoting Jefferson...here is my favorite:


And again that doesn't indicate Jefferson's lack of belief in a deity. 

Blind devotion is just that.  Blind.  You should always ask questions and search for answers. 

AUChizad

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #103 on: March 10, 2010, 05:56:05 PM »
Theodore Roosevelt wasn't a founding father. Neither was Lincoln. Or Susan B.  But I digress.
Fair enough, but I thought they were prominent American figures with quotes that would be shocking coming from a President today. Those you mentioned besides Roosevelt all appear on US currency. Roosevelt's on Mt. Rushmore. That's got to count for something.

Quote
The quotes you referenced actually don't support your position at all.


Nothing in Jefferson's quotes indicated that he didn't believe in Christ or Christianity, only that he lamented the manner in which some chose to express it.  

Same with the others.  

Is that really any surprise considering that this country was first populated (white populated) by refugees from religious persecution?  
I think you confused my position (in the third party thread I am referencing here). That is probably my fault, since it may be unclear as to the context of that post. Basically jad was implying that our founding fathers wanted us to be a Christian nation.

Perhaps it is clearer if I presented the previous two posts in the exchange between jad and I.

Quote
When social, moral-value type issues take a back seat, or we let go of them and stop fighting for them....the effects are much longer lasting, and honestly, nearly impossible to reverse.  Once the Bible was taken out of schools, do you really ever seeing it making it's way back in?  No way, that ship has sailed, it's a thing of the past...we're no longer a Christian nation, so the leaders of the left have declared.  From a moral-value stance, we continue to erode.  If we continue to keep God and Biblical influence locked inside the church, society will continue to slide.  If we keep those things locked up inside the church, it won't be long before that's the only place you find what we used to be.  We'll be a Godless, European-moral nation on this side of the Atlantic.  We will seize to be America.
I'd rather not get too deep in another controversial political thread (especially the most controversial of all topics), but this kind of thinking is the problem, in my opinion.

We were never a "Christian" nation that was intended to have our schools indoctrinate a state religion. To believe that we are is to completely defy and selectively ignore everything our founding fathers stood for.

When a politician starts advocating these kinds of things, or outwardly claims to take the Bible literally, he loses credibility with me.

Now that being said, I can't see how you can look at many of these quotes and not ascertain that those being quoted are deists at best.
Quote
When Jefferson says ""The day will come when the mystical generation of Jesus, by the Supreme Being as His father, in the womb of a virgin will be classed with the fable of the generation of Minerva in the brain of Jupiter." " is that his hope or his dread?  There's no context there.  

I believe that the day will come when followers of Jesus are mocked and his worth given little credence (Flying Spaghetti Monster anyone?).  Does that mean I wish for that day or am comforted by it?  No, only that I feel it is inevitable.
While I can't say without equivocation what he meant, I feel like equating Christianity to a religion that is completely dead and used only in the context of literature is pretty clearly a statement on the fictitious nature of the Christian religion. I'm not saying it's impossible that he meant what you said, but I think he was extremely misquoted if that part was left out. That's be like quoting someone as saying "I believe in raping puppies", when the actual quote was "I believe in raping puppies being a punishable crime."
« Last Edit: March 10, 2010, 05:58:15 PM by AUChizad »
I'm telling you now (and you can write it down) that if he sustains that level -- seven or eight games -- next season, you should consider that a successful effort on his part.  Of course there are qualifiers depending on which games he loses and how dreadful AU looks in those losses, but just maintaining the position would be a win.
You can take the ten-win predictions and file them with the wolf-boy pictures from The Globe.

AUChizad

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Re: Religion Poll
« Reply #104 on: March 10, 2010, 06:02:28 PM »
If we're quoting Jefferson...here is my favorite:

That was the first one quoted.
I'm telling you now (and you can write it down) that if he sustains that level -- seven or eight games -- next season, you should consider that a successful effort on his part.  Of course there are qualifiers depending on which games he loses and how dreadful AU looks in those losses, but just maintaining the position would be a win.
You can take the ten-win predictions and file them with the wolf-boy pictures from The Globe.