having been on the other side of the fence all i saw was evangelical christians patting each other on the back for standing up against the world and it's evil ways and it was a general understanding that it was up to us to save the world...every missed opportunity was lost forever
My husband was raised Catholic, and he converted to Nazarene when he was 18. Nazarene is a very conservative branch of Christianity, at least the ones we have been exposed to are. I was raised with no religion at all, and I learned about religion by studying it, exposing myself to various discussion groups, reading blogs, even visiting churches and such. When I try and discuss religion, specifically Christianity, with him, he has very set ideas on what Christianity IS. It gets very frustrating, but I repeatedly have to explain to him that he sees it that way simply because that is what he was exposed to. He bases all of his understanding of what is Christian on his Catholic upbringing and his time spent in a Nazarene church. I tell him that he should check out a more liberal flavor of Christianity sometime and let me know if he still feels the same.
You saw what you saw because of the people you chose to surround yourself with, and you based your opinion on that. The highly evangelical, conservative churches tend to teach that it is your job to convert the world. Christians who believe in predestination don't believe they can do anything to change anyone's mind. They believe that God chooses. Sure they will share their faith with others when the opportunity presents itself, you never know if God is using you to bring them them message after all, but they don't tend to go down the road of trying to convince anyone. If God wants that person in heaven, eventually God will get through to that person.
There are something like 36,000 flavors of Christianity. They all think differently, yet they all claim to be Christian.
i think abortion is wrong but i would never impose my beliefs on anyone
do you see where i'm coming from?
No, I don't see where you're coming from.
First, how would a person be compromising their belief that abortion is wrong by building a road? I don't see the connection.
Second, I am sure there are beliefs that you feel strongly enough about to cross that line and impose those beliefs on others. In fact, just the fact that you believe that others should not impose their beliefs on others might even fall into that category. They disagree with you, you're telling them they shouldn't push it on you.