migueldarican
New Member
I'm not even sure if this is much of a debate. Most people claim they've arrived at their religious beliefs or lack of beliefs for the right reason, and it'll probably turn out that those reasons are the same as mine.
The Right Reason - Examining the actual beliefs. What do the "sacred" texts say? What are commandments if any? If you've examined the actual belief system, close enough to say, "I'm a [place belief here]", you're good to go.
The Wrong Reason - What followers of your examined belief system say about it. How they act. Do they act contrary to what they say they are? Are they a bad [place belief here]? You end up leaving a belief system because hypocrisy, and join another belief system because there's a lot of cool people there.
Now, don't get me wrong: the second reason there, can definitely be an influence. Especially when some followers of a given belief are actually leaders within that belief system. You shouldn't stop being a Christian, because there are bad Christians. Or become an atheist because a lot of atheists are just so cool, yeah. No!
Like I said, most people want to say they did it for the right reason. Everyone wants to say they're the logical one. Believe it or not, theists will tell you that believing in God is more logical than not believing. Seriously, it's like watching the soup commercials about MSG. Remember? Campbells and Progresso both having commercials that said, "We don't have MSG, they do." Okay, either one of you or both of you is lying, and there's an easy way to tell. We're not talking about opinion stuff here, like taste or whether or not it's a "wholesome" diet. It's an ingredient. But I'm off in left field now... back on topic.
Too often I see people lose faith in a religion because they were treated badly. Or leaders in their religion acting contrary to their religion. So they leave. But if they leave for the wrong reason, chances are they'll return for the wrong reasons as well.
I read an article by a Christian who said he tried on atheism for a while until he saw what popular atheists were saying, and disagreed so he went back. No! You're doing it wrong!
If you see Christians behaving badly, then you be a good Christian. If an atheist is being an idiot, then you be an atheist who is not an idiot.
The Right Reason - Examining the actual beliefs. What do the "sacred" texts say? What are commandments if any? If you've examined the actual belief system, close enough to say, "I'm a [place belief here]", you're good to go.
The Wrong Reason - What followers of your examined belief system say about it. How they act. Do they act contrary to what they say they are? Are they a bad [place belief here]? You end up leaving a belief system because hypocrisy, and join another belief system because there's a lot of cool people there.
Now, don't get me wrong: the second reason there, can definitely be an influence. Especially when some followers of a given belief are actually leaders within that belief system. You shouldn't stop being a Christian, because there are bad Christians. Or become an atheist because a lot of atheists are just so cool, yeah. No!
Like I said, most people want to say they did it for the right reason. Everyone wants to say they're the logical one. Believe it or not, theists will tell you that believing in God is more logical than not believing. Seriously, it's like watching the soup commercials about MSG. Remember? Campbells and Progresso both having commercials that said, "We don't have MSG, they do." Okay, either one of you or both of you is lying, and there's an easy way to tell. We're not talking about opinion stuff here, like taste or whether or not it's a "wholesome" diet. It's an ingredient. But I'm off in left field now... back on topic.
Too often I see people lose faith in a religion because they were treated badly. Or leaders in their religion acting contrary to their religion. So they leave. But if they leave for the wrong reason, chances are they'll return for the wrong reasons as well.
I read an article by a Christian who said he tried on atheism for a while until he saw what popular atheists were saying, and disagreed so he went back. No! You're doing it wrong!
If you see Christians behaving badly, then you be a good Christian. If an atheist is being an idiot, then you be an atheist who is not an idiot.