wellwisher
Well-Known Member
Inspired by this thread: The religion you believe in - Why did you choose to believe that religion?
I'm not talking about religions where a passing familiarity was enough for you decide they weren't for you. I'm talking about religions that you were once immersed in: the ones you seriously considered a participated in, or where you were a full member.
If you are no longer a part of a religion you were once in - or were at least on a path toward - why did you reject the religion?
I used to be Liberal when I was young. I rejected that religion, as I got older, since it was too much based on emotional thinking and not enough on common sense and logic.
Not all religions are about divine beings. Buddhism does not have gods, but it is called a major religion. It is closer to philosophy. Other types of religions have humans playing god; humans defining universal right and wrong based on revisionist history. Revisionist history is where man gets to control the narrative of time and therefore history. Emotional thinking, without common sense, appears to allow this type of time backward religion.
Let me give an example, when we are young, such as a teen, you will do stupid things that are risky. But this is normal for that age, since one lacks experience and will often need to learn from the school of hard knocks.
As we get older we stop doing such things, since we have learned from our mistakes. However, this final understanding and 20/20 hindsight was not available to you when you were a teen. We grow from naive and young into wise and old. The teen does not start with the wisdom of old age and 20/20 hindsight anymore than the people of the past could see the future of today.
Revisionist history lives in an alternate reality where you start with the wisdom of old age; today, and grow young; past, with all the wisdom of today somehow available to you as a child. The result is the children of history are misjudged to have 20/20 hindsight of old age. Revisionist history does not see teens making and learning from mistakes, but judge them as adults of today; old growing young.
The AntiChrist, which is part of a religious prophesy, will make alterations in times and law; revise history for his own benefit; judge the past by the present and ignore the naive teen years of humanity. Instead this revision will be use to punish people, out of the natural vector of time, as though the teen knew the future; wise old man in a teen body.