Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
Theology
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by jonfan View PostI think the message from the exchange of the 10 year olds is that it’s a simple matter of faith, and if you don’t have that then heaven is not an option.
I rather think just leaving the house is a matter of making a heap of assumptions amounting to faith - and while that's a long way from even thinking about heaven, it's in the same order of calculation. The kind of life we live today with obligatory multiple choices, tends to reinforce insecurities about the efficacy of our inner processes, including the capacity for making wise judgements - doubts which have been embedded by religion or its moral and ethical after-effects into our self and by extension social expectations. This filtering process has conveniently replaced old religious certainties and their associated obligations (to God and to our fellow beings) with uncertainties, which (lo and behold) just happen to match up with those built into the system we live under that (re)produces the wealth and resources the way it does and then distributes them unequally the way it does. The resulting tendency is towards resignation and deferment to people who take on or are bequeathed responsibility for decision-making and running things, and the chronic escapisms consequent on the subconscious realisation that we are made to abrogate responsibility in favour of expediency and fitting in with social expectations accordant with maintaining the status quo, keeping them and their system in power.
It often seems we have forgotten these things we (or some of us) learned in the 1960s and fed into the way we understood our histories, surrounds, contemporaries, and politics, and it's only now that some people are beginning to piece these things together again in the search for that comprehensive, verifiable picture to guide a different kind of future.Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 21-03-20, 18:21.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI overheard a short conversation between two youngsters today, prompted by the cancelling of church services. Something along these lines:
A. Why can't God protect people going to church?
B. Maybe God loves people and doesn't want them to catch the virus.
A. If God loves people, why has he allowed the virus in the first place?
B. Umm. Maybe God is helping people to fight against it.
It matters not a jot whether you believe or not BUT to some people it helps them get through the chaos.
A. Is he helping old people not to die?
B. If they die they go to Heaven don't they?
A. I don't really believe in God.....
BUT some people do and use it as a motivation to do good things, build beautiful buildings, write wonderful music and help people
though the existence or not of "God" doesn't make these things happen OR even more likely
There are some wonderful people who DO believe in God who are really doing good in the world. There are also some wonderful people who don't who are equally doing good.
IMV
Comment
-
-
It must be a very peculiar God who invented a world in which animal life is sustainable only by killing and eating other forms of life (except for the most primitive forms that exist on nutrients). I think Tolkein was rather perceptive when he referred in passing to a race cursed with eternal life. Why anyone would want to live for ever beats me. The thought of a perpetually changing eternity fills me with dread, but so does the thought of a static eternity. Anyway, I don't want to go to heaven because it will be full of priests. And I don't want to go to hell because it will be full of organists.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jonfan View PostYes it is, to quote Jesus. I. In order to believe in the Christian God you don’t need a degree in theology. God is love. That’s it.
There are some who really are followers .....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostRowan Williams was interviewed on Newsnight towards the end. He was impressive, I thought, and surprisingly open in his views about capitalism. (One has to read between the lines maybe.)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gradus View PostI thought it was a thought-provoking interview worth watching if you missed it.
At 34 minutes.
Raw, but worth it!
Comment
-
Comment