Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
what if you had evidence
Do all your beliefs, require personal evidence?
you have no evidence, but you can guess
Does one’s own expectations of those who call themselves “christain” justifies one’s own judgement that one should not believe in the God of Jesus Christ?
Thing is, isn’t it true that how others are, is no excuse for how one is?
Does one’s own expectations of those who call themselves “christain” justifies one’s own judgement that one should not believe in the God of Jesus Christ?
Thing is, isn’t it true that how others are, is no excuse for how one is?
Does one’s own expectations of those who call themselves “christain” justifies one’s own judgement that one should not believe in the God of Jesus Christ?
Thing is, isn’t it true that how others are, is no excuse for how one is?
This justification business gets tricky, though. Even a charlatan that pretends to provide "miracles" to take people's money has a justifiable reason for doing it: to get their money. We may not agree with their justification, morally, because we do not accept their Darwinist philosophy of life, humanity, and commerce, but that doesn't make it any less reasonable, or even unjust, according to the paradigm being used by the actor, to assess it.Justify it, no. Cause one to become disillusion about the religion, probably.
What justifies my lack of belief is an inability to justify belief. That really has nothing to do with anybody else or their behavior. However the hypocrisy I found in several church leaders I came across led me down a road to try and justify belief. I'd suppose if the people to teach you about God could be admired you'd be less likely to start to question what they are teaching.
I think we are all trapped in the bias of our own expectations. It's part if the human condition. The difference is in being able and willing to acknowledge this fact, or not. It's humbling to acknowledge the hopelessness of our own subjective bias, but it keeps us willing to learn, and open to others. Whereas those of us who are not willing to be so humbled become unteachable; ignorant and rigid, and unnecessarily abrasive to their fellow humans.
Honesty and humility are essential for a life well lived, and for relations well shared. We can't help our innate bias, but we can minimize the significance of it's effect in our lives with self-awareness, and practice.
Conviction justifies belief of all types. People believe what they believe for a variety of reasons. No reason exists in a vacuum, thus if one's belief hinges on a single thing it is not likely to endure new information regardless of what that single reason is.
Perhaps it' the placing of blame enables our "lesser angels" in the first place, though. It may be that in some instances, humility and self-awareness means setting aside that inclination all together. We may not be able to make it 'go away' as a part of our nature, but we may be able to choose not to act on it's behalf.Well its true that to be aware of one’s own nature and to have honest expectations of one’s own nature is better than not.
Thing is in this case, there is the part of human nature that is to blame, and to place blame for being the victim of.
Perhaps it' the placing of blame enables our "lesser angels" in the first place, though. It may be that in some instances, humility and self-awareness means setting aside that inclination all together. We may not be able to make it 'go away' as a part of our nature, but we may be able to choose not to act on it's behalf.