No I think for instance unitarians or arian christians, seven day adventists etc know they don't belong to mainstream churches and therefor would admit, while proclaiming they have the truth, to not being orthodox or mainstream.
I'm not particularly familiar with the Unitarians or the Arians, but the Seventh Day Adventists have an orthodoxy - it's sort of what makes them a distinguishable group.
Ok which one's are you using?
How am I supposed to choose when there's absolutely nothing to base it upon - Christianity, surely, is the sum of the actions and beliefs of those people calling themselves Christians, so all of them.
So are you speaking of professed christians? How many of those can you show have never got an answer to is God there, is Christ living?
I guess so - I don't tend to have the conversation on the off-chance someone might be. How many, none of the ones I've spoken to have ever had an answers - some report a 'sense' of something, others don't, but no-one's claimed to have had a meaningful response - I don't know about the 'Christ' question, it's not one I recall asking.
Where are you getting these stats from?
They aren't stats, they're my personal experience - that's why I was wondering whether it was a general majority or if that's just my experience.
What answers do you think Christians are after and not getting?
Not answers, necessarily, just communication - just something back from this 'relationship' that's supposedly going on.
I was rather asking for your definitions and parameters of punishment
Because we ask all the questions, right...
That's all a bit vague and frankly a tad handwavy.
I don't pretend like there are easy answers to complex questions.
As I said, How you reason your way togood guyship probably needs it's own thread and you will note I did rather forsee the paucity of information in your response.
Just as I foresaw that, despite your ad hominem about how we don't answer any questions, we just ask them, I've been giving all the answers and you still don't appear to have any.
Yes there are christians who cleave to it and there are the new atheists who feed from them.
What's 'new' about atheism? Is it new just because we don't feel we have to be quiet about it?
You seem to be in a numbers game here. Namely, If we can establish that the majority of christians cleave to the old testament like we atheists think they do, then we need only deal with their arguments.
No, unfortunately we're in an endless fragmentation whereby we're challenged, we point out the nonsense and suddenly we get 'oh, yeah, but that's not OUR KIND of Christians'... it's a slow, tortuous progress through layer, upon layer trying desperately to find something substantial on which any of this is hung, but it's just varnish all the way down.
There is as you probably realise the danger of straw manning and caricature
I'm not sure there is a straw man, if you look hard enough you'll probably find somebody somewhere who believes everything about God - some of them believe Joseph Smith was visited by an actual angel...
The only thing that seems changed if you are prepared to ignore the state of the environment is that one can shut the door on God ......and that's it!
So you've missed the whole germ theory of disease, orders of magnitude reductions in infant, child and childbirthing mortality, improvements in health, nutrition and education around the world...
But what if you don't want to?
Don't want to what, work to improve the environment?
If God doesn't exist and there has been genocide with or without the word God then your attribution of God to genocide is not really an atheist argument.
It's not supposed to be, of itself; it's yet another demonstration that the allegedly perfectly moral being of God has some pretty fundamental immoral takes on things in the foundational document of the religion that we're talking about. It's about demonstrating the illogicality of the Christian conception of a god.
No-one, so far as I can see, has ever suggested that atheism is an automatic claim to moral superiority or an innoculation against immorality.
Two things, to hold that all the wickedness of the world is down to the word God is imho bonkers and akin to believing in magic
And if anyone were suggesting such a thing that might be relevant. You'll note I made use of the fact that Stalin was a bit of a shit to point out that you weren't setting much of a standard for your God, so it's pretty obvious no-one was saying 'all the wickedness of the world' is down to god.
and secondly to believe that it will all or the majority of it will disappear if we extinguish the religious impulse is something that has not been established
And I'm not sure that anyone said the majority of it was down to 'the religious impulse' - or even implied the 'Christian' impulse. I think if people forwent Christianity some things would improve, some things would get worse, but the things that would get worse we don't need Christianity to replace (charities, community works) whereas some of the bad things that we'd lose there's no obvious replacement for (institutional homophobia, Christian nationalism, certain strands of white supremacy, certain strands of misogyny).
Carry on up the caricature.
I'll tell you what, if you and the other Christians go and sort out your story and tell me what the proper one is, I'll show you the gaping great holes in it, as it is I'm left trying to second guess which Christianity is shifting the goalposts today.
Some 'fundamental' precepts, it seems, to Christianity include:
God is perfect, in morality, in knowledge, in action;
God has the capacity to forgive or condemn;
God will either welcome us into an afterlife or condemn us to some sort of punishment (for eternity? Limbo?)
The God of the Old Testament is the same God of the New Testament (who is also Jesus, who is also the Holy Spirit?)
There are no other gods (and Angels and saints, for some reason, aren't divine beings like demigods because this is Different
TM;
Jesus isn't an avatar of God because reasons.
O.