Quote from: Kyle XD on August 25, 2010, 01:32:45 AM
It's fine to say you don't believe in god since it's just an opinion. It's when you flat out say there is no god that you are being preachy.
But you do have to agree that there is a long history of religious folks who want to proclaim "There is a God" without a thought that this statement might be equally offensive to militant atheists. So I think that this is rather a case of live and let live. Both sides of this have a nasty tendency to proclaim their beliefs as fact.
Thus to fairly censure Dee it would seem to me that you would first also have to censure many millennia of religious preachers who have proclaimed the opposite belief as fact. For example I know of very few evangelists who say "
I believe there is a God". Similarly I have to say that I too find the concept of assumed universal sin, at least as defined, to be troubling. I don't actually believe that any of us has the right to assume that everyone else sins.
Meanwhile back on topic, the reason this Catholic position is so deeply disturbing has occurred to me and it is this. If the God they believe in really is so small and petty as they make out, then he would hardly be a worthy creator of infinity, rather he would have the appearance of a rather parochial and small minded individual, almost a twisted sadist indeed, who expects his creatures to live in ways which are contrary to their true natures and then, just to make things worse, provides them with a medical science capable of relieving their suffering, but forbids them to access it.
That does not sound like the Jesus of the gospels.
Indeed Jesus is consistently portrayed as the person who went into bat on the side of the underdog against this exact sort of religious legalism. I firmly believe he would have called the current Catholic church a bunch of pharisees for their legalistic beliefs, and the gospel, if written today would not say that he "Dined with publicans, and tax collectors" rather than he dined with "Transgenders and bankers" or some such modern equivalent. Who knows, I personally think we might easily have had a sex change as a modern miracle.
The small minded idea of God that they have would seem to me to be almost blasphemy in that rather than God creating man in his own image they seem to be engaged on the reverse, namely man creating God in their own image, and imbuing him with many of our least attractive characteristics. This I simply can not accept.
The God I believe in is simply bigger and more forgiving than that.