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There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence.
Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?
Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?
Of course the are pacifists. They act like pacifists, they think like pacifists, and they talk like pacifists.Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?
Can you explain how the acceptability of non-human violence disrupts pacifism? Would you say the same of a pacifist who believes that, say, tigers can legitimately use violence?Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?
What would violence committed by God look like? How would that even be possible when the one-god is not a tangible, immanent entity in our world?
I would argue that they are not pacifists because they are not against all violence, only human violence, from what I gather from your post.Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?
Inspired by another thread, but I didn't want to take that thread off track:
There are some religious denominations where the members are personally non-violent because they believe that only God can legitimately use violence. IOW, they're against violence in human society, but they would be fine with any violence committed by God.
Are these denominations pacifist? I would say they aren't. Thoughts?