Jinx 2 said:
bearassnekkid said:
Jinx 2 said:
bearassnekkid said:
Jinx 2 said:
bearassnekkid said:
Jinx 2 said:
bearassnekkid said:
Jinx 2 said:
Coke Bear said:
Jinx 2 said:
Some people don't view same-sex attraction as a 'cross' but as a naturally occuring variation. As is their right in any nation that touts separation of church and state.
First, science has not established what causes Same-sex attraction. Blindness, deafness, malformations, etc., are naturally occurring. These are considered crosses to bear.
Jinx 2 said:
Same-sex attraction as 'sin" or a "cross to bear" is a religious belief--a very bigoted one, IMO, and not one all Christian churches share.
I never called it a sin to have Same-sex attraction. I will argue all day that it is a cross to bear. No one wakes up upon discovery and says, "YEAH, I'm Gay!" Most struggle for years, if not a lifetime.
Humans are designed to be attracted to the opposite sex. That is how all species grow, prosper, and evolve. Same-sex attraction is against the natural law.
As Christians, we are called to love ALL people. I do my best to do so. That doesn't mean that I have to love the behaviors of all people.
You think humans are 'designed.'
I think we evolved, and that being gay--which has been a constant since the dawn of time--must have some benefit, or it would have been selected out.
There are so many things that can and do go wrong with our 'design'--genes that cause cancer and alzhiemers, extra cromosomes causing various types of intellectual and physical disabilities, chronic issues like cystic fibrosis or sickle cell anemia, a horrible death sentence like Huntington's disease. As the sister of a profoundly disabled brother who died at 32 with his multitude of issues never fully diagnosed or understood, I've seen the worst result of randomness and find that the miracle is that things go right so much of the time.
Your 2nd paragraph and 3rd paragraph are contradictory.
If homosexuality must have some "benefit" or else it would have been "selected" out . . . . then kindly tell me the benefit of cancer, alzhiemers, and chromosomal disorders "causing various types of intellectual and physical disabilities." Since, you know, those things haven't been selected out either.
The point where we probably disagree is that there is a Plan or a Purpose. I don't believe there is, and I believe that imbues us with greater responsibility for our fates and the fate of all life on earth, not less. We are doing a very poor job of stewarding the environment that created us. The cost for that could be our own extinction.
Who cares? If there's no purpose, then so what? Species go extinct all the time.
Plus, I mean, wouldn't the planet be better off without us, in your opinion? I'd think earth-worshippers like you would almost be rooting for our extinction, not living in fear of it.
Do you think purpose in life must be based in religion?
I don't. I don't believe in a God that controls the universe right down to the minute details of everyday life. What I think instead is that makes us responsible for choosing how to give our lives meaning and purpose--a big responsibility. Religion is one option, but that means you must accept someone else's definition of what you must do and must not do. And, in the case of Christianity and other religions, it means you must believe in an afterlife in which you are rewarded or punished for the choices you make. I particularly dislike a purpose driven by fear of hell or eternal damnation or the promise of some sort of heavenly reward, like 72 virgins (and what about THEIR enjoyment of the afterlife? Having to be a sex slave for some jerk with a food catching beard for all eternity sounds like the virgins are being punished with eternal misery to reward one guy for pleasing God).
I belief this is the only life we have, and the reward and punishment we reap comes in real time. Or not. Some really bad people are rewarded with wealth and comfort, while some really good ones suffer random awfulness like an ALS diagnosis or the death of a spouse or child.
My purpose is to leave the campsite better than I found it, by raising good children and doing good work, and also to savor the days I have to learn and walk my dog and read and work. I feel lucky to have two grown daughters I love, a good life partner, a comfortable house, a good dog to take walks with and a good job.
Ahhhhhhh, ok. So purpose of our existence is entirely subjective. I suppose that means you're very understanding of someone seeing things differently than you do. Like, say, someone who doesn't think it's important to leave the campsite better than you found it? After all, they have a different purpose, Jinx. You don't care about their religion, and they don't care about your purpose. It's all up to the individual what life is really about. Since this is "the only life we have" and all. Eat, drink, and be merry. Why the responsibility to future generations of an insignificant species who is a scourge to poor Mother Earth, right? Your worldview tends to make your stated purpose meaningless.
You are conflating agnosticism with individualism.
If anything, my concern for people and my conviction that we must work together to preserve the planet for everyone may be stronger than yours, because I don't exclude people of other faiths or no faith (especially, in the case of evangelical Christians, Muslims), nor do I believe we're going to be bailed out of drowning in our own waste by the Second Coming, which may seem to make issues like clean air, clean water, trash-free oceans and climate change seem less urgent. If you think God's in control and that you're his chosen people, you may think there's an exit strategy. If you don't, our incredible hubris in fouling our nest strikes you as incredibly stupid and short-sighted.
"Leave the campsite better than you found it" is a strong ethic for me.
I feel just as strongly about that as something everyone needs to do as some evangelical Christians feel about eliminating any form of abortion as a legal choice for all women or about eliminating civil rights for gay people because that's legitimizing sin.
The fact that my beliefs and convictions aren't religiously based doesn't mean they aren't strong, and that I won't act to support them. Just as the fact that your beliefs and convictions ARE religiously based doesn't mean they aren't strong or stop you from advocating for laws forcing everyone to adhere to them, regardless of whether they share your beliefs about reproductive rights or gay civil rights.
Thanks. I think your positions about human life being meaningless in a grander scheme (subjective purpose only) but also having a need to tend to mother earth for future generations are inconsistent.
Also, despite your barbs about religions, your beliefs seem pretty religious as well. Although in keeping with the aforementioned inconsistency they seem to be a mix of Nature Worship and Humanism. For what it's worth, you do seem more "holier than thou" and self-impressed than most mainstream religious folks I know.
Lastly, despite your veiled digs, I don't know a single Christian friend or acquaintance that is in favor of "eliminating civil rights for gay people." That's just an absurd accusation. You're right that many are, however, in favor of being on the right side of history on the issue of slaughtering millions of tiny defenseless humans. And they should be, because the practice is absolutely monstrous. But nobody is trying to eliminate civil rights. They might be opposed to people receiving special consideration based on the people they choose to share a bed with. And yes, they consider the practice of homosexuality to be a sin (among many other sins that everyone they know commits) but that doesn't make them anti civil rights. I suspect you know this.
Your snide critique of my views is wrong. I don't believe human life is "meaningless in the grander scheme." As I stated before, I believe you have to find your own meaning, and that religion is only one option.
If you choose religion, you are choosing to agree with someone else's definition of what gives life meaning and how you should live, whether that's the Pope (who has just disavowed the death penalty); the Mormon Elders, who had a revelation in the 1970s that black men should be admitted to the priesthood--so those sets of beliefs CAN change and evolve while the foundation stays intact; the Jehovah's Witnesses, who think a small group of the elect--them--will be saved; the Christian Scientists, who have concocted an elaborate scheme to let rich people buy their way to meaning; ISIS, which used a 7th century text to justify sexual slavery, murder and the complete subjugation of women; various brands of protestantism, some of which believe everything is fore-ordained. Religions evolve and change over time.
Of course my beliefs are informed by religion; I was raised in Methodist and Episcopal churches, spent 3 years in the Nazarene church, which cured me for life of the weekly alter-call drama of evangelical Christianity, and I think the ethic of "Treat other people the way you would have them treat you" is one of the best approaches to life there is. I wish Christianity, in particular, hadn't failed so badly in promoting stewardship of the planet, and I'm at a loss to understand why people like you are so hostile to that view. We only have one planet. There's no escape for us and our children. Why are we so intent on fouling the nest? A desire for better stewardship of the cradle of humanity does not equate to nature worship.
Note above that I talked about MY beliefs, not yours, while your post focused entirely on critiquing my views until you got to the abortion issue. You are free to believe whatever you choose; I will oppose views I disagree with only when you attempt to impose them on me with the force of law. And I am very tired of the "but abortion" argument used to discredit anything else a person does, says or thinks. Especially from people who support the death penalty. Respect for life, to me, involves respecting the bodily integrity of women and their existence as individuals who retain the right to make reproductive decisions for themselves. IMO, the government should not have a role in making those decisions, any more than the government should be in the nasty business of killing its citizens, especially given our faulty, error-prone system of justice.
And at least some evangelical churches and some factions of the Catholic church have a clear agenda to deny people who are gay basic civil rights like marriage--both a civil and religious institution. Some hold the view that the only option open to people attracted to those of the same sex is a life of celibacy, or the choice to marry someone of the opposite sex and live as straight. Since that choice involves another person--typically a woman, whose needs for a partner who is actually attracted to her are utterly disregarded in this scenario--I think THAT's immoral. I'm not asking you to change your views or your church. I'm asking you to make room for people who don't share your views and stop trying to preclude their choices with the force of law to outwardly conform to your religious beliefs. And to support policies that involve better stewardship of the planet for future generations. I don't want my grandchildren to depend on egotistical guys like Elon Musk for an escape route. That's pragmatism, not nature worship.
I'll try to address a few of these points one at a time:
"I don't believe human life is "meaningless in the grander scheme." As I stated before, I believe you have to find your own meaning, and that religion is only one option."Forgive me, but I just think these two sentences are contradictory. If each individual concocts their own individual "meaning" or purpose, then there is no "grander scheme" purpose for the species. No universal truth means we're merely one of the currently known 8.7 million species on the planet. No more or less important than a praying mantis. Making meaning entirely subjective negates the value of the concept altogether.
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"If you choose religion, you are choosing to agree with someone else's definition of what gives life meaning and how you should live." I'm not following someone else's definition so much as I'm embracing what I believe to be the truth of the universe. Other people don't define or control my belief, but there are certain people who have tapped into the same truth from whom I can learn. You, on the other hand, are choosing Self. This, according to Christian faith, was the sin of Lucifer before the creation of Earth and the original human sin in the garden. This self-deification is also why I suggest you practice a form of Humanism.
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Christian Scientists, who have concocted an elaborate scheme to let rich people buy their way to meaning."Not that it matters, but I think you might be confusing Christian Scientists with Scientologists. Two very different things. Christian Science is a metaphysical religion centered largely around the belief that sickness is an illusion, where as Scientology is a science-fiction cult where you buy your way to the top like Tom Cruise and John Travolta have done.
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I wish Christianity, in particular, hadn't failed so badly in promoting stewardship of the planet, and I'm at a loss to understand why people like you are so hostile to that view. We only have one planet. There's no escape for us and our children. Why are we so intent on fouling the nest? A desire for better stewardship of the cradle of humanity does not equate to nature worship."How has Christianity supposedly failed in this area? By not making it a primary plank of its doctrine for some reason? What specifically are you referring to? Also, I'm not hostile to the idea of taking care of the planet. I'm an outdoorsman, hunter, fisherman and conservationist. I have taught my daughters to respect nature and to be good stewards of our planet. I do NOT, however, believe that human beings as a species are contributing in a way that is significantly and realistically alterable to the (insert ominous music here along with deep announcer voice with reverb) . . the DESTRUCTION OF THE PLANET. Spending my days lamenting how us awful humans are ruining the planet would be a waste of my life. If humans are hurting the planet, the only real way that will change in a signifiant way is if there are less human beings. I'm not saying I don't think people should be responsible, I'm just saying that lobbying for sweeping, expensive environmental regulation is likely to contribute more harm to humankind (by being injurious economically) than it is to contribute benefit. And the expense is unlikely to result in a meaningful difference. It's simply a cost-benefit analysis. But, bottom line, it just isn't as big a thing for me as it is for you. Again, I think you worship nature and self. Those aren't things I worship.
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I will oppose views I disagree with only when you attempt to impose them on me with the force of law. Me too. On abortion, I think a really bad interpretation of constitutional law was applied 45 years ago and as a result millions of human beings have been exterminated. That bad law should be changed, and this monstrous practice should be prohibited.
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"And I am very tired of the "but abortion" argument used to discredit anything else a person does, says or thinks. IMO, the government should not have a role in making those decisions."You have taken the disingenuous position of claiming that you are a champion of "choice" and "freedom" and therefore think government shouldn't intrude. But you don't feel this about other topics. For example, I assume you aren't pro-choice for rapists, right? They are choosing what to do with their bodies, and in so doing are violating the body of another person and visiting violence upon them. This same thing happens with abortion. You believe we should "impose with the force of law" a prohibition against rape. I believe we should do the same when it comes to killing the most defenseless human beings among us.
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And at least some evangelical churches and some factions of the Catholic church have a clear agenda to deny people who are gay basic civil rights like marriage--both a civil and religious institution. I don't know a single Christian person who opposed a gay person having equal "civil rights
like marriage." Most of us think the government shouldn't be involved in marriage in any way. We view it as a sacred relationship, not a governmental one. As such, I don't oppose gay people entering into a lifelong committed relationship and having the exact same rights I would have for being in one that I call "marriage." I object to them calling it "marriage" for the same reason I object to calling a three-sided object a rectangle. It simply isn't what it is. But I don't think they should have less rights than those who
do enter a marriage.
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Some hold the view that the only option open to people attracted to those of the same sex is a life of celibacy, or the choice to marry someone of the opposite sex and live as straight.Huh? Nobody (none that I know, anyway) believes this should be mandated somehow by government. That's crazy. Christians don't want a theocracy. They hold the views you described when it comes to their personal view on sin, but certainly not the law. I think it's a sin to tell a lie, to commit adultery, to covet your neighbors stuff, etc . . .but I don't think this has anything to do with law or government. I don't think there should be laws against those things and I don't think there should be against homosexuality. This isn't a civil rights issue. Not sure what you're talking about on this point with regard to "force of law."