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| Belief and Spirituality General thinking beyond the boundaries of religion and organised belief |
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#31 (permalink) | ||
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 32
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Re: Why is faith different?
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#32 (permalink) | ||||
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Where is the Love???
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Adolescence
Posts: 4,244
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Re: Why is faith different?
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#33 (permalink) | |||||
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 32
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Re: Why is faith different?
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But gut feelings, while they have their uses, and can certainly play a part in life-or-death situations, are not to be preferred when making the more important decisions of life, or at least, it seems that way to me. Granted, when all the evidence is in on a particular matter, there may not be a clear-cut answer, and intuition, or gut feeling, may, indeed, be the best way to decide the issue. But I wouldn't think that going only on gut feeling without making use of other things is advisable, assuming that there is time to ponder a situation. Quote:
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For me, there is this to do: ask questions, seek truth, engage in dialog and conversation with those who care about this topic, learn from them, consider, revise, go on, and on, and on. Coming back to my original question, which has yet to be answered, why is, in the mind of some, faith not a matter to be questioned? Exempt from the strictures of logical thought? |
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#35 (permalink) | ||||
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Where is the Love???
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Adolescence
Posts: 4,244
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Re: Why is faith different?
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#38 (permalink) | ||||
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Executive Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,377
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Re: Why is faith different?
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For a more personal example: Did I place faith in my wife because I assumed she would remain faithful, or was it the absence of assumption that she had a hidden agenda? It was the absence of assumption. I can place Faith in someone who is unfaithful, is a known liar, convicted felon, has drug addictions, etc... someone with whom evidence has mounted up that they will once again fail. How am I able to do that? Death wish? I did not imply that it is wrong to seek out information. I am saying that Faith is in a person... not in the information. Ask all the questions you can, only I'd recommend asking God if you want to get to know God better. Quote:
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I submit that the freedom to explore is neither provided, nor removed, by my words. |
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#39 (permalink) | ||||||
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 32
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Re: Why is faith different?
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When you ask me to believe, and I say, "Why?" -- if your response is "just because" or a variation of that, then I immediately have less reason to believe you. My question -- again -- is: why is that seemingly okay in the domain of religion, when it is not in any other area of life? Is this a hard question? Everyone here seems to want to tell me what faith is, but won't answer what I consider to be a rather straightforward query. Quote:
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#40 (permalink) | |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Michigan, USA
Posts: 912
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Re: Why is faith different?
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It may have seemed reasonable back when nobody really had a clue how human conception works, but it is much less reasonable given what we now know. Unless you are some kind of Docetic, you must believe that at some point the body of the baby Jesus started being composed of ordinary physical matter, organic molecules ordered in cells which grow and split in the usual fashion? At what point did the ordinary processes take over? Did a Sacred Sperm poof into existence to fertilize the egg, after which everything went as usual? Or did the extra chromosomes just poof into existence inside the nucleus, without the "grossness" of a sperm cell introducting them? Either way, if Jesus was male and had a Y-chromosome not derived from a human parent, God must have specially selected what values all of his male traits (penis length, density and texture of facial hair, level of sexual arousal) were going to have, and this is troublesome to me. If Jesus just took genetic "luck of the draw" like the rest of us, that would be one thing; but if God made a special point of ensuring that his experience was unlike what I experience, then this lessens the relevance of Jesus to me. |
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#42 (permalink) | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 32
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Re: Why is faith different?
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Suppose the fact I'm questioning is whether or not God exists. Wouldn't having a conversation with him pre-suppose that I accept that he exists? How then to examine the question? By conversing with those who claim to have a personal relationship with him. And when those people say, "Don't ask us for reasons; just believe," what then? Again, the purpose of this thread is to explore why it is generally accepted that this line of thinking is all right in the domain of religion and not in any other area of life. I'm not challenging anyone's beliefs; only the unwillingness to give reasons for those beliefs. |
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#44 (permalink) |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: liverpool, the 2008 winners of the capital of culture, england
Posts: 948
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Re: Why is faith different?
hello Chron, welcome to CR...
I have just come across ur initial post, so will respond to it in my way... I am of the opinion that this "blind faith" is actually, NOT acceptable, or rather, it shouldn't be acceptable to us, supposedly civilised and intelligent beings... I think it is a cop-out which has been used rather well over the centuries and will continue to be so used until ppl become a bit more rational and a little less superstitious... if something "is", it "is"... if "it" is, then we should be able to prove that "it" is, whatever "it" is... otherwise, it is not fact, but hypothesis, an untested hypothesis at best... now... I cannot prove to u that "it" exists, you have to discern such things for urself, but I know I've seen/felt/been used by/been guided/protected by "it", although any evidence to support my wild assertions will be circumstantial at best... but then... I have faith... not blind faith, but real faith, based not on conjecture and circumstantiality, but conviction, a firm belief based on evidences, a firm belief created by establishing conclusions, not for you, as you will have ur own, but just for me, a faith created by testing and challenging and learning from "it"... if I am sane, and without an agenda, I would not want u to believe what I believe purely because I believe it... as that would be insane, and irrational... just my thoughts... |
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#45 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 32
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Re: Why is faith different?
Francis, thank you for the welcome and your thoughts, which are near to my own. In spite of the fact that it may seem otherwise from the dialog that is this thread, I, too, have developed my own brand of faith since leaving the fold of the fundamentalist evangelicals.
I, too, have no evidence other than circumstantial, and yet I believe. It is frustrating to me that those who have joined this discussion (not all, but many) seem to think that I need convincing about the nature of faith, when that is not what my question concerns at all. I've asked this question over and over, and always learn from the ensuing discussion. I never do get an answer, though, for there always seems to be an assumption on my listener's part that I have an agenda in asking my question, and it is the listener's concern with my supposed agenda that quickly becomes the focus of the discussion. Save for you, Francis, who have understood my point. But I'd wager (if I were a wagering fellow) that you don't have an answer either, as to why people persist in this curious practice of defending the unreasonableness of blind faith. Good to meet you, if only via electrons. cheers, chron |
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