daveinprague
New member
All religion is written by man. No 'God' involved in any of it.
Another one not surprised. And it's not just the young - I'm nearly fifty and have gone from a light believer through agnostic to complete and utter non-believer. I think western world is gradually waking up to reality. What annoys me is that if someone believes in a God most people still think they're sane. Say you believe in unicorns and fairies and you're considered mad. Both are equally daft.
Genuine question from (and this is obvious) someone who isn't religious in the slightest.
Can you be Christian and believe in dinosaurs?
I'm willing to be educated.
Genuine question from (and this is obvious) someone who isn't religious in the slightest.
Can you be Christian and believe in dinosaurs?
I'm willing to be educated.
Yes, and a lot of Christians do. Genesis is now considered to be a more cautionary tale. What would happen if you disobey God and the like.
Faith? No. Christianity? Yes.
Or even worse in my view, parents who have their children christened, effectively just for the occasion rather than for religious significance.
Can you have Christianity without having faith?
How many people still when presented with a survey or asked as a hospital patient will say CofE without any thought, despite the fact that the only time they go to Church is for a wedding/funeral/Christening.
Is that having faith or having Christianity.
How many people accept the invitation to be a god parent to a new born child of a family member or close friend, although they seldom if ever go to Church or still believe, and do they keep to the requirements of the Church of being a god parent.
Or even worse in my view, parents who have their children christened, effectively just for the occasion rather than for religious significan
Sermon over
I regularly ask "Equality & Diversity" questions on a helpline to people of all ages. I'd say in excess of 90% of respondents to "Do you follow any particular religion or belief" say "no". A subjective experience,yes, but one that supports the trend described.
Sorry to annoy you....not that it will change my view
Annoys is probably over egging it really.
If I said I had some magic beans that could grow a huge beanstalk to a castle with a giant in it in the sky I'd be derided.
If I said I rode unicorns around my garden each evening I'd be derided.
If I said I'd had a messages from the fairies in the local forest that the world was about to end I'd be derided.
If I said I believed in an all encompassing being that had a son via a virgin who carried out some remarkable miracles and rose from the dead I'd be called a Christian and considered sane.
Can you have Christianity without having faith?
How many people still when presented with a survey or asked as a hospital patient will say CofE without any thought, despite the fact that the only time they go to Church is for a wedding/funeral/Christening.
Is that having faith or having Christianity.
How many people accept the invitation to be a god parent to a new born child of a family member or close friend, although they seldom if ever go to Church or still believe, and do they keep to the requirements of the Church of being a god parent.
Or even worse in my view, parents who have their children christened, effectively just for the occasion rather than for religious significan
Sermon over
Annoys is probably over egging it really.
If I said I had some magic beans that could grow a huge beanstalk to a castle with a giant in it in the sky I'd be derided.
If I said I rode unicorns around my garden each evening I'd be derided.
If I said I'd had a messages from the fairies in the local forest that the world was about to end I'd be derided.
If I said I believed in an all encompassing being that had a son via a virgin who carried out some remarkable miracles and rose from the dead I'd be called a Christian and considered sane.
Of course you can. Bit of a silly question.
'Christian' doesn't mean 'Fundamentalist Evangelical Fruitcake'. At least, it doesn't for most.
For most people I've encountered of a Christian faith, the Bible and scriptures are not something to be taken in any way as factual or as a set of rules. More just a set of stories, from which a set of morals and guidance can be inferred.
I don't think it's a silly question.
If you believe in the story of how the earth was created in however many days it was, then I've never quite understood where dinosaurs fit in, or evolution.
Again, I'm naïve and not a Christian or even remotely religious so am completely willing to be informed.
And on the point of not being completely engrossed in the faith but instead choosing to take on the morals.......aren't the morals things like don't be a ****, break the law and kill people? I'd say those are things anyone would aim to stick to.
But that is the point - unless we are talking only about fundamentalist CREATIONISTS, then Christians almost to a man, do NOT 'believe a story about the earth being created in however many days'.
So you can pick and choose which bits of the story to believe? Do some CHRISTians not believe in Christ?
Essentially, the more liberal the church has become, the less relevant it is to anybody. This is why Islam, a comparatively hard-line religion requiring salah several times daily, rather than MAYBE on Christmas Eve, is a much stronger force for those who have already been indoctrinated into what to believe.