We may use cookies to help customize your experience, including performing
analytics and serving ads.
Learn More
| 185 | 31190 |
People can't seem to understand that one group does not define a religion. I know several Muslims and studied Islam and it is a noble religion if you ask me.
I see nothing wrong with hating a religion (the idea itself). Especially the 3 top ones, which have a plethora of reasons to dislike them. While the people who practice them are most often good people, that doesn't change what's in their holy books and what they purportedly believe.
I guess what I'm getting at is the "Without religion, good people would be good. Bad people would be bad. Making good people go bad takes religion." My usual case is Ziad Jarrah, flight 93's hijack pilot. He was smart, went to college in Germany for aerospace and stuff. He dressed western, socialized western, had a close girlfriend for years and a good moderately wealthy family, had the distanced sort of "yeah, God's there, pray, it's all good" interpretation that many people tend to have, not highly devout or heavily indoctrinated, befriended some of the radicals who considered his religious views weak. His wedding was planed for 9/22, he bought a suit and told his family on 9/9 that he was excited for it. Then the group said Allah needs you, so he writes a lengthy suicide note and attempts to crash a plane into a building.
had the distanced sort of "yeah, God's there, pray, it's all good" interpretation that many people tend to have, not highly devout or heavily indoctrinated
That's what scares the crap out of me because that's where I was for years.
Yes, the people themselves generally are decent because they refuse to act upon such things. They happen to be more moral than their deity, yet they claim adherence. Some disagree with their book's orders, but they still claim they come from the most-high source, so they must be unquestionably true and good and righteous. Some act upon those presuppositions.
that stain the name of the religion
but hatred indicates an overzealous and active intolerance and repelledness.
The problem is they may actually be doing it right, based on the history. Just because a majority aren't preaching violence doesn't mean that's not what it's about. They all still claim to worship the god who gets his jollies sniffing blood. Is that not stain enough itself?
To their beliefs? Yes. To the people? Not until they act upon them.
something that is not put into practice by the majority of them.
They worship his benevolent side, and ignore/hide from his evil side.
Acting on their beliefs doesn't necessarily mean terrorism. It includes the other things like stoning gays or nonbelievers simply for existing "because god said so".
If I say "I LOVE HITLER WITH ALL MY HEART!!! Nononono... he's not just some evil guy who kills Jews and opposers, even though that was completely justified and entirely necessary, but I love the part of him that loves Germany and gets all warm and fuzzy about his people", is it not still Hitler?
And how many actually stone people?
They worship his benevolent side and shun His ghoulish one.
Fine, stoning's a low minority and declining. But the death penalty is still enforced in some countries for the same reasons.
Many defend the "bad side" tooth and nail because "God can't ever be bad", so if we think it's evil, "You must be interpreting it wrong", "He's on a higher level of morality", "His ways are mysterious but always correct and justified", "Might makes right" etc. But they shun man following the "bad side" because "that's a selfish person trying to emulate that which is most-high, and vengeance belongs to Him".
Death penalties for adultery are extremely uncommon
I'm not particularly concerned if they defend God's evil side, so long as it does not lead to negative, real life consequences.
but carry out no violence on part of a religion
an irrational abhorrence
Death penalties for adultery are extremely uncommon in many of such countries.
I wasn't talking about adultery, but nonbelief and homosexuality. Both are punishable by death in Afghanistan and other regions.
What's odd is that the max punishment in the Quran is 100 floggings, which means the death penalty is something they added.
I'm concerned with defending acts done on behalf of God's 'erfect' commands/laws during his 'harsh stage', because those things often do lead to negative, real life consequences.
Oppression doesn't always require violence.
Find me a tangible, observable, testable benefit of religion that cannot be obtained through secular means. If I had time, I could literally find hundreds of tragic things that are unique to religion, such as the 'faith healer' parents and brutally killing nonbelievers just for being nonbelievers.
Muslims only operate based on the Holy text, because the Holy text is ''divine law'' and ''infallible''.
Most of the times, jewish who lived in islamic countries got better conditions then in christian countries.
You must be logged in to post a reply!
We may use cookies to help customize your experience, including performing
analytics and serving ads.
Learn More