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What happens to organized religion...

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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:02 pm

mrswdk wrote:
jimboston wrote:The Catholic Church Doctrine dictates that you can only go to Heaven Through Jesus...


The head of the Catholic church (the 'Pope') says that you don't have to believe in god to go to heaven:

https://charterforcompassion.org/unders ... -to-heaven

inb4 jim "the pope can't control Catholics and therefore his statements are irrelevant"


So this is interesting and unknown to me.

The Pope, as the head of the Catholic Church, can change Catholic doctrine, though it technically is only “guaranteed” accurate when the specifically states he;s speaking directly “for or from” God. This is a special “power of infallibility”, I had to look up the name, but according to Wiki “the use of this power is referred to as speaking ex cathedra.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_infallibility

So technically, according to Catholic Doctrine, the Pope’s statements here are his ‘fallible’ interpretation of the Path to Heaven... because he didn’t speak “ex cathedra” and issue a formal document saying as much. Now... if he has subsequently done this great... Catholic Doctrine has changed.

Even if he hasn’t formally changed Catholic Doctrine, this statement may be enough to change it over time if subsequent Popes and Bishops continue to support this idea.

That said... the Pope CAN control Catholics... but those are the only Christians he formally does control. No other formal Christian religion recognizes the Pope as their supreme leader. So if this is. formal change of Catholic Doctrine it doesn’t necessarily change the beliefs of other Christians. Some may choose to agree and others may not.

All said, this is a pretty significant statement and is the manifestation of the changes I have already been seeing and what prompted this thread.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby 2dimes on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:05 pm

I don't know. Who are you going to believe. The new pope or Mel Gibson?
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:06 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:
HitRed wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:
HitRed wrote:Jesus on free will to choose


I accept the free will of humans to choose good or bad. I come to lead those willing to follow me willingly.

I would have all with me but I respect the human free will to choose.

There is a Hell and people really do go there of their own free will. I can only warn and tell how to avoid this unimaginable death.



Source?


God

You gave this a quote mark. Where is it a quote from?


These quotes re from the Bible.... of which there re many versions and translations.

The simple fact is that many many Christians believe this... and I’m sure many Jews think you have to be Jewish, and many Muslims think you have to be Muslim. It’s true of MOST organized religions... they all “limit” access to Heaven. If not how else would they hold power.

My thread isn’t supposed to be bout what people believe or don’t believe... it’s supposed to be about how these beliefs are/have evolved when people start having regular contact with people of other religions and how friendships and other intimate relationships across religious boundaries are going to impact said organized religions.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jonesthecurl on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:25 pm

jimboston wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:
HitRed wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:
HitRed wrote:Jesus on free will to choose


I accept the free will of humans to choose good or bad. I come to lead those willing to follow me willingly.

I would have all with me but I respect the human free will to choose.

There is a Hell and people really do go there of their own free will. I can only warn and tell how to avoid this unimaginable death.



Source?


God

You gave this a quote mark. Where is it a quote from?


These quotes re from the Bible.... of which there re many versions and translations.


I don't think they are.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby Dukasaur on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:27 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:
jimboston wrote:
These quotes re from the Bible.... of which there re many versions and translations.


I don't think they are.


Ditto. Doesn't sound like any Biblical passage I've ever read.

I believe HR says he gets his info directly from God. He's basically a latter-day saint.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:28 pm

DoomYoshi wrote:
jimboston wrote:
DoomYoshi wrote:Your comments indicated that you do somewhat believe yourself to be judge.

You said Gandhi not being Christian made you question your faith. I was just following this to mean that you think Gandhi "should be" in heaven. So the question becomes then, do you trust yourself to make that call? Or even better, do you trust the priest to make that call?


I don’t think I am arbiter or whether or not Gandhi should be in Heaven.

I do think that he was, by nearly universal accounts, a “good” man. A who helped his people achieve independence and freedom from oppression by preaching peaceful methods. That’s a very laudable and Christ-like accomplishment.


Yes, Gandhi is lovely, in terms of humanity. There is a core problem with how humans define goodness though. We always look down the scale. People justify their own sins by looking at a worse sinner and saying "at least I'm not a criminal in jail" and the criminal in jail says "at least I'm not Hitler" and then Hitler says "At least I'm not NomadPatriot" and so on, and so on, until you get to Satan. However, when you look "up" the scale, you start to realize the problem with our human perspective looking down the ladder. At the top is the one, true, wholly holy and purely good God. His presence cannot abide with evil or sin of any kind and unfortunately, as good as Gandhi might be, he isn't good enough to be in God's presence without perishing. He just can't measure up. Nobody can, and that's why Jesus came, to cover our sins and allow us into the presence of God.

More specifically though I DON’T think he’s entrance into Heaven should be determine solely upon the fact that he wasn’t Christian and didn’t believe Jesus was the One True Savior.


That's fine for you to disagree with a priest. Perhaps Jesus is on your side on this one. One of Gandhi's favorite passages in the Bible was the Sermon on the Mount, which ends with this invitation:
“Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’




I disagree that I am dooming myself to Hell because I ‘reject’ Christ. I don’t reject most of what the Bible states as the opinions of Christ and I accept what is stated as his teachings.... that we should (in general) love and be kind to our fellow humans. I just feel God (if there is a God) will give me a pass on disbelieving in Jesus if I am otherwise a mostly good person.


Which parts specifically do you reject?
There is the idea of "good people getting rewarded" within scripture, but it is always "good people who seek God" not "good people who seek their own benefit".


This is all your belief and that’s fine.
Maybe you’re right, and maybe I’ll wind up in hell no matter how kind a person I am or how “good” a person I am.

I don’t have the patience to type out in detail all I accept and all I reject from the Bible.
I don’t want to argue about the Bible, as I cannot win an argument against your faith.
By definition your faith is based on ‘what you believe’ and if you are truly committed to your believe system then anything I say will not change that no matter how logical or how much I type. Furthermore I have no interest in changing your faith. Your faith is likely a source of joy and comfort for you... and that’s great. I wouldn’t be a very “kind or good” person if my intent in discussing this with you was to make you lose your faith... would I?

A “nice or good” person would not try to take something from another human that is a source of joy and comfort for that person.

All said... my biggest problem with Christianity is the idea that you have to be Christian to receive external reward.
(Now there was a post saying the Pope disagrees with this, and if that’s true fine... but that doesn’t change how most Christians feel about the subject.)

My problem with having to believe in Jesus first is centered around a few related thoughts...
- What about people who were born and lived BEFORE Jesus? By definition they were not and could not be Christians, and therefore cannot have Eternal Life.
- What about people who lived after Jesus, but whole were never exposed to Christianity? Never given the “opportunity” to accept Him?
(I’m thinking about natives of the Americas or remote islands etc)... these people were never given a chance to accept Jesus. They re not Christian and therefore cannot get into Heaven.
- What about people who were born and raised in other faiths? Even if peripherally exposed to Jesus they were not educated in the same way I was and therefore their likelihood of being Christian is low. This is especially true of people like Gandhi, who was exposed to Christianity but who likely saw Christianity as the religion of the oppressors. How is it reasonable to think that someone living under the thumb of a Christian oppressor is going to convert?
- ... and then there are all those people who are “Christian” but are evil. I’m thinking like half the Popes from the middle ages, and all the Catholic priests who raped boys... and then just the local drug dealer who goes to church every Sunday. According to my upbringing... any and all these people will be forgiven is they truly repent... and once forgiven they get to go to Heaven. Yet a Muslim who’s a kind man, who treats his neighbors and family well, and who never does anything bad to anyone else... he can’t go to Heaven?

It just doesn’t seem fair.

Yet we’re often told “God is Just”.... so where is the “Justice” there?
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:30 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:
jimboston wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:
HitRed wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:Jesus on free will to choose

[size=150]


Source?


God

You gave this a quote mark. Where is it a quote from?


These quotes re from the Bible.... of which there re many versions and translations.


I don't think they are.


It’s moot and off the point.

Even if you get a straight answer it won’t be satisfying.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby DoomYoshi on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:31 pm

Re: jones - I don't think they are either.

Re: jb - The pope didn't actually say what the headline implies, ex cathedra or otherwise. All he said was that God is full of mercy to those with a contrite heart, which is a biblical concept and always held by the church. If you truly seek God, he will reveal to you Jesus Christ.

In the end, you keep distracting the issue by focusing on other people. It isn't for me, or the pope, to say anything about those people who lived and never heard about Jesus or whatever. The only salvation that I can impact is my own. The only salvation you can impact is your own. By focusing on others' salvation, you are making yourself judge over them; whether you intend to or not.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jonesthecurl on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:34 pm

jimboston wrote:It’s moot and off the point.

Even if you get a straight answer it won’t be satisfying.


If someone tells me they're quoting God, I'd like the source verified, or at least pointed at.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby Dukasaur on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:41 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:
jimboston wrote:It’s moot and off the point.

Even if you get a straight answer it won’t be satisfying.


If someone tells me they're quoting God, I'd like the source verified, or at least pointed at.


Why can't you accept that someone is divinely inspired?
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jonesthecurl on Wed Jan 22, 2020 3:51 pm

Because my ukelele says it ain't so.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 5:39 pm

DoomYoshi wrote:Re: jones - I don't think they are either.

Re: jb - The pope didn't actually say what the headline implies, ex cathedra or otherwise. All he said was that God is full of mercy to those with a contrite heart, which is a biblical concept and always held by the church. If you truly seek God, he will reveal to you Jesus Christ.

In the end, you keep distracting the issue by focusing on other people. It isn't for me, or the pope, to say anything about those people who lived and never heard about Jesus or whatever. The only salvation that I can impact is my own. The only salvation you can impact is your own. By focusing on others' salvation, you are making yourself judge over them; whether you intend to or not.


am I not my brother’s keeper?

So why should I not want my friends to go to Heaven?

... and if I can’t convince them to believe in Jesus shouldI just pray they turn and believe they’ll wind up in Hell?

Sad.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 5:40 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:
jimboston wrote:It’s moot and off the point.

Even if you get a straight answer it won’t be satisfying.


If someone tells me they're quoting God, I'd like the source verified, or at least pointed at.


If they point to the Bible are you then convinced it came from God?
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jimboston on Wed Jan 22, 2020 5:41 pm

jonesthecurl wrote:Because my ukelele says it ain't so.


ur divine ukulele?
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby HitRed on Wed Jan 22, 2020 5:49 pm

I the Lord would do great things if people believed in me. Most treat me as if I were dead still in the tomb.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby jonesthecurl on Wed Jan 22, 2020 6:28 pm

jimboston wrote:
jonesthecurl wrote:
jimboston wrote:It’s moot and off the point.

Even if you get a straight answer it won’t be satisfying.


If someone tells me they're quoting God, I'd like the source verified, or at least pointed at.


If they point to the Bible are you then convinced it came from God?


No, but that's a different level of scepticism to someone throwing quotes on something they just made up and claiming it's from God.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby mrswdk on Wed Jan 22, 2020 7:02 pm

I think HitRed's quoting al-Shabaab.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby KoolBak on Wed Jan 22, 2020 7:20 pm

Can't decide if this is more or less annoying than america bashing or political threads :lol:
"Gypsy told my fortune...she said that nothin showed...."

Neil Young....Like An Inca

AND:
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby 2dimes on Wed Jan 22, 2020 7:21 pm

Well just remember what God's son says.

Hey brah, it's all good. I the Lord loves you man.
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Re: What happens to organized religion...

Postby tzor on Thu Jan 23, 2020 11:51 am

jimboston wrote:My initial title was too long...

“What happens to organized religions when you start mixing with people of other faiths?”


There are a couple of points to the problem.

First, the state of "Catholic" Catechism is at best horrid and at worst abysmal. Even when the subject is distilled properly it is often oversimplified. As I like to joke the worst thing about "Roman Catholicism" is the "Roman" part ... the western tendency to overanalyze a thing to death. A proper understanding can be seen in the writings of the Catechism. There are things we know and things we don't fully know yet (but will at the end of time). It's certainly a lot easier when we stick with what we know, but sometimes we are faced into the land of what we don't really know. Faking it (a common practice) generally doesn't work well.

Second, unless your particular faith is "my way or the highway" then the greater the difference, ironically enough, the better chance of existing peacefully with one another. For the most part (as an example) Judaism is as different from Christianity as ... well as Mary and Martha in the Gospel stories. Hinduism is also radically different in terms of direction and focus. It's not a case of whose pantheon was better (which is really more of a dispute among similar religions akin to Orthodox and Catholics) but whole different concepts of how one approaches life.

Finally, there is the "organized" religion thing. Here is a Catholic concept I will bet you never heard from in school; subsidiarity. This means that things should go to the lowest level possible to get accomplished. This is definitely true with "Organized" religion. It starts at the local level and works upwards. Since that level of organization is nearly spontaneous, there will be no long term threat to "organized" religion in the near future.
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