Islam vs. Christianity
Is there really a big difference?
“Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword” (Matthew 10:34). Or they could re-tell the parable of conflict resolution, which Jesus ends this way: “But those enemies of mine who did not want me to be king over them—bring them here and kill them in front of me” (Luke 19:27).
One of the big accomplishments of the United States was separation of Church and State or "ethical philosophy and political philosophy", unfortunately many christians and many environmentalists want to break that wall down.
“Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword” (Matthew 10:34). Or they could re-tell the parable of conflict resolution, which Jesus ends this way: “But those enemies of mine who did not want me to be king over them—bring them here and kill them in front of me” (Luke 19:27).
One of the big accomplishments of the United States was separation of Church and State or "ethical philosophy and political philosophy", unfortunately many christians and many environmentalists want to break that wall down.
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I was raised Roman Catholic (Vatican I until the age of ten, then RC Lite with the advent of Vatican II.) We were told there is one God with three persons in the one God. This was to be taken as an article of faith. There were so many changes between the two ecumenical councils that it was difficult for my young mind to accept articles of faith. Suddenly there was no Limbo and anyone who ate meat on the following Friday could get into heaven but everyone from the previous Friday on back was condemned to hell for eternity. I assume purgatory still exists.
All I know is there exists a force far greater than I, or any other human, in existence. I can't go a day without appreciating something for which there is no explanation - it can range from being in awe of the sunrise to how was it that everything went eerily correct, when the odds were against it, all day.
Man has free will. He can choose between right and wrong. You don't have to be a humanist to do that nor do you have to follow a specific religion or philosophy.
Religion isn't an argument against God. It's an argument against man, here on the earthly plane, as God.
The bigger problem I see is that due to the Twelfth Amendment linking the election of the President and Vice President to a single party, I don't see third-party runs becoming viable. Disappointing.
You cite two verses, not only out of context but forcing an improper context on them. You say you looked, so you should have seen that the Matthew quote compares peace vs sword in the context of whether someone values other people more than God. You can disagree with whether God exists, or is more important, but that verse does not tell anyone (today or then) to take up sword, anymore than a politician "targeting" an opponent means they are calling for someone to shoot them.
The Luke verse is the tail end of a parable about servants who are rewarded based on how well the manage a king's resources (an Objectivist concept - reward for production). It is not about conflict resolution, and does not tell anyone today to kill anyone. In the time it was written, slaying enemies was normal behavior for a king (if you strike the king, you must kill the king). A statement in a story, expressly introduced as a made up story, that underscores the authority of a king is not a command for anyone in the real world to kill anyone.
For clarity - I'm not arguing against separation of church and state, just against basing your arguments on such poor foundations.
The enlightenment never would have occurred if not for Christianity - Charles Martel, the Templars, the Magna Carta. Christianity (as brutal as some powers made it - Kings holding on to their position by using divine right, the Catholic church asserting their influence to assume dominion over all the kings) was fertile soil as people began to become educated (catholics) and the security of civilization reduced threats that fostered the enlightenment (it was only natural, an educated mind with idle time), and not in-spite of the Christian world.
Still, this is just my observation from history.
Thanks.
You may actually like (although not agree with) those two books. I found them very interesting and they present facts and arguments around those facts.
As a for instance, The Norsemen, who became the rulers in Normandy and the Normans of Engalnd set up their government based on the government structure given to the Hebrews in Laviticus, even some of the names of offices are derived form these. These books touch on this one lightly, but Cleon Skousan give a talk at BYU way back when, I have a recording, and detailed it all out very nicely. Within that was the idea of self rule....
Anyway they are both books worth a read.
In my religion it is all about choice, you choose to follow or not, you choose to work towards your religious goal or not. No one is forced to stay, or do anything its all about goals and achievement.
I may have misinterpreted your use of the term as I see it in no other way than a trade of something I want more for something I want less.
in our time, as bitterly as Einstein and Bohr disagreed, no one threw handgrenades into the biergartens of graduate students to settle the argument. People of reason have a better way to find truth.
Let me ask you: Did pizza and spaghetti become American foods because of the influence of Italian culture in our society?
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