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So I'm noticing a trend in proselytizing religions. It goes something like this:
If you listen/read/pray with a pure heart and open eyes/ears/heart, then you will come to believe in the same thing I have come to believe.I've heard this from Christians, Muslims and Baha'i here. If I've heard you saying it, presumably you've all heard each other saying it as well. So here's the thing:
At what point do you say to yourself, "We're all making the exact same claim as the way to find faith in the religion we already believe in. Maybe all having a pure heart and opened orifices does is reinforce a belief or intensify a leaning that we already had."
I mean think about it. There's a good chance that in the over one billion people in the religion you are not a part of, at least one or two of its more mild adherents was feeling terribly distraught and truly opened their hearts to whatever was out there. And came away with even deeper faith in their religion just like you did.
Maybe it just really doesn't work unless you're already inclined to believe in the religion you're a part of?
So I'm noticing a trend in proselytizing religions. It goes something like this:
If you listen/read/pray with a pure heart and open eyes/ears/heart, then you will come to believe in the same thing I have come to believe.I've heard this from Christians, Muslims and Baha'i here. If I've heard you saying it, presumably you've all heard each other saying it as well. So here's the thing:
At what point do you say to yourself, "We're all making the exact same claim as the way to find faith in the religion we already believe in. Maybe all having a pure heart and opened orifices does is reinforce a belief or intensify a leaning that we already had."
I mean think about it. There's a good chance that in the over one billion people in the religion you are not a part of, at least one or two of its more mild adherents was feeling terribly distraught and truly opened their hearts to whatever was out there. And came away with even deeper faith in their religion just like you did.
Maybe it just really doesn't work unless you're already inclined to believe in the religion you're a part of?
So I'm noticing a trend in proselytizing religions. It goes something like this:
If you listen/read/pray with a pure heart and open eyes/ears/heart, then you will come to believe in the same thing I have come to believe.I've heard this from Christians, Muslims and Baha'i here. If I've heard you saying it, presumably you've all heard each other saying it as well. So here's the thing:
At what point do you say to yourself, "We're all making the exact same claim as the way to find faith in the religion we already believe in. Maybe all having a pure heart and opened orifices does is reinforce a belief or intensify a leaning that we already had."
I mean think about it. There's a good chance that in the over one billion people in the religion you are not a part of, at least one or two of its more mild adherents was feeling terribly distraught and truly opened their hearts to whatever was out there. And came away with even deeper faith in their religion just like you did.
Maybe it just really doesn't work unless you're already inclined to believe in the religion you're a part of?
When someone starts telling me, "the Bible says". I tell them I have never heard my Bible speak to me. And I know for a fact that it doesn't know what I'm going to do with those words I read, copy and paste, or memorize to try convince someone else that I'm a godly person. I could be a liar and the Bible wouldn't even know it.
There is nothing to be gained by doing so.I get it. You make a very valid point. I find it interesting that Judaism does not proselytize (at least as far as ive been told)
I've noticed.but the religions that are offshoots of Judaism do, such as my own. Hmmm.
If G-d hadn't given them the ability to understand until Deuteronomy 29, then neither G-d nor Moses should have been complaining anything they did as it was never under their control. But they do. A number of times. What the verse is actuallysaying is:This is a term used often by the Manifestations of God which His followers repeat.
An example of it is told by Moses in Deuteronomy.
"And Moses called unto all Israel, and said unto them, Ye have seen all that the LORD did before your eyes in the land of Egypt unto Pharaoh, and unto all his servants, and unto all his land; The great temptations which thine eyes have seen, the signs, and those great miracles:
Yet the LORD hath not given you an heart to perceive, and eyes to see, and ears to hear, unto this day.” (Deuteronomy 29:2-4)
This points to another ear and eye that perceives and understands and is needed in order to see truth.
If G-d hadn't given them the ability to understand until Deuteronomy 29, then neither G-d nor Moses should have been complaining anything they did as it was never under their control. But they do. A number of times. What the verse is actuallysaying is:
G-d didn't give you a heart [to forget but rather] to understand and [G-d didn't give you] eyes [to turn away from, but rather] to see and [G-d didn't give you] ears [to ignore, but rather] to hear, until this day.
In other word,s Moses is reprimanding them for not using their hearts, eyes and ears for the right purpose.
My favorite is "My bible says", like what do they mean? Does there's say something different than mine? (I'm kinda poking a little fun at the screaming revival preachers of my youth. )
I question the loyalties of anyone who just "comes to Jesus" after a few words. These also tend to be the same types of people who want to see all references to other religions destroyed or else people will lose faith. I think what we have here are people who are willing to buy anything they see on a commercial, not people who truly experience a need to have a divine relationship of any sort.I know a number of staunch atheists and non-Christians who read through a Gospel with a Christian friend and are truly captivated and convinced by the words of God, convinced by the person of Jesus, His teaching and resurrection and give their lives to Him.
This is due to the fact you can be a pure heart and be purely compassionate or purely selfish.In the following years, I had a number of further experiences that kept showing me the bad things that people who claim to be of pure and open heart do: some seem to do mostly good, or at least with good intent, but more seem to do bad, or seem to have bad intent.
I get it. You make a very valid point. I find it interesting that Judaism does not proselytize...
What you have done and what has been done by followers of your religion, may not be the same.Tumah wrote above:
"So I'm noticing a trend in proselytizing religions. It goes something like this:
If you listen/read/pray with a pure heart and open eyes/ears/heart, then you will come to believe in the same thing I have come to believe.
I've heard this from Christians, Muslims and Baha'i here."
My reaction to your post above is that as a Baha'i on this forum I generally try to respond to peoples questions and present material explaining what the Faith is about. Proselytizing in my view involves putting some pressure on a person an enquirer and this really isn't my goal or intention to proselytize here. We do encourage people to seek out the truth of a matter and not simply accept something on faith or on authority.. better that the seeker applies their logic and sorts out things for themselves.
Maybe. But how often is that really recognizable? I mean, why would someone choose to convert to something they are inclined against, without first becoming inclined to? And if they are inclined to it, what made them that way - or maybe: how even was the playing field?I agree, but isn't it also possible to overcome personal inclinations?
So I'm noticing a trend in proselytizing religions. It goes something like this:
If you listen/read/pray with a pure heart and open eyes/ears/heart, then you will come to believe in the same thing I have come to believe.I've heard this from Christians, Muslims and Baha'i here. If I've heard you saying it, presumably you've all heard each other saying it as well. So here's the thing:
At what point do you say to yourself, "We're all making the exact same claim as the way to find faith in the religion we already believe in. Maybe all having a pure heart and opened orifices does is reinforce a belief or intensify a leaning that we already had."
I mean think about it. There's a good chance that in the over one billion people in the religion you are not a part of, at least one or two of its more mild adherents was feeling terribly distraught and truly opened their hearts to whatever was out there. And came away with even deeper faith in their religion just like you did.
Maybe it just really doesn't work unless you're already inclined to believe in the religion you're a part of?
Religious experiences or conversion via experience can be much more profound than what you seem to imagine. Your perspective, although 'logical', to your own experience/assumptions, etc, is actually not accurate in many cases.
We notice this consistently on the forums, an assumption of ''why'' someone adheres to a certain religion, so forth, yet, it is not actually inferred from facts, rather ones /usually own perspective.
Example, I personally have no ''reason'' to think 'Christianity'' is a real religion, no inclination to do so, no church, not baptized, don't think that I ''have'' to be a Christian, etc etc. /ie i'm not a Christian
Yet, I argue many things from a Christian standpoint on the forums.
why?
whyyyyy...
perhaps I am arguing subjects from an actu l perspective of thinking they are correct, and not basing it on emotions.