Best First wrote:sprunkner wrote:
I don't know what to say to all this. (But I'm going to say it anyway!) I spent my entire life, until the last few months, as a member of a faith that was extremely literalist and dogmatic. Mormonism really does have an explanation for everything... kind of like Yaya's attempts to answer everyone's questions.
What bothers me is that 'answers to everything' are always based on premises that that person or that faith have decided are true.
so essentially the answer, no matter how wordy it is, is always 'because I say so'.
People can point, for example, to the Bible as a source of truth, but they are the ones who decide to give it credence therefore all that is essentially being said is "this is the truth because I think it is'.
I know. The thing that really gets me is the way people talk about the Bible being "the word of God." Yet, when you get down to it, those people will ignore certain verses and emphasize others-- and the verses vary amazingly from Christian sect to Christian sect.
[quote="Best First']of course that begs the question why I bother questioning people who adopt such a mentality who will happily infer one illogical thing from another and then state it as if it were obvious fact (e.g. the existence of God must mean there is an afterlife, when one in no way logically infers the other) , but to be honest it fascinates and worries me in equal measure. Its a bit like picking a scab in some ways.[/quote]
Oh, I know. Right about when I started dropping out of Mormonism and radically redefinig my beliefs, I began reading everything I could about the Crusades. "Let's see... I'm fed up with religion... Hey, look at this! It's about the possibly most bloody, bizarre religious conflict in history! I must read it!"
It's much more fun when you don't have any ****ing clue why it works.
[quote-"Best First"]Although some things just irritate me, like statements that intimate that its 'remembering' God that makes us honest, trust worthy and accountable. Now I can be arrogant, moody, sarcastic and pedantic but I am all of those things above and it has nothing to do with worship of any god. Again we have someone saying this how things are because this is how I think things are.
For Space Monkey's sake Yaya even, despite telling me that no one should be judged because only God can know someone's inner workings, tells us why Impy feels the way he does. Its slightly mind numbing.
there's a quote from someone I can't remember that goes something along the lines of "I have found that people who are constantly seeking the truth are generally much more agreeable than those who think they have found it". I think there's something in that.[/quote]
Not to mention the
Firefly-ism "Nothing's more dangerous than a man who's convinced he's got God on his side."
The idea that good attributes come from God... yea, I think it's completely ****ed to create divine beings that influence all our decisions. It's as though we create religions in order to excuse behavior.
I would like to hope, though I'm not sure I believe, that when we love, inspire, and create, we tap into some sort of divine well within ourselves. The more I meditate the more I feel as though there is greater power in my subconscious than I ever tapped into. I think this is similar to so many people's assertions that our conception of God is based, deeply, on our conception of ourselves. If God created us, then he would have given us not just some kind of receptor for Him, but a well of divinity within ourselves that is just as important. I can't believe in complete dependence. We don't ask our children to depend on us their entire lives.
Best First wrote:In all honesty there are times I would love to believe in something, to have that sense of reassurance but that's never going to happen as long as the notions we have don't stand up to a few simple questions.
And if I am wrong, and it's in someone's plan that I or anyone I know and care about get AIDS and die horribly, then even if there is some higher purpose that I am not aware of, that person/thing remains a c*** for not filling me in on the detail or picking such a piss poor bunch of prophets that they can't even get the party line right. Come on people - branding.
I really don’t think there is much getting away from the fact that if God exists and has some kind of message, it is doing a pretty weak job of passing it on. Unless the message is “as a race bumble around disagreeing over what all this means, don’t question those in power too much and kill each other in large numbers over things that one would have thought really aren’t as important as a single individual life”.
This is the problem I kept running into within Mormonism. By the time I hit 22, I had already reached the conclusion that the only direction from God anyone could claim would be entirely personal, and based very strongly on that person's non-divine-derived notions of right and wrong. But I continued to belong to an organization that claimed organizational divine authority from God. Part of it was that I still believed, to some degree, in the visionary claims of the early Mormon prophets. Once I found out that those weren't what they were cracked up to be, either (ah, genuine history, so cold, so cold!) I still tried to stay in for family's sake. Then the Mormon Church started fighting against gay marriage, on the claims of divine inspiration.
All my experience with homosexuals had convinced me that they are gay for good. All my experience with marriage had taught me that you really have to be attracted to your partner A LOT. Put 'em together-- what the hell is wrong with gay marriage? So this organization was claiming divine authority to something that felt wrong, deep in my soul, to me. You could say God showed me that they were wrong. Or maybe I just understood myself better than I ever had. I don't believe it, therefore I don't have to follow it. Amazing how that took 26 years.
And on that note, I think I'll have a cup of coffee.