But why judge the worst monotheist with the best non-theist or non-monotheist?
Why, indeed? That's why I didn't do it.
You wont get an argument from me that Christians and other monotheist have done horrible things, but what are you planning to gain by pointing them out?
I think it might be helpful to understand
why the adherents of dogatic belief systems are so prone to intolerance and violence.
But you can say this to just about anything that you attach importance to. This isnt just in monotheism or religion either. Of course systematic and dogmatic religions will have louder responses but you can attribute that to all sorts of things outside of dogma. Anytime you have a large body of people who find something meaningful and someone or some group to tamper with it, you will get a response. This can be attributed more to human behavior then you can any dogma. Sociology 101...
Not just louder, but more intolerant, more violent, more deadly. Why?
Not just in reaction to people who "tamper with" their beliefs, but in aggressive attacks on people who merely fail to conform. Why?
Some religions convince their adherents not to behave that way. The Abrahamic religions, for the most part, don't. Why?
Maybe I'm wrong about dogma. I don't think I am, but it's possible. If it's not dogma, though, there must be some other explanation for the brutal behavior of Christians, Muslims, and Jews toward people of other religions, and even toward dissenters within the same religion. What
is the explanation?
His take on St. Theodosia (that she intended murder) is bizarre in the extreme and flies in the face of her life as taught by the Church so who's glorifying violence? She was martyred for trying to prevent the destruction of an icon and martyrs are martyrs whatever other failings they might have. We don't expect saints to be perfect - they're still human.
St. Theodosia was executed for killing a man and stoning the patriarch. She was, of course, trying to prevent the man she killed from taking down an icon. She protected the icon by knocking a high ladder out from under a man. I think if you were standing on a high ladder, and I knocked it out from under you, you might think I meant you harm -- even if harming you wasn't the
main reason I killed you.
What's bizarre to me is the refusal even to acknowledge the problem of violence in the Church, and the Church's failure to address it. What kind of a religion excuses burning people at the stake? What kind of a religion do people have when they hang their Jewish neighbors up on meathooks and run them through the machinery at a slaughterhouse, under the banner of the Archangel Michael? When they are so eager to slaughter their Jewish neighbors that even the Nazis are horrified?
Do you think it was any consolation to the Jews of Bucharest that all the horrors inflicted on them by their pious Orthodox neighbors weren't directly ordered by the hierarchy? Do you think they might have wished that -- somewhere along the line -- the Church had made it absolutely clear that torturing and murdering people because they belong to a different religion is
not acceptable?
Can you imagine Buddhists doing such a thing in the name of their religion? Unitarians? Quakers? Jains?
Can you not understand
at all why people would wonder
what is wrong with the Abrahamic religions?
I actually can't see how such can be anything other than willful on his part - and willful ignorance is something that I'm not even willing to debate. If you want to wallow in your misconceptions then by all means do - I won't stop you.
And if you want to take this down to the level of personal insult, I won't stop you, either. But I won't join you.