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Tony Funderburk

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Yes, and I believe it can be obtained through careful observation and reason. Although it may not be easily understood by man.

So, if you had not been born, absolute truth wouldn't exist. Especially for the slow-minded ones who don't understand what they observe.

Absolutely. I believe in God. But merely for the subjective, intuitive, and mystical reasons everyone else does.

That's silliness. Because intuition (and "reason" you mentioned) should show you not everything is observable.
 

Tony Funderburk

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Originally Posted by Revelation
"What does AIDs have to do with monogamous homosexual relationships? You can't get an STD if you aren't sleeping around."

Tell that to the many wives of homosexuals who acquired the AIDS virus from their despicable husbands...even though the wives were monogamous.

And it's no wonder you think the way you do about things. With cartoon science (the "video" you promoted) which builds up the Christian "straw man" to easily knock him down it's simply no wonder.

In this world, it's easy to compare ourselves to society as a whole and feel pretty good about our own standing, but your perversion will eventually find you out. I implore you to really consider the actual sexual act you'll be committing once you cease your celibacy. Really think about what is going where. That's about as gross as I care to get, but you should get a clear picture of yourself in that circumstance. Can you see yourself passionately kissing another man? And can you see yourself waking up next to that guy every morning with love in your eyes for one another.

Please...don't go there.
If you're right about your existence, then so be it, and so what to all of us.
If I'm right, you could find yourself thanking the Christians who cared enough to try and talk you out of an eternity apart from life...or lamenting the fact that you didn't listen.
 

Revelation

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Originally Posted by Revelation
"What does AIDs have to do with monogamous homosexual relationships? You can't get an STD if you aren't sleeping around."

Tell that to the many wives of homosexuals who acquired the AIDS virus from their despicable husbands...even though the wives were monogamous.

And it's no wonder you think the way you do about things. With cartoon science (the "video" you promoted) which builds up the Christian "straw man" to easily knock him down it's simply no wonder.

In this world, it's easy to compare ourselves to society as a whole and feel pretty good about our own standing, but your perversion will eventually find you out. I implore you to really consider the actual sexual act you'll be committing once you cease your celibacy. Really think about what is going where. That's about as gross as I care to get, but you should get a clear picture of yourself in that circumstance. Can you see yourself passionately kissing another man? And can you see yourself waking up next to that guy every morning with love in your eyes for one another.

Please...don't go there.
If you're right about your existence, then so be it, and so what to all of us.
If I'm right, you could find yourself thanking the Christians who cared enough to try and talk you out of an eternity apart from life...or lamenting the fact that you didn't listen.

I'm very aware of the kind of wives you are speaking about who have gay husbands who cheat on them. Here is a video of some and their perceptions...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bm9hLVjpZno&feature=channel_page

And I'm not going to pretend the cartoon wasn't biased, because it very clearly was. But the fact that I am here and discussing these matters with theologians who are convinced that I'm going to hell should be more than enough evidence of my willingness to challenge my personal biases. How many GLBT forums have you been to lately?

As far as your argument, I find Christianity can be quite the perversion. It can serve as a form of emotional rape by which a person gets a psychological thrill out of prostelizing their faith regardless of how it affects others. Look at the Westboro Baptist Church and some of the members here. They aren't lamenting and grieving because some of their neighbors will be spending an eternity separated from God; they are enjoying it. They even feel like they are in a special position to judge everyone else for how they live their lives.

In the words of Ghandi....

"I like your Christ, I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ."
 

Town Heretic

Out of Order
Hall of Fame
As far as religion, when I was young I was a Jesus freak...But even at a young age I didn't buy a lot of what my church was saying about the Bible. I simply read it and interpreted it differently than how my church told me I was supposed to interpret it.
By what light? I mean, you were a kid with limited life experience, still forming frontal lobes/judgment centers and without the scholarly background to challenge the material independently...a recipe for disaster.
By high school I was strongly questioning Christianity, especially when I realized I was gay and I had to listen to my peers going on about how gays were sinful, diseased, etc.
That you knew other judgmentally deficient kids who enjoyed attacking people with differing planks in their eyes is unsurprising. That's really a bit of what you were doing to the church dogma you weren't in a position to properly judge, isn't it?
I studied a lot of different belief systems. Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Taoism, Satanism, etc. While all of them provided interesting insights, I found it difficult to decipher which of them would be "the one truth path."
It seems that you looked for an alternative that would allow you to find that earlier, fun sense of spirituality without actually making a demand of you that you would be unwilling to meet. As to how diligent you were in your studies...we'll come back to it in a moment.
And then in college I studied philosophy. I read Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Kant, etc. and what it taught me was how to use critical thinking.
Always a good thing.
That is the ability to look past my own biases and prejudices and to be open to any answer as long as it was supported by reasonable evidence.
Who got to define reasonable?
So I went out into the world and I forced people to defend their position and I found that the more you questioned people's beliefs in their religion, the more it was revealed how little they actually know outside of their respected holy scriptures.
Forced? That sounds awfully militant for a relativist...also fairly judgmental. And what people? All? Most? Some?
It seems when it comes to morals, everyone I have ever met relies on their feelings and reason to decide what is correct for them to believe.
You should get out more or you're the victim of a bizarre mathematical coincidence.
Some people give this very human trait a name like the "Holy Spirit" or "Karma" or whatever, but it's always the same.
If you think the HS and Karma are the same you shouldn't have invested that early study in "Religion For Dummies" as those things are just fraught with error and supposition. :plain:
Sadly, I found the more you push it, the more self righteous and defensive people become,
You find it sad and/or surprising that when you attack the most personal beliefs people have they become defensive? :squint:
largely because of how aware they are of how intangible their beliefs really are.
Really...is that what they said?
When I learned psychology I came to understand this was an emotional defense mechanism that people commonly use to avoid anxiety brought upon them when they are forced to contemplate their belief system. Even on this forum I see so many common defense mechanisms being used, like some of the delusional projection I saw in the homosexual thread.
For some that's probably true, for many it probably isn't. For you it's probably part of dealing with the buried guilt of denying what you once embraced and feeling the need to justify the betrayal.
In fact, all this was ultimately how I got over all the guilt my church and peers instilled in me for being gay and I was able to develop my own moral propositions from the world around me.
I think this confirms that your search was mostly about self justification and your response is understandable in that light.
I think political beliefs are largely situational and dependent on things like your upbringing, peer groups, social class, etc.
Points for ideological consistency in approach then...
Sorry for the long intro, but that is me in a nut shell.
Welcome. :e4e:
 

Stripe

Teenage Adaptive Ninja Turtle
LIFETIME MEMBER
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By what light? I mean, you were a kid with limited life experience, still forming frontal lobes/judgment centers and without the scholarly background to challenge the material independently...a recipe for disaster.

That you knew other judgmentally deficient kids who enjoyed attacking people with differing planks in their eyes is unsurprising. That's really a bit of what you were doing to the church dogma you weren't in a position to properly judge, isn't it?

It seems that you looked for an alternative that would allow you to find that earlier, fun sense of spirituality without actually making a demand of you that you would be unwilling to meet. As to how diligent you were in your studies...we'll come back to it in a moment.

Always a good thing.

Who got to define reasonable?

Forced? That sounds awfully militant for a relativist...also fairly judgmental. And what people? All? Most? Some?

You should get out more or you're the victim of a bizarre mathematical coincidence.

If you think the HS and Karma are the same you shouldn't have invested that early study in "Religion For Dummies" as those things are just fraught with error and supposition. :plain:

You find it sad and/or surprising that when you attack the most personal beliefs people have they become defensive? :squint:

Really...is that what they said?

For some that's probably true, for many it probably isn't. For you it's probably part of dealing with the buried guilt of denying what you once embraced and feeling the need to justify the betrayal.

I think this confirms that your search was mostly about self justification and your response is understandable in that light.

Points for ideological consistency in approach then...

Welcome. :e4e:
:rotfl:

You've been TH'ed...

... and found wanting :cool:
 
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