TexasScientist said:
Oldbear83 said:
TexasScientist said:
Oldbear83 said:
quash said:
Oldbear83 said:
TexasScientist said:
Oldbear83 said:
TexasScientist said:
curtpenn said:
Please tell me how Matthew 5 doesn't directly contradict your claims.
One was written ~ 1800 BCE and the other sometime after late first century CE.
One changed the world, the other was largely ignored in its own country of origin.
Hammurabi influenced the world during and beyond his time. Religion has changed the world. Islam is changing the world.
Agreed about Islam. There's no evidence Hammurabi changed the lives of ordinary people or how they lived.
And I'd suggest that not all religions have the same effect, purpose, or consequence.
Historians would disagree with you about the effect of the earliest known code of justice. So would the people who benefited.
All religions share a supernatural component.
First, historians as a group disagree on a great many things. Name the ones who support your claim and we can discuss it but no, you don't get to pretend they all say what you say.
As for your second claim, Buddhism for example does not have a supernatural component per se, nor does Jainism nor Scientology. I have varying degrees of respect/interest in those, but they are definitely religions and do not have a supernatural component.
That's not right. Buddhists believe in spirits and they believe Buddha had supernatural powers.
My wife's family is Buddhist. You are wrong on both claims in terms of the structure and nature of Buddhism.
Try again without the assumptions.
Why are there Buddhist houses for spirits in Thailand? Didn't Buddha supposedly walk on water etc.?
You are conflating those who misuse a faith to advance superstition with the actual tenets of that faith.
There are, for example, people who handle snakes because they misunderstand the scripture, and try to use it for personal gain rather than to walk closer to God. This happens in all groups.
You may recall that Thomas Beddoes and Humphrey Davy, for example, had parties using nitrous oxide for recreation in 1799-1800. That does not mean that Science in general is just looking for ways to get high.
So too it is invalid to judge Religion in general by those who use it for personal purposes rather than in following its tenets.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier