Dumbstar
We got another woman hater here.
You're a muslim, and a Liverpool fan?
A proof that prayers doesn't work right there
My FIVE time prayers work just fine, thanks.
You're a muslim, and a Liverpool fan?
A proof that prayers doesn't work right there
My FIVE time prayers work just fine, thanks.
Wafers in Catholic mass have absolutely nothing to do with Christianity, and it could even turn out that it would be a cream cracker. Or the guy from the bakery where it was produced might be shocked to hear someone call it flesh. He may even wonder why he did not keep it for his barbecue. You are correct it is just a wafer, get 2 of them and put some icecream in between supposed to be very tastyOh I understand that. I'm just saying, if you go to Mass and believe that the priest has just changed the wafer into part of a body, despite it still looking and tasting like a wafer, then it's a bit mental.
Like if you're a believer, you can say that rising from the dead was a miracle and while yeah, it's still fairytale, I can't technically disprove that. If you give me the blessed wafer, I can prove that it's not human flesh. Even if you don't want to accept the taste and the fact that it's still a wafer as evidence, we could go to a lab and test it and prove that it is not part of a human. Believing that is a very strange one.
BastardMy FIVE time prayers work just fine, thanks.
I know you asked for specific historical knowledge, which I can't provide. But still, the numerous references to human sacrifice in the Tanakh/Old Testament (and its repeated rejection/demand of substitutional practises) suggest it was a big deal once, and that its prohibition must have been seen as a major question of humanity.Was human sacrifice a big deal in the pre-Christian Middle East/Mediterranean?
Pretty interesting how Agnosticism has grown in the past century.
That has a lot to do with the Chinese communist party.
Pretty interesting how Agnosticism has grown in the past century.
Does Agnosticism include Atheists?
People didn’t switch, just that those born in China in the past 70 years or so are far more likely to be agnosticHow many people genuinely switched religions because of them ?
I'd suspect a lot of the people that are counted under 'Christianity' are actually CINO's and would be a lot closer to agnostics/atheists from their positions. My guess is that churches are pretty much empty in Western Europe bar the few elderly, is there a country with a different picture?
Hinduism outnumbered Islam only a 100 years ago? Really? Considering the number of continents each religion covers.
The Middle East was seriously underpopulated a century ago, the Ottoman and Qajar empires may have had less than 25 million between them on the eve of WW1 and not all of these were Muslims.
Typical evangelical thinking in the Southern US.
Nikki P** G**---BUT, there have been so many blessings. God’s fingerprints are everywhere in our circumstances. I mean, when your refrigerator happens to stop working on the weekend they are all on sale, that’s a blessing. Some people might say it’s luck, but I know better.---
God wants you to have a new refrigeratorTypical evangelical thinking in the Southern US.
Nikki P** G**---BUT, there have been so many blessings. God’s fingerprints are everywhere in our circumstances. I mean, when your refrigerator happens to stop working on the weekend they are all on sale, that’s a blessing. Some people might say it’s luck, but I know better.---
I think so, since most who seem to identify with one, also frequently identify with the other as well (even though they are somewhat different).
I'd suspect a lot of the people that are counted under 'Christianity' are actually CINO's and would be a lot closer to agnostics/atheists from their positions. My guess is that churches are pretty much empty in Western Europe bar the few elderly, is there a country with a different picture?
For me the main difference has always been that Agnostics basically say "I don't know if there is a god or not." While Atheists point of view is usually "There is no proof for a god ergo there is non."
Typical evangelical thinking in the Southern US.
Nikki P** G**---BUT, there have been so many blessings. God’s fingerprints are everywhere in our circumstances. I mean, when your refrigerator happens to stop working on the weekend they are all on sale, that’s a blessing. Some people might say it’s luck, but I know better.---
omg, literally.
“Bless your hearts. Don’t y’all know he works in mysterious ways?”God wants you to have a new refrigerator
Religion for me, namely Islam, is a spiritual compass. It's not about fairy tales, but deciphering the logic of Allah's word whilst being mindful of the time, place, society and context in which they were communicated. It's evolution of man rather than revolution.
Muslims are not the only people of God, but the people of his final messenger. I also don't believe that someone who lives an honest altruistic life will be condemned to hell while some jihadi cnut waltzes in to heaven cos he knows 2 words of Arabic. End of the day, the communications are there to further us, it is not Allah that needs us but rather us that can improve via his connection.
Prayer for me is meditation. 5 times a day, we perform our ablution, clear our minds of worldly conditions/influences and centralise our thoughts. I love the words "to be in the world, but not of it".
Science isn't an enemy of religion, but the tool and lense through which we witness/investigate/comprehend Allah's incredible creations/systems. Brings me to another quote great quote, “science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind” - Einstein.
The Quran is also very particularly about the persuit of knowledge being the responsibility of the individual rather than institutions. Of course there are scholars who would be significantly more knowledgable, but the spirit of the Quran was to carve out the individual from the tribe (in -1400 years ago Arabia) and equip him with his own moral agents.
Your views on religion are great but the unfortunate truth is that most people don't have such a watered down view view of religion. Until people stop taking it too seriously and literally science will remain incompatible with religion.
Hinduism outnumbered Islam only a 100 years ago? Really? Considering the number of continents each religion covers.
Do you know what Jordan, Lebanon or Turkey have shouldered in the wake of the Syrian war?I dont give a shit about religion or God nor do I judge people if you have a religious belief but my friend brought up a question during a recent conversation: Do Muslims want Islam to spread throughout the world? Is that why these refugees are pushing out of middle east into Europe and different areas of the globe and not fleeing to say Saudi Arabia? Why arent the other Muslim countries taking in as many refugees as some of the other Western countries? @iluvurmummy
Your views on religion are great but the unfortunate truth is that most people don't have such a watered down view view of religion. Until people stop taking it too seriously and literally science will remain incompatible with religion.
Agree, wish all religious people shared his view on it.
Only thing i react on, is his username, lol.
That's not how i was taught that religious people are supposed to behave.
I dont give a shit about religion or God nor do I judge people if you have a religious belief but my friend brought up a question during a recent conversation: Do Muslims want Islam to spread throughout the world? Is that why these refugees are pushing out of middle east into Europe and different areas of the globe and not fleeing to say Saudi Arabia? Why arent the other Muslim countries taking in as many refugees as some of the other Western countries? @iluvurmummy
If you wouldn't be condemned to hell for living an honest, altruistic life then why bother with anything else?Religion for me, namely Islam, is a spiritual compass. It's not about fairy tales, but deciphering the logic of Allah's word whilst being mindful of the time, place, society and context in which they were communicated. It's evolution of man rather than revolution.
Muslims are not the only people of God, but the people of his final messenger. I also don't believe that someone who lives an honest altruistic life will be condemned to hell while some jihadi cnut waltzes in to heaven cos he knows 2 words of Arabic. End of the day, the communications are there to further us, it is not Allah that needs us but rather us that can improve via his connection.
Prayer for me is meditation. 5 times a day, we perform our ablution, clear our minds of worldly conditions/influences and centralise our thoughts. I love the words "to be in the world, but not of it".
Science isn't an enemy of religion, but the tool and lense through which we witness/investigate/comprehend Allah's incredible creations/systems. Brings me to another quote great quote, “science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind” - Einstein.
The Quran is also very particularly about the persuit of knowledge being the responsibility of the individual rather than institutions. Of course there are scholars who would be significantly more knowledgable, but the spirit of the Quran was to carve out the individual from the tribe (in -1400 years ago Arabia) and equip him with his own moral agents.
If you wouldn't be condemned to hell for living an honest, altruistic life then why bother with anything else?
You call it “watered down”, I think it’s a matter of perspective.
Here’s a piece of commentary on the book Islam Without Extremes: A Muslim Case for Liberty, which I highly recommend.
Hinduism is actually a blanket term for several religions anyway that existed in that time. Anything from blind worship to the heights of philosophy in Vedanta.
The Charvaka believed that nothing exists beyond the body and the sole purpose of life is to enjoy -- even by stealing, if need be. They were hedonists. Purva Mimamsa school of thought believed that karma determines everything, thus there is no need for a god to dispense the fruits of actions. They are atheists in that sense, but of a different kind than the Charvaka as they performed austerities and recommended the contextual usage of rituals. Yet every one of them is classified as a "hindu" in modern parlance.
That's a very good piece and I couldn't agree more with the points that Mustafa Akyol raised. There's no doubt that secularism and liberal democracies have had a moderating effect on Christianity. In hindsight, "watered down" was completely the wrong word. The point I was making is that while your view of religion is great it is quite simply not the view of the majority who practice the religion. It is true that people can find the Qur’an and find it very liberal but it is also just as true that people can read it that conclude entirely the opposite. And neither side would be wrong. Hopefully more people come down towards your way of interpreting it
In the current form of Hinduism, people who claim to be Hindus atheists usually do it to take some kind of misguided moral high ground over other religions and bash them. It's utterly transparent, dishonest and bigoted.
That’s like, an awesome hard rock band name.Hell is death.