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Your Religion


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Poll: Your Religion (97 member(s) have cast votes)

What is your Religion / Belief system?

  1. Christian - Covers all churches (25 votes [25.51%])

    Percentage of vote: 25.51%

  2. Muslim (5 votes [5.10%])

    Percentage of vote: 5.10%

  3. Sikh (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  4. Buddhism (3 votes [3.06%])

    Percentage of vote: 3.06%

  5. Judaism (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  6. Other (15 votes [15.31%])

    Percentage of vote: 15.31%

  7. Agnostic (17 votes [17.35%])

    Percentage of vote: 17.35%

  8. Atheist (32 votes [32.65%])

    Percentage of vote: 32.65%

  9. Hinduism. (1 votes [1.02%])

    Percentage of vote: 1.02%

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#201 amazin

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 02:30

well i was exaggerating a bit about the big bang, i know of course that it didnt create the whole universe, but where did the giant ball of matter come from? why did it explode? how did an explosion form whole planets comprised of different materials with different atmosphere conditions?

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It may well have been, we just do not know. However there are very fundamental creationists who try to prove that the world is only a few thousand years old and that dinosaurs lived together with cavemen (or was it in medievil? I don't remember, don't quote me on the dinosaur issue) either way, that is quite absurd in my eyes as we do have quite a lot of scientific evidence pointing the other way.


by saying i am creationist doesnt mean i buy into that, people who say that are just ignorant extremists. just because i am a conservative creationist does not mean i dont believe in ideas that science presents (for example, i believe that god made it so that animals can adapt to their enviroments)

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If you have billions of planets, a huge coincidence will happen on one at some point.


i also question the fact that it is even possible for lightning stiking a puddle to create life in the first place. a scientist said he recreated the circumstances and created life, but it was later proven that he modified the test to get those results

#202 Sicarius

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 03:36

View Postumm not dachamp, on 2 May 2009, 20:30, said:

well i was exaggerating a bit about the big bang, i know of course that it didnt create the whole universe, but where did the giant ball of matter come from? why did it explode? how did an explosion form whole planets comprised of different materials with different atmosphere conditions?


Well I believe that some of these are what science is trying to prove now. (LHC, anyone?) But the last question IS explained in the big bang theory. IIRC, when the big bang occurred, it created the universe, but it was basically just a monstrous cloud of hydrogen. But some of this hydrogen gravitated into a single point, sucking in more and more and becoming denser. This is the formation of the universe's earliest stars. Through fusion, stars create heavier elements and release energy. So the (abridged) version of the formation of the universe is something like this: when two hydrogen atoms join together through fusion, you get helium, so on and so forth till you have all the elements. When a star dies, these elements are released, and the process starts all over again. Some new stars are born out of the ashes of the old, and some of the newly created matter also gravitates together to create planets. Obviously this is quite a dumbed-down version of it, but you get the point. (I hope my science is correct on this, but maybe someone can explain it better.)

Anyway, at the topic, I was raised Lutheran but now that I'm on my own I've become agnostic. I actually don't care either way if we were all created by a God or random chance, as long as people don't try to push their religion onto me.

Edited by Sicarius, 03 May 2009 - 03:39.

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#203 BeefJeRKy

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 04:12

View Postumm not dachamp, on 2 May 2009, 22:30, said:

well i was exaggerating a bit about the big bang, i know of course that it didnt create the whole universe, but where did the giant ball of matter come from? why did it explode? how did an explosion form whole planets comprised of different materials with different atmosphere conditions?

Quote

It may well have been, we just do not know. However there are very fundamental creationists who try to prove that the world is only a few thousand years old and that dinosaurs lived together with cavemen (or was it in medievil? I don't remember, don't quote me on the dinosaur issue) either way, that is quite absurd in my eyes as we do have quite a lot of scientific evidence pointing the other way.


by saying i am creationist doesnt mean i buy into that, people who say that are just ignorant extremists. just because i am a conservative creationist does not mean i dont believe in ideas that science presents (for example, i believe that god made it so that animals can adapt to their enviroments)

Quote

If you have billions of planets, a huge coincidence will happen on one at some point.


i also question the fact that it is even possible for lightning stiking a puddle to create life in the first place. a scientist said he recreated the circumstances and created life, but it was later proven that he modified the test to get those results

Dachamp I highly recommend reading the book "A Short History of Nearly Everything" as its explanation of what we think about the Big Bang is quite possibly the clearest I've ever read. I'm not saying it will convert you, but it will probably remove any misconceptions about said theory.
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#204 ultimentra

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 05:44

I am a firm believer in evolution and the big bang theory, even tho I am christian.
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#205 TehKiller

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 11:02

So am I...the fact is that people believe in stereotypes (like that we believe that the world is 5000 years old...I am a christian for 15 years and I have not seen this statement anywhere in my religion)
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#206 BeefJeRKy

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 16:08

View PostTehKiller, on 3 May 2009, 7:02, said:

So am I...the fact is that people believe in stereotypes (like that we believe that the world is 5000 years old...I am a christian for 15 years and I have not seen this statement anywhere in my religion)

It's because going through the generations, you get to Abraham as roughly at 3000BC or something like that. But you're right, it's not explicitly stated.
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#207 TehKiller

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 16:15

You get to Abraham who is the father of the Hebrews...so what does Abraham have to do with the start of the world?

but that is for some other discussion
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#208 BeefJeRKy

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 16:20

Hey, don't shoot the messenger! I was just giving the usual argument for this dilemma.
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#209 amazin

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 18:59

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

#210 Revan

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Posted 03 May 2009 - 21:11

View Postumm not dachamp, on 3 May 2009, 20:59, said:

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

Calm down, I don't think anyone in here ever stated that Christians stereotypically are like that, nor that you are one like that. There ARE however religious fundamentalists who take everything literally and try to prove that the world is only 5000 years old.
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#211 The Wandering Jew

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 04:18

I'm a Roman Catholic by document, an atheist by heart (I have read several books on Hinduism, Abrahamic and Buddhist religions, so I concluded that religion is unecessary, belief in one's perception of good and evil is.)
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#212 Golan

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 07:57

View PostRevan, on 3 May 2009, 21:11, said:

View Postumm not dachamp, on 3 May 2009, 20:59, said:

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

Calm down, I don't think anyone in here ever stated that Christians stereotypically are like that, nor that you are one like that. There ARE however religious fundamentalists who take everything literally and try to prove that the world is only 5000 years old.

Well, we can't disprove that God created the world 5000 years ago either (in a state as if it were as old as science says) - she's freaking GOD. It's like A Wizard Did It on speed.
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#213 TehKiller

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 09:27

View PostRevan, on 3 May 2009, 22:11, said:

View Postumm not dachamp, on 3 May 2009, 20:59, said:

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

Calm down, I don't think anyone in here ever stated that Christians stereotypically are like that, nor that you are one like that. There ARE however religious fundamentalists who take everything literally and try to prove that the world is only 5000 years old.


Care to be more specific? As this is really the first time I ever hear about those kind of groups
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#214 Libains

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 09:40

View PostTehKiller, on 4 May 2009, 10:27, said:

View PostRevan, on 3 May 2009, 22:11, said:

View Postumm not dachamp, on 3 May 2009, 20:59, said:

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

Calm down, I don't think anyone in here ever stated that Christians stereotypically are like that, nor that you are one like that. There ARE however religious fundamentalists who take everything literally and try to prove that the world is only 5000 years old.


Care to be more specific? As this is really the first time I ever hear about those kind of groups

http://forum.cncrene...showtopic=31233 Says it all really. I've met numerous versions of people like this across the world, and they're all almost exactly the same as this family, if a little more open.
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#215 ultimentra

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 15:08

Anyone care to recall the WACO incident?
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#216 amazin

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Posted 04 May 2009 - 22:55

i dont like it when people blame christianity for terrible things like that, but i think it is mostly because christianity is larger than a lot of the religeons, so we are stuck with more of the crazies

plus it has so many sects that people are pretty much free to twist the bible however they please

#217 TehKiller

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 08:25

View PostAJ, on 4 May 2009, 10:40, said:

View PostTehKiller, on 4 May 2009, 10:27, said:

View PostRevan, on 3 May 2009, 22:11, said:

View Postumm not dachamp, on 3 May 2009, 20:59, said:

i know a lot of christians (a lot of them are even catholics, including myself), and i don't know any who are THAT ignorant

Calm down, I don't think anyone in here ever stated that Christians stereotypically are like that, nor that you are one like that. There ARE however religious fundamentalists who take everything literally and try to prove that the world is only 5000 years old.


Care to be more specific? As this is really the first time I ever hear about those kind of groups

http://forum.cncrene...showtopic=31233 Says it all really. I've met numerous versions of people like this across the world, and they're all almost exactly the same as this family, if a little more open.


Not really what asked for...a single person who didnt even claimed the "5000" is not a group claiming that.

View Postumm not dachamp, on 4 May 2009, 23:55, said:

plus it has so many sects that people are pretty much free to twist the bible however they please

Agreed. Actually people seem to be taking sects as serious followers of christianity while they have almost nothing in common (except for the Bible which they twisted to their favor completely)
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#218 Wizard

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 09:16

So it's ok to blame Muslim Extremists for deviant acts of religious war but not Christians? Christians have been part of many numerous and atrocious acts over the centurys. And currently. It's best you realise that everyone is capable of horrible things in the name of a God and be done with it.

#219 Alias

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 09:35

I don't think that's his point, Wizard - rather saying that just as Islamic Extremists are denounced by most Muslims, Christian extremists are denounced by most Christians.

Edited by Alias, 05 May 2009 - 09:37.


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#220 Wizard

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 09:50

View Postumm not dachamp, on 4 May 2009, 23:55, said:

i dont like it when people blame christianity for terrible things like that, but i think it is mostly because christianity is larger than a lot of the religeons, so we are stuck with more of the crazies


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View PostWizard, on 5 May 2009, 10:16, said:

So it's ok to blame Muslim Extremists for deviant acts of religious war but not Christians? Christians have been part of many numerous and atrocious acts over the centurys. And currently. It's best you realise that everyone is capable of horrible things in the name of a God and be done with it.


Might make more sense looking at it like this. Extreme sects/cults/followings that cause harm or do not follow the doctrine of tolerance (which, without checking, I believe is enshrined in all religions) should be shunned and denounced by all "main stream" religions. But not forgetting that most religions, have, in their own time, been on some form of crusade against other groups. In those situations, you can't call everyone crazies.

Edited by Wizard, 05 May 2009 - 09:51.


#221 TehKiller

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 10:24

Thing is that religion is used by extremist as an excuse for their actions
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#222 Wizard

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 10:47

At what point does an extremist become mainstream is my point. Religion is an excuse used by all religious people for their actions. I am simply saying that there have been times in the past when it has been the mainstream, of more than just Christianity, that have done terrible things, that it isn't simply right to say that Christianity has it's fair share of crazies, when the non-crazies have been part of the problem before.

#223 amazin

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 14:42

well if you are looking at, for example, the inquisition, that is a VERY good example of corrupt people in power twisting the bible how they please.

and you could not blame that on the Christian beliefs, i think that was more a problem with how much power the church itself had at the time

Edited by umm not dachamp, 05 May 2009 - 14:44.


#224 Wizard

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 15:01

View Postumm not dachamp, on 5 May 2009, 15:42, said:

and you could not blame that on the Christian beliefs, i think that was more a problem with how much power the church itself had at the time

It is almost impossible to separate Christianity from the churches that prescribe to Christianity. Let's look at this another way. Christians believe in Jesus Christ and that he died for their sins, Muslims believe in Allah and his Prophet Mohammad. They do not believe, fundamentally, that they must wage war on each other, or that the other is the devil. However, when people who share the ultimate common belief carry out acts in the name of their religion, it is not the religion that carries out these acts, it is the people. So when someone with Christian or Islamic beliefs act like this we associate it with that religion and it's beliefs, rightly or wrongly.

Edited by Wizard, 05 May 2009 - 15:02.


#225 Golan

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Posted 05 May 2009 - 17:56

View Postumm not dachamp, on 5 May 2009, 14:42, said:

well if you are looking at, for example, the inquisition, that is a VERY good example of corrupt people in power twisting the bible how they please.

and you could not blame that on the Christian beliefs, i think that was more a problem with how much power the church itself had at the time

Why should the Inquisition ( and/or the church at that time) be any less Christian as what we have today? It is a matter of interpretation, after all.
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