Originally posted by MrGongGong
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Equal marriage
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amateur51
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Posti think it would be good for both parties. The next step would be to abolish faith schools, of course.
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What goes around comes around is a tenet of the Hindu-Buddhist doctrine of karma. Personally I think the church's problems with its African flock are down to the preaching of doctrines cram-full of inner contradictions. I'm so glad to be right out of it all. In some ways the Mediaeval church had it easier with its doctrine of hell fire for anyone transgressing Bibilical injunctions. A god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation people would be too terrified other than to obey. If people are to be made to be so gullible that the West can keep its hands on sources of cheap labour and raw materials, religion, the soft underbelly of economic imperialism, needs to make up its mind. Is the god of Judaea a loving, forgiving god, or not?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostWhat goes around comes around is a tenet of the Hindu-Buddhist doctrine of karma. Personally I think the church's problems with its African flock are down to the preaching of doctrines cram-full of inner contradictions.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm so glad to be right out of it all.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIn some ways the Mediaeval church had it easier with its doctrine of hell fire for anyone transgressing Bibilical injunctions. A god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation people would be too terrified other than to obey.
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIf people are to be made to be so gullible that the West can keep its hands on sources of cheap labour and raw materials, religion, the soft underbelly of economic imperialism, needs to make up its mind. Is the god of Judaea a loving, forgiving god, or not?
In so saying, however, I think that we've gotten rather too far from the subject of "equal marriage", so apologies for the diversion!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostBy "terrified" do you mean "terrifying"?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
By "terrified" do you mean "terrifying"?
Being "outside" all of that more or less as you are, I could not say with certainty but, since that particular god is by no means the only one and Christianity in any or all of its guises is not the only religious manifestation of such a "soft underbelly of economic imperialism", would you not say that all religions that embrace the notion of some kind of "god" are equally capable and culpable of sustaining and indeed developing such imperialism? I also wonder if the common understanding of the very meaning of the word "imperialism" courts the inherent danger of assuming that it is all and only ever about large-scale issues; someone (I cannot now recall who) once suggested that "the aristocracy of the mind" is arguably synonymous with "the imperialism of the mind" - and I am not convinced that the West's long held control over the "sources of cheap labour and raw materials" to which you allude will remain the exclusive province of the West, because at least some non-Western nations have seen how the West operates on such a basis and want a piece of the same action for themselves.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe western colonial impact on the conditions and hence collective mindsets of the colonists, the colonised and their sucessors down the ages has surely been qualitatively of a different, altogether larger order than anything that had preceded, don't you think?
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Originally posted by jean View PostIt's true the sentence hasn't got a main verb, but who needs those?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOf course it is; "a god" is the subject and it is that god who would be "too terrifying other than to obey". Where's the difficulty in understanding that?
A god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation people would be too terrified other than to obey.Last edited by jean; 07-04-14, 14:16.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThe difficulty lies in making sense of the word people. The original (elliptical) sentence goes:
A god isn't the subject of anything, because there's no main verb. However I don't think that's what makes it difficult to understand, if indeed it is difficult, which I question.
"Under a god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation, people would be too terrified other than to obey [him]".
"A god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation would be too terrifying to be other than obeyed".
"A god who instilled such fear of eternal damnation would make people too terrified other than to obey him".
I did contemplate altering the last part of the third option to "too terrified to other than obey him", but that would involve a split infinitive.
Anyway, that's enough boredom from me for today!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostPersonally I think the church's problems with its African flock are down to the preaching of doctrines cram-full of inner contradictions. I'm so glad to be right out of it all...
The Church of England has moved on since then, but the worldwide Anglican communion, especially in Africa, has not.
You may be right out of it, but Justin is not - and his problem is the mismatch between where the Church wants to be in this country, and how that will affect Anglicans in Africa, who are hanging on to doctrines we'd rather forget we ever taught them.
Nobody has answered my question What should Justin do now?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI did contemplate altering the last part of the third option to "too terrified to other than obey him", but that would involve a split infinitive.
But you could avoid the problem by writing
...too terrified to do other than obey him...
Anyway, that's enough boredom from me for today!
.Last edited by jean; 07-04-14, 14:57.
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