Does the author, being born in the bible-belt, wants to target only Christianity or all the religions alike?
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Re: Does the author, being born in the bible-belt, wants to target only Christianity or all the religions alike?
CConfounded wrote: ↑20 Dec 2020, 16:25 I feel like the author was generalizing. Christianity in and of itself is a broad religion with numerous subsections.
To me, the author was confusing traits that are common themes across humanity with the religions in and of themselves. I feel like most of humanity is wired toward religion, otherwise there would have been a purely atheist society long before this century. Thus, to a lot of people, it's easy to pinpoint the bad aspects of society on religion, when, in reality, its humanity itself which is geared toward destruction.
So very true. Thank you!
I too feel like that us what the author is doing. She is taking her bad experiences I'm the catholic church where she worshipped for much of her youth, and using that at a yardstick to judge and condemn rganised religion. Finding a way to prove the existence of God using science.
Humans are flawed, she needs to reme!her that . humans are flawed and the religion may not be flawed. Not saying that is what it is, but I think it is important to remember that.

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Completely agree.Maddie Atkinson wrote: ↑06 Dec 2020, 11:02 While this is in the context of Christianity, specifically Catholicism, I think that it can be put into other religious contexts. Many religious leaders, no matter what their religion, manipulate holy scriptures for their own gain, which is what the author is trying to question. The author is merely questioning his own religion, but it can apply to all!!!
I also think that the author should note that some of the reasons for this manipulation are financial gain. The author concentrated more on noting that the manipulation was due to a misunderstanding of scripture but I've seen it done deliberately for financial gain.
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