comprehend said:
Is it necessary to have actually read the bible before one can criticize Christianity? I think it is. Cover to cover. Would anybody listen to me complain about some movie that I haven't seen? of course not. So why does anybody listen to people who argue against Christianity when they haven't actually read the Bible?
Would it not also be prudent to have read the whole Bible, cover to cover, before one claims to believe it? How can someone believe it if they don't know what it says? It seems that fewer and fewer Christians know much at all about the contents of the Bible:
http://www.irfi.org/articles/articles_51_100/bible_reading_declines.htm
I myself have read the Bible three times - once as a Christian, and twice more after I lost my faith. I've studied it fairly extensively, besides, but that doesn't necessarily, by itself, qualify me to critisize Christianity, as a religion, though it's something I enjoy doing. I retain the right to critisize what I consider to be bad behaviour, though, such as the current crop of evangelicals who are trying to have critical influence on our laws and government. I'm not saying that fundamentalists don't deserve representaion - they certainly do - but so do the rest of us that don't believe in their religion, be we moderate Christians, atheists, Muslims, or some other non-Chtistian group.
I do, however, like to debate the merits of the Bible, and its passages and verses - when they seem to me to be inconsistent, I usually will point that out to anyone who's interested.