Quote from: Julie Marie on May 11, 2010, 01:38:28 PM
Generally speaking, any politician who is gay or bi and votes against gay rights or engages in anti-gay campaigning qualifies as someone who is throwing fellow gays under the bus for cash. I'll grant you that when it comes to religious leaders, the waters muddy a bit. That's because these people are so messed up THEY don't know what's real.
But let me ask you Laura, since it seems you are closer to the religious right than I, do these people really believe there is an evil spirit called the devil or Lucifer or whatever, who is trying to bring down mankind? I mean really believe it!
When I was a kid, I sort of believed in the devil but I quickly outgrew that. Just as I did thinking Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny were real. Most people grow out of these childhood fantasies.
I mean, if these people REALLY believe there is some sort of evil demon trying to tempt us to sin so we end up in hell, doesn't it make you want to suggest they enter into therapy?
there are theologically deeper folks than me here but I've spent most of my life in the SBC so i speak more from experience with the outworking of the doctrine rather than what it officially says.
In my experience, almost every evangelical Christian believes in a being who fills the role commonly thought of as "the devil" or Satan.
They/we do NOT believe in the horns and pitchfork cartoonish image that is part of the common culture.
Most Christians do not give remotely enough thought to the practical implications of what they believe...
(and I could give you exhaustive examples of the sorts of cliches commonly spoken or written that demonstrate a lack of thought but I'll hold it to one: a lot of people will say, in a conversational way, "I'm so glad my house didn't get blown away in the storm! I'm so blessed and God is so good to me!" while never stopping to think that the logical implication is that god is NOT good when it comes to the sweet little church lady down the road who DID get her house blown away. they don't really THINK about the implications of what they say, they just parrot cliches)
...and so it often is with Satan.
Let me offer you a bit of a hypothesis that's mostly my own synthesis of what I think the Bible says and what seems logical to me (logical within the context of their actually being a God anything like the bible describes):
My working hypothesis is that this existence that human beings have is, in essence, a massive demonstration lab.
God, in eternity past, professed himself to be - by virtue of being the ultimate being - all knowing, all loving, alljust, etc.
The being we refer to as Satan essentially said "How do we know? if there is no sin, what is there to forgive or be gracious about, or to judge?"
So God created this universe (or the part of it our senses can perceive) to serve as a example to demonstrate to the Skeptic that he was what he claimed to be.
(yes, by the way, that makes humanity a pretty humble part of the whole of creation but I'm not troubled by that)
Whether or not my suggestion has any merit, it illustrates what i can say about my fellow evangelical Christians - Satan is "the great adversary"
different people apply that in different ways - I have no doubt that for some that means a being who (personally or via some minion) actively tries to screw up their lives and cause them to doubt God; for others he is merely ...how do I put this?...the spirit of doubt and fear and loss of faith...if that makes any sense. He's the one who "spins" whatever goes through your mind in a way which reflects most negatively upon God.
But to clarify, this being's intent is understood not to be antagonistic to men, but to God. That men might suffer if he succeeds is "collateral damage" at best. But the understanding is that this being sincerely wishes to overthrow the rule of God and, if successful, no one would suffer from the judgment of the dethroned former-god. So the mythology doesn't really suggest he just wants to drag ever soul he can to hell. He would say his goal is that there is no hell and no one in it and no one to send you there.
At least, so I understand it.
My own personal take is a lot less specific.
i believe that there IS a god and that the Bible is instructive in that it tells us what he wants us to know about the "other world" he inhabits and what the implications are for this one, though I no longer believe in the literal approach. It's a lesson book not a history book.
Within that context, I believew there IS a being which we refer to as Satan but I think that we, in this life, have almost no real understanding of what's going on with him and can only speculate beyond the premise that he is an adversary of God and that God for some reason tolerates his acting in that role.
I speculate that there is a rather massive (from our perspective) "spiritual war" going on that we in this world are only tangentially concerned with (and that from their perspective - it's all but irrelevant from ours)
I fully admit that none of this is based on any scientific evidence, and do not attempt to proselytize my own point of view - it might well be that it's simply a comfort to me to believe that there is something bigger and more important going on in the 'verse than what i can see around me.
YMMV.
All that said, no, I wouldn't suggest therapy unless I was going to suggest it for all the other goofy things people believe in this world (and that list is QUITE long)