Two things here ..........have you forgiven the germans for what they did 1932-1945? If so what is the special problem with 1215 AD, secondly what happened in 32-45 was nazi antisemitism along racial lines.
The 'special problem' with 1215 is how much that example of Christian anti-Semitism predates the Nietszche you were trying to blame the worst example of Christian anti-Semitism in history upon.
Secondly If Neitszche wasn't there in 1215 I doubt Jesus and the apostles were there either.
But I'm pretty sure it was pretty 'Christian-heavy' that 4th Lateran Conference. Just a guess, I stand to be corrected...
In fact they would have not been as welcome as Neitszche if at all.
Well, they were Jews, after all...
So out of Jesus and the Apostles and the 4th Lateran council which do you think we should take our christianity from?
As a non-Christian it doesn't really matter which I think should be involved; what's significant is what have Christians used their Christianity to achieve and to espouse.
Who do you think you have to justify your actions to that I don't?
Me, and so far as it relates to our garden, Mrs. O.
If I belonged to one of the commandment religions I might agree that I dont need to participate in making moral decisions although we have societal rules that hold the same place as commandments. But christianity is not clear cut like that being a relationship and so yes I do have to make moral decisions.
No True Scotsman... nice. And how, as an outsider, do I objectively decree which is the 'right' Christianity and which the 'wrong'?
The uncomfortable truth is that without God the final arbiter is "Not getting caught"
Whereas with God it appears to be that the final arbiter is whether you're sorry afterwards, depending on your sect.
You said you make moral decisions yourself. Are you now contradicting yourself .You cannot claim that you are making moral decisions and I'm not a nd then say yours are down to culture.
You seem confused here.
We're making decisions about moral issues - I speak of Christians in general, and within any large group there is going to be a degree of variation. I don't dispute that there are some Christians - arguably even a lot of Christians, and similarly Jews and Muslims - who would make decisions that largely conform to the moral standards I appreciate, and would claim to do so motivated by their religion. However, there are also some that would make moral judgements completely antithetical to those, based on their religious motivation as well - and they'd think they were doing good, and that they had a divine mandate to do it.
I'm not confused, but I'm negotiating innumerable cults and sects and denominations of at least three major iterations of the same nonsense and its interactions with various cultures around the world and history and trying to identify broad trends and historical patterns; I know you'd like me to be a raging black-and-white foaming at the mouth anti-theist because it would make your arguments easy, but reality is more nuanced than that.
That is a caricature of christianity.
No, it's the worst examples from my perspective, but it's very, very real. Just look at the Evangelical churches in the US putting their weight behind Trump because they can see that he's enacting political decisions that conform to the spiteful, white-supremacist, American exceptionalist viewpoint that expressly and outgrowth of their religious conviction: they aren't just complying with God's will, God expressly founded the US as a white, Christian nation and it's their religious duty to try to maintain that in the face of gays, liberals, feminists, ethnics and foreigners.
Even you want a less extreme but more widespread example, look a the number of Christians around the world, again led in a large part by US origins, who campaign to keep healthcare out of the reach of the poor; some because of the 'nobility of suffering' a la Mother Theresa, some because of prosperity gospel nonsense - religious motivation that expressly seems to against what I guess you (or even I, as an outsider) would see as a reasonable interpretation of the depiction of Jesus in the New Testament.
Christianity ushers in the age of the holy spirit the mutual body of christ and the widespread use of different gifts by all Christians.
That's your take on it. That's, broadly, what I think most Anglicans see it as, as far as I can tell. That's not necessarily what Christianity as a whole, or any given individual Christian thinks.
Not at all like the Old testament.
Except for the hordes of fire and brimstone Christians who see that passage about Jesus coming not to change the laws but the reinforce them, or whatnot, which puts all that straight back on the table for them.
What an example of how ignorance of what you speak leads quickly to false accusation. but not the Nazi party. MARXISM MUCH LIKE ATHEISM.
If it's so ignorant, point out where it's wrong.
Humanity marches forward religion disappears....then utopia.
I think you've missed a couple of steps, and it's more aspiration than expectation, but it's certainly an excerpt of a plan.
O.
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