Gabriella,
You still haven't explained how a religion's core beliefs exist on their own - without individual people to interpret and act on them and be certain that they are right. In the same way non-religious morals by themselves don't cause problems without people to act on them and be certain their morals are right. I agree people who are certain they are right are a problem.
At some point you’re going to have to grasp the nettle. Either you think that certain core beliefs do exist “on their own” because your faith tells you so, or you don’t. If you don’t, that’s fine by me – you can treat the “holy” texts as you would any other attempts by people to understand the world, albeit relatively primitive ones appropriate to their times. If you do though, then if everything potentially at least is up for re-interpretation what need is there for a god sitting behind it?
You keep asserting it is problematic - I am not seeing the problem unless the consequence of an action causes problems.
It does. Are your seriously suggesting that the behaviours of theocracies for example aren’t (and haven’t always been) “problematic” for those unfortunate enough to have been subjected to them?
And when the consequences cause a problem there are clearly theists who think their original interpretation needs to be re-interpreted in light of new information to arrive at what they think is better outcome. Only the theists who don't do this cause problems, not all theists.
Tell it to the clerics who provide the intellectual cover for ISIS.
I don't investigate the word of god as without a person to interpret it, the word of god has no relevance. So I investigate the person interpreting it. How do you investigate someone's perceptions in order to arrive at an objective truth of whether something is right or wrong? You can't yet we make moral decisions because we have to make some decision.
We do, but sometimes someone will say, “X is true because god says so, and I know that because that’s my faith”. Then what?
You could I suppose shop around until you found a cleric who said instead, “Y is true because god says so, and I know that because that’s my faith” (assuming you happen to prefer Y over X) but that would just be confirmation bias – you wouldn’t have investigated anything.
You're choosing not to see it. Without people to interpret it no one has any concept of what god supposedly knows or says.
Nope. What “interpretation” could there be of the accurately worded revealed instructions of gods? Either you think everything is up for grabs (in which case the god bit is redundant) or you don’t (in which case the faith bit is the problem).
Incidentally, why too if there was a god who wanted us to know what his rules are would he make them so unclear that we’d need an eternity to re-interpret them, and even then not know whether we’d got it right? What test could we apply to know whether the current interpretation is now the correct one?