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What are your religious beliefs?
#76

What are your religious beliefs?

My religion is the red pill and this forum is my church.

I like the moral code aspects of many traditional religions and the sense of community one can develop with many religions but I simply can't buy the religious dogma aspects; dogma that involves history from hundreds if not thousands of years ago and people today talking about it like they know every little fact without question. Facts that allege in some cases that supernatural events occurred on top of it, are occurring today, and/or will occur in the future. Despite my point of view, I am not an atheist. Why?

Because I simply don't know for sure either when it comes to the dogma aspects of traditional religions. In contrast, I wished many religious people had the same perspective and maintained a more skeptical attitude towards their dogmatic beliefs as oppose to militant loyalty; which is far too common within many religions. I find the latter quite dangerous and the case history, both past and present, supports my opinion tremendously.

We can't even get the the total picture regarding certain documented events (with video/audio technology) from the past century completely correct but I'm suppose to buy into and revolve my life around a series of supernatural/implausible/impossible to verify events from forever ago? Just makes no sense to me.

I do wish there was a strong red pill/patriarch religion without the dogma with a physical presence (a red pill non-libtard Unitarian church?) that I could maybe join but local tribal meetings and the internet red pill community will have to suffice for now.
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#77

What are your religious beliefs?

Quote: (09-25-2016 04:43 AM)MMX2010 Wrote:  

Quote: (09-22-2016 09:34 AM)AboveAverageJoe Wrote:  

I got kicked out of Sunday school as an 8 year old for asking too many logical questions and flustering the teacher. Never looked back.

Let's divide people who study religion into theologians (people who go to accredited religious colleges), religious psychologists and sociologists (like Jonathan Haidt, who have degrees in a either a social science or psychology AND are paid to do academic research on religion), and neither of these (normal dudes who study religion personally, without academic rigor nor religious training, like Scorpion, me, and probably everyone else).

I choose to exclude the testimony of both the theologians and the normal dudes, elevating the scientific conclusions and non-scientific speculations of the religious psychologists. Many people find this technique objectionable, which I understand. But I won't change my mind. And I'm glad I reveal this up front; you should, too.

Religious psychologists agree, both scientifically and speculatively, that the purpose of religion is to create a highly bonded community. This is a bedrock agreement that cannot be dissuaded by considerations of whether God is real OR whether specific Biblical stories have literally happened. Read again: CANNOT be dissuaded by... Many people, particularly normal dude atheists, find this annoying.

Many religious psychologists, (but not all, since some object vigorously), have speculated (but NOT scientifically proven, nor supported) that believing in non-reality is MORE effective than believing in reality. In other words, a religion that contains obvious bullshit elements (literally, elements that are scientifically and/or logically proven to be bullshit) is MORE effective at creating a highly bonded community than any religion which contains no bullshit at all.

It goes like this. Everyone, especially as a child, encounters obvious religious bullshit. This invites every child to question the obvious religious bullshit. If this questioning is done respectfully, with more of a focus on putting emotional bonding first, this questioning is acceptable. And the child is kept within the religious community, with either little or much punishment. But if this question is done disrespectfully, with either snark or too much "fierceness" of inquiry, with less of a focus on putting emotional bonding first, this questioning is unacceptable. And the child is either booted out of the religious community or self-deports as an adult, leaving behind a more highly bonded religious community.

The logic is simple (if even Very Fucking Annoying): a religion which only contains non-bullshit elements CANNOT administer this subtle test, and therefore cannot know how committed its believers are. Whereas ANY religion with ANY form of bullshit can always know that everyone in the church has put the emotional well-being of the church above himself.

My experience is that religious people can respectfully consider this proposition and either love it, hate it, or dismiss it, without hating on me. Whereas a much smaller percentage of atheists can do so; they always try to steer the conversation back to whether Good exists, or to assertion that objective truth is more important than community bonding.

-----

Edited to add, if you read the entire thread, you can see my post's thesis working in real time.

The majority of us have accepted religious bullshit with an eye for social bonding. These are Scorpion, debeguiled, Kid Twist, myself, and some others. (To be fair, Scorpion would say his perspective IS NOT religious bullshit, and he would support this argument with far more religious knowledge than I possess.)

Meanwhile, there are two posters who simply cannot accept religious bullshit. These are Mage and AboveAverageJoe.

Without getting into a deep theological discussion of whether all religious beliefs are true, ask yourself where we would sit if we were discussing religion in a bar. Obviously, Mage and AboveAverageJoe would be sitting next to each other, challenging our religious beliefs.

Now ask yourself, if a non-English speaker witnessed our behavior, what would he see? He would see that Mage and AboveAverageJoe are upset at us for some reason, but that we accept their upset mood - without being upset ourselves. They would also see that Scorpion is our de facto leader, and that we more or less agree with him.

In Trumpian terms, Mage and AboveAverageJoe have built an emotional wall, and they have gotten themselves to pay for it.

This is good analysis but we are not in a bar. We are discussing ideas anonymously on internet.

You also somewhat underestimate my stance on this.

I have been aware of this social dynamic you describe here for a long time. I am myself tolerating Christian bullshit for greater purposes. Some of my friends are Christians with whom I share common traditional values. Obviously I don't challange their faith everyday. My wife is a Christian. I am ok with her being a Christian because the church does the job of keeping her moral character high for me. She is teaching my two children to pray Christian prayers. I don't mind. I know this will install in them some basic ability to think im metaphysical terms, but they will not grow to be zealots, because that is not characteristic to those born in a religion. better they see the bullshit trough children eyes. I know when they will grow up I will show them the Godfather movie and explain that men and children can be careless and believe in fairy tales but men are expected to perform even by saintly priests and women and sometimes it means knowing when to break the rules. When I need support of like minded traditionalist men with sane moral values and family values I myself pretend to be more Christian than I am. I know there are many men who do the same. I know Trump is such a man too.

But the thing is I don't feel the need to play this game in this forum. Anonymous Internet is where we should discuss our ideas boldly.

Anonymous Internet has enabled men to compare their experiences with women and has helped us to unveil their true nature. We don't need to pay the woman respect tax on the internet unlike in real life

Similarly we should't pay our bullshit tax to religion here. We should discuss how to keep traditional moral values with less catering to bullshit. if we are to accept Christian half truths that means we are stuck not only with the good things that are suggested by Christianity like charity, sexual modesty, honesty, respect for elders, family values, sanctity of life but also with bad ones like softness, meekness pathological altruism and others.

If a man acknowledges that Christianity contains some bullish but he plays along with it for greater purpose of keeping the good values Christianity teaches I can respect that. But if a man cannot confess even in an anonymous freethinker forum that he holds some fairy tales as bullshit he is a fanatical man whom I wouldn't trust much in real life too.
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#78

What are your religious beliefs?

The reason I never debate religion is, that believers always assumes atheists/agnostics are arguing from a position of superiority. Kind of like when you break it to a younger sibling that the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus is not real. It takes too much reconsideration of ones basic beliefs that it is easier just to swallow all the incredible leaps of logic and science that Christianity demands, whole.
Religion is the most galvanizing way to organize people which is why it always find itself in politics and war.
One can be a follower of the teachings of Jesus Christ without also believing in sky fairies, and magic.
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#79

What are your religious beliefs?

Quote: (09-24-2016 12:57 PM)AboveAverageJoe Wrote:  

To me all the Abrahamic religions are just a bunch of fairy tales told to keep people compliant. I don't see why red-pillars aren't following the ancient relegions of Rome or Greece, they have been around longer and they both created great civilizations that Christianity just built opun. In fact Christianity was grafted onto already existing Rome.


Humans couldn't help to personify and anthropomorphize images of men and women that ruled over them whimsically in unseen astral planes. Many still can't as the prevalence of modern religion show. Religion also lends itslef to two more of our natural instincts: to form social groups and to appoint leaders over ourselves.

Greco-Roman gods as well as the pagan gods of other various civilizations through out history are way more anthropomorphized then God in the monotheist religions. They are pretty much super humans - human beings but with their powers and abilities greatly increased. The difference between them and regular mortals is a difference of degrees rather then kind. They are unique to each civilization and to their needs and reflects the needs of that particular civilization. That's a big reason a lot of modern nationalist movements, if they have any sort of spiritual bent tend to revert to their ancient pagan traditions. A good example is with the revival of Norse paganism in the Nordic countries.

It's also pretty telling that a lot of these sort of gods tend to be a god of a specific domain and these domains seem to always reflect the earthly needs of human such as agriculture, war, love, and the like.
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#80

What are your religious beliefs?

Quote: (09-25-2016 10:08 AM)Mage Wrote:  

If a man acknowledges that Christianity contains some bullish but he plays along with it for greater purpose of keeping the good values Christianity teaches I can respect that. But if a man cannot confess even in an anonymous freethinker forum that he holds some fairy tales as bullshit he is a fanatical man whom I wouldn't trust much in real life too.

Mage, you hold all these double standards. We as humans came from nothing but are debating metaphysics on the internet from undisclosed locations. That's amazing in its own right.

If I believe that God raised someone from the dead I'm a "fanatic", for example? At best, you should just be silent. At worst, you can't answer anything but keep running your mouth. So it's time for you to be honest and admit that you can't explain the origin or grandeur of life, so why keep trying to bring other people down?

Normal, functional and healthy Christian believers, for example, aren't fanatics. They are people who try to live up to eternal things, like virture, beauty, and truth.

I'm not sure why you keep childishly attacking others. We know there are stupid, bad teachings by some out there, in all fields and disciplines.

They exist everywhere. We are all aware of that. But don't call things that are not stupid as such, not fanatic things as "fanatic". You just become a weird language SJW type with that crap.
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#81

What are your religious beliefs?

And other beliefs beside the Christian theology debate?
Don't get me Wrong, I find it incredibly interesting and delightful to read this argumentations from well informed contenders.
However, I was hoping I d find something more about other tendencies even modern ones?
Zoroastrionism? Greco - Roman, African or Polynesian? The tibetan take on Buddhism?

We move between light and shadow, mutually influencing and being influenced through shades of gray...
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#82

What are your religious beliefs?

Was going to post this in the pepe thread but went way off topic so probably here is the best.

Aurini said that part of the reason the west orchestrated an industrial/technological boom was because we stamped out the false gods.

I think we didn't know when to stop. We've pushed away all gods, and have totally lost any sense of the spirituality that completed our ancestors for tens of thousands of years.

Our religion has been replaced with a sterile entertainment that allows the (((entertainers))) direct access to the part of our placated masses once reserved for tradition and religion. This tradition and religion always bought the people together. (((Entertainment))) divides us.

Humanity devoid of a spiritual binding has been shredded by the capitalistic technology boom and our highly lauded sterile intellectualists.

We think we're the smartest people to ever live.

I think we're the most arrogant society that has ever existed.
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#83

What are your religious beliefs?

Pentecostal Christian.

I got involved with the Pentecostals because the preachers at my church go in, yelling stomping feet laying hands etc. People speak in tounges etc.

I left the Catholic church at 14 because mass literally puts me to sleep there.

I experimented with Hinduism, Buddhism bunch of malarky IMO Jesus is my saviour and the truth.

I started reading the Bible and became Christian again 5 years ago but couldn't find a non-cucked and non-boring church before the Pentecostals.

Red pill stuff I've heard in Church:
Pray away the gay (homosexuality is a sin period)
Allah is bull****, Buddha too
Women are strongly pressured to wear skirts or dresses not pants
Women can lead in our songs but ABSOLUTELY NOT preach
Marriage is for LIFE
Armageddon is close
Etc etc

I've heard Orthodox is pretty RP but if the mass is Catholic like I simply couldn't stay awake, happy with Pentecostals
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#84

What are your religious beliefs?

Quote: (09-28-2016 02:10 PM)El_Gostro Wrote:  

And other beliefs beside the Christian theology debate?
Don't get me Wrong, I find it incredibly interesting and delightful to read this argumentations from well informed contenders.
However, I was hoping I d find something more about other tendencies even modern ones?
Zoroastrionism? Greco - Roman, African or Polynesian? The tibetan take on Buddhism?

I put forth the concept of ancestor worship and star worship. We are the sum of our ancestors DNA and many of the elements that make up our body were forged in stars and not on earth. Also without our great star-the sun-we wouldn't have life.
Makes sense to me. No grand leaps of logic necessary.
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