Fnaar
Smutmaster General
- Location
- Thumberland
Actually God and Santa aren't as different as you might believe
Actually God and Santa aren't as different as you might believe
Creation stories as in Geneisis? Only a minority of the CofE vicars I know believe them to be true. I've never yet met a Catholic creationist, let alone a Catholic creationist priest.
Afterlife? Whole range of views exist on that one....
Metaphors? Loads of vicars are of that view. It's a perfectly valid, useful and acceptable belief system.
You objection seems to be that some people don't believe what you, ?as an unbeliever?, think they ought to believe if they claim to be believers!![]()
I really can't believe this thread is happening.
The very first words of the Nicene Creed (accepted by the vast majority of Christian churches worldwide, including, I believe, all churches extant at the time) are:
We believe one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and invisible, And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father...
The essence, therefore, of Christianity, as for any other theistic religion, is belief in a God.
What defines Christianity apart from the other Abrahamic religions, is the belief in Jesus the Christ as a human expression of the divine.
It's a bit weird to claim otherwise. And taking the definition of Christianity from some out there preachers who, for whatever reason, like to claim to be Christian while at the same time proclaiming atheism (thus negating the message of the Christ) is, as User says, like taking the definition of a car from someone describing a rock, rather than being able to define what a car is.
I really can't believe this thread is happening.
The very first words of the Nicene Creed (accepted by the vast majority of Christian churches worldwide, including, I believe, all churches extant at the time) are:
We believe one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of all things visible and invisible, And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, begotten of the Father, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father...
The essence, therefore, of Christianity, as for any other theistic religion, is belief in a God.
Okay, let's take this logically.
1. There are people who exist who call themselves Christian who do not believe in God. Nobody is denying this, right?
2. This being the case, there are two basic responses:
- dismissal of the claim - i.e. they can't be Christian because no true Christian would say such a thing (the logically fallacious 'no true Scotsman' argument), or
- taking the claim seriously at some level.
3. If you assert that they are a priori not Christian whatever they claim to be, you are dismissing a claim of belief and identity, whilst asserting your own right to make such a claim and be taken seriously. This is hypocrisy.
4. If you dismiss their claim by recourse to scripture, some institutionally agreed script, speech-act, etc. you are relying on an already mediated understanding of 'Christianity', which requires that we accept that Christianity must be defined in a certain way - exactly the way in which the person making the claim to be Christian is already rejecting. This might satisfy you if you are fundamentalist or an adherent of one or other organised Christian sect etc. but it does not satisfy logic.
If you think that there can't really be religious people who think this, then I suggest you look up theological noncognitivism. I would also suggest that there are multiple accounts of Jesus Christ that do not see this particular figure in the same way (the story of Jesus in Islam is just one example), and it is possible, if unusual, to separate the question of Jesus's divinity from other religious implications and from his social and political teachings (or what is attributed to him, since the words of Jesus are nowhere recorded directly).
I should point out that I am not saying that this is desirable, good, better than other kinds of Christianity, just that it is possible and people who believe these things exist and call themselves Christian, and thus being a Christian who does not believe in God is not something you can deny except by recourse to the doctrine of a particular institution that would claim in some way to represent or define the idea of 'Christian'.
I have been a Buddhist (Mahayana tradition) since my late teens. Took an interest in it from one of my social workers whose friend was, and still is, a monk.
Has been an immense help in my life since then.
Excellent I have also practised for some years in the Mahayana tradition (particularly Vajrayana Nyingma) both here and abroad. I have also spent some small time with the Theravadins.
If it is O.K to ask, what lineage are you taught in?
![]()
Okay, let's take this logically.
1. There are people who exist who call themselves Christian who do not believe in God. Nobody is denying this, right?
2. This being the case, there are two basic responses:
- dismissal of the claim - i.e. they can't be Christian because no true Christian would say such a thing (the logically fallacious 'no true Scotsman' argument), or
- taking the claim seriously at some level.
3. If you assert that they are a priori not Christian whatever they claim to be, you are dismissing a claim of belief and identity, whilst asserting your own right to make such a claim and be taken seriously. This is hypocrisy.
4. If you dismiss their claim by recourse to scripture, some institutionally agreed script, speech-act, etc. you are relying on an already mediated understanding of 'Christianity', which requires that we accept that Christianity must be defined in a certain way - exactly the way in which the person making the claim to be Christian is already rejecting. This might satisfy you if you are fundamentalist or an adherent of one or other organised Christian sect etc. but it does not satisfy logic.
If you think that there can't really be religious people who think this, then I suggest you look up theological noncognitivism. I would also suggest that there are multiple accounts of Jesus Christ that do not see this particular figure in the same way (the story of Jesus in Islam is just one example), and it is possible, if unusual, to separate the question of Jesus's divinity from other religious implications and from his social and political teachings (or what is attributed to him, since the words of Jesus are nowhere recorded directly).
I should point out that I am not saying that this is desirable, good, better than other kinds of Christianity, just that it is possible and people who believe these things exist and call themselves Christian, and thus being a Christian who does not believe in God is not something you can deny except by recourse to the doctrine of a particular institution that would claim in some way to represent or define the idea of 'Christian'.
Geluk/Lama Tsonghkhapa tradition/lineage