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If Catholic Church had a new leader...

  • 02-03-2012 3:33am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭


    Reading the other thread I wondered if the pope was to pass away and a new pope was chosen who attempted to modernise the church and did the following:

    1: Apologised unreservedly for the sins perpetrated by members of the Catholic Church in the past and to refuse to offer protection to said parties, help bring them to justice and to bring any future criminals to justice.

    2: Preached that tolerance and respect for one and other was the most important teaching of the church and that though some aspects of modern life went against the traditional teaching of the church, (such as homosexuality and contraception) it was no ones else’s place to judge these choices or people but the person in question and God.

    3: Started selling off buildings and the huge collections of art owned by the church and funneling most of the funds directly into charity work for the poor in society and the rest to purchasing more meager functional properties.

    Would your attitude toward the Catholic Church change for the better? I appreciate that the artiest or people of other religions are not going to suddenly believe in anything they didn’t before but would you have more respect for the religion or its practitioners?

    Would agnostics or lapsed Catholics be tempted to return to the church?

    Would you want the new head of the church to do more and if so what?

    I always hear a lot of negativity about the current pope that you would not necessarily have heard about the previous pope or leaders of other religions such as the Dalai Lama.

    Do currently practicing Catholics see the three points above as unreasonable or unrealistic things to happen?

    (To clarify my own thoughts I am Agnostic but like most Irish people was brought up within the traditional Catholic church. I would welcome these changes and it might make me more inclined to go to church.)


«13

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,059 ✭✭✭Sindri


    Doc wrote: »
    2: Preached that tolerance and respect for one and other was the most important teaching of the church and that though some aspects of modern life went against the traditional teaching of the church, (such as homosexuality and contraception) it was no ones else’s place to judge these choices or people but the person in question and God.

    Wouldn't happen, they've lured quite a few North American conservative protestants to Rome by their stances on social issues.

    Bidness doing good!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    It wouldn't convince me to go back to the Church, for me the damage has been done. Long before the current popes' time too.
    Then again, I'm dubious about organised religion for various other reasons, so I'm biased to begin with.
    It might however help a new wave of younger children into the church, say, those that are in primary school now. Our generation and the ones above us have seen too much.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    No, because the concept is still batsh1t insane no matter who's calling the shots. The damage has been done and long may it continue.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    krudler wrote: »
    The damage has been done and long may it continue.

    Huh?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Sauve wrote: »
    Huh?

    the damage the church has done to itself, falling attendences, people disenchanted with the organisation etc, the longer that goes on the better


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    krudler wrote: »
    No, because the concept is still batsh1t insane no matter who's calling the shots. The damage has been done and long may it continue.

    Don't really understand the last part of this but in relation to the first, do you feel the same towards all other religions?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,846 ✭✭✭Fromthetrees


    Lets just eat some cheese, sit back and listen to 60s music, is that cool?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    Lets just eat some cheese, sit back and listen to 60s music, is that cool?

    What kind of cheese?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,443 ✭✭✭Bipolar Joe


    Lets just eat some cheese, sit back and listen to 60s music, is that cool?


    I don't really like cheese, so fuck you and your party.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 142 ✭✭fcussen


    Doc wrote: »

    3: Started selling off buildings and the huge collections of art owned by the church and funneling most of the funds directly into charity work for the poor in society and the rest to purchasing more meager functional properties.

    What would this charity work involve? Preaching to the poor that they should accept their lot and not to try to improve their situation because they will be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven? Denying painkillers to dying people a la Mother Teresa because their suffering and poverty will bring them closer to Jesus? Telling uneducated Africans that AIDS is evil but condoms are worse?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    krudler wrote: »
    the damage the church has done to itself, falling attendences, people disenchanted with the organisation etc, the longer that goes on the better

    Agreed. I can't see a major turnaround having a fast enough impact.
    That said, as humans, we (society) need something to gravitate towards/worship.
    Whats the alternative to organised religion? Or is it just the Catholic church that you've a problem with?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,377 ✭✭✭Warper


    It took me years to realise this but anyone that believes in religion is not thinking. Whose religion is best then? Its all bull and the sooner, we as a human race faces up to this fact, the better we will all be.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 100 ✭✭alandublin33


    I think bravestar would be an excellent leader of the church , he'd take no crap yet be fair, and if things got hairy he'd call on 30 30 and his Sarah Jane to sort things out.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    fcussen wrote: »
    What would this charity work involve? Preaching to the poor that they should accept their lot and not to try to improve their situation because they will be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven? Denying painkillers to dying people a la Mother Teresa because their suffering and poverty will bring them closer to Jesus? Telling uneducated Africans that AIDS is evil but condoms are worse?

    Ah yes Im sure no Catholic charity work has ever helped anyone how silly of me to think that it might.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 142 ✭✭fcussen


    There are plenty of organisations such as Oxfam that help the needy but manage to refrain from preaching the evils of johnnies


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Sauve wrote: »
    Agreed. I can't see a major turnaround having a fast enough impact.
    That said, as humans, we (society) need something to gravitate towards/worship.
    Whats the alternative to organised religion? Or is it just the Catholic church that you've a problem with?

    do we though? more and more people are beginning to realise that maybe, just maybe, basing morals and ethics based on a book written by bronze age people is...kinda nuts. religion has been the cause of so much, hatred, mysogny, suffering, war, fearmongering, and downright evil acts its hard to think we need that in our lives anymore.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    krudler wrote: »
    do we though? more and more people are beginning to realise that maybe, just maybe, basing morals and ethics based on a book written by bronze age people is...kinda nuts. religion has been the cause of so much, hatred, mysogny, suffering, war, fearmongering, and downright evil acts its hard to think we need that in our lives anymore.

    Maybe I phrased it wrongly. Personally I don't need a religion or something to worship, but I think a lot of people would seek out guidance/rules/someone to tell them what to do. I could be wrong, but to me modern society reeks of rule-following, sheepish behaviour.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Doc wrote: »
    Ah yes Im sure no Catholic charity work has ever helped anyone how silly of me to think that it might.

    depends on your definition of help really doesnt it, Mother Teresa "helped" people by teaching suffering and poverty was a way to be closer to god, had draconian opinions on womens views and abortion and set up establishments where people went to die in misery instead of being helped or cured. the church has brought the word of god to African villages but not the knowledge of birth control or safe sex, because god doesnt like that does he, apparently he'd much rather see AIDS spread around than a thin piece of rubber used to stop disease spreading and people having a better knowledge of disease and how to protect themselves.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Sauve wrote: »
    Maybe I phrased it wrongly. Personally I don't need a religion or something to worship, but I think a lot of people would seek out guidance/rules/someone to tell them what to do. I could be wrong, but to me modern society reeks of rule-following, sheepish behaviour.

    this is a question Bill Maher asked someone so it suits this topic "do you really think if it wasnt in the bible we wouldnt have figured out it was wrong to murder each other and take each others stuff by now?"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    fcussen wrote: »
    There are plenty of organisations such as Oxfam that help the needy but manage to refrain from preaching the evils of johnnies

    So because there are organisations such as Oxfam you believe that the Catholic Church should not use its money to help the needy? Don't get me wrong I understand what you are saying about trying to convert people they are helping to a certain extent but the Catholic Church dose do a lot of good charity work in the world too and I think it would be good if it made an effort to do more.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,903 ✭✭✭Napper Hawkins


    Sauve wrote: »
    Agreed. I can't see a major turnaround having a fast enough impact.
    That said, as humans, we (society) need something to gravitate towards/worship.
    Whats the alternative to organised religion? Or is it just the Catholic church that you've a problem with?

    What's this 'we' business? Speak for yourself.
    EDIT: Ah I get ya. Never mind.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    krudler wrote: »
    this is a question Bill Maher asked someone so it suits this topic "do you really think if it wasnt in the bible we wouldnt have figured out it was wrong to murder each other and take each others stuff by now?"

    No I hear ya, I was referring to society in general needing rules to follow, which was kind of off-topic.
    I do believe that organised religion is on the way out, and quickly too, with the Catholic one being the first to go. People are afraid though, I think that's half the reason why it's still there. There's a deep-rooted belief from childhood of the 'God sitting on a cloud' who'll send you to hell if you touch yourself and don't say your prayers.
    Something that was drilled into us by our parents and teachers can be difficult to fully remove.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 142 ✭✭fcussen


    Sauve wrote: »
    No I hear ya, I was referring to society in general needing rules to follow, which was kind of off-topic.
    I do believe that organised religion is on the way out, and quickly too, with the Catholic one being the first to go. People are afraid though, I think that's half the reason why it's still there. There's a deep-rooted belief from childhood of the 'God sitting on a cloud' who'll send you to hell if you touch yourself and don't say your prayers.
    Something that was drilled into us by our parents and teachers can be difficult to fully remove.

    The Catholic Church might be on the wane in Ireland but it's certainly not if you look at the entire world


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    fcussen wrote: »
    The Catholic Church might be on the wane in Ireland but it's certainly not if you look at the entire world

    Ah I dunno, the decline may be slower in other countries, but I think it's still happening. Though this is just my perception, I don't have any facts to back this up.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    Sauve wrote: »
    No I hear ya, I was referring to society in general needing rules to follow, which was kind of off-topic.
    I do believe that organised religion is on the way out, and quickly too, with the Catholic one being the first to go. People are afraid though, I think that's half the reason why it's still there. There's a deep-rooted belief from childhood of the 'God sitting on a cloud' who'll send you to hell if you touch yourself and don't say your prayers.
    Something that was drilled into us by our parents and teachers can be difficult to fully remove.

    thats the thing, so many people , catholics especially, just follow whatever religion they're raised with,why? because....well thats the why. I lost my faith, or what little I had anyway when I was in my early teens, even in primary school I kinda twigged that...maybe this is all bullsh1t, the more I thought about it the more I knew it just doesnt add up, a belief system based on assumptions that people in the bronze age knew what would happen after this life (they didnt , nobody does, end of) and not only that but with such descriptive terms for stuff that not one single person in the history of mankind has any, ANY knowledge or actual experience of is just crazy to me. its all morality tales and fables that have gotten jumbled up into false truths and used to keep people in check for centuries along with being a great tax free money earning enterprise. jesus taught the way of a simple life without the need for money or treasure, the vatican is a palace with immeasurable wealth, yeah that adds up alright.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    Sauve wrote: »
    Ah I dunno, the decline may be slower in other countries, but I think it's still happening. Though this is just my perception, I don't have any facts to back this up.

    From Wikipedia:
    Membership statistics
    Further information: Catholicism by country

    Total church membership (both lay and clerical) in 2007 was 1.147 billion people,[40] increasing from the 1950 figure of 437 million[41] and the 1970 figure of 654 million.[42] On 31 December 2008, membership was 1.166 billion, an increase of 11.54% over the same date in 2000, only slightly greater than the rate of increase of the world population (10.77%). The increase was 33.02% in Africa, but only 1.17% in Europe. It was 15.91% in Asia, 11.39% in Oceania, and 10.93% in the Americas. As a result, Catholics were 17.77% of the total population in Africa, 63.10% in the Americas, 3.05% in Asia, 39.97% in Europe, 26.21% in Oceania, and 17.40% of the world population.

    Of the world's Catholics, the proportion living in Africa grew from 12.44% in 2000 to 14.84% in 2008, while those living in Europe fell from 26.81% to 24.31%.[43] Membership in the Catholic Church is attained through baptism or reception into the Church (for individuals previously baptised in non-Catholic Christian churches).[44] For some years until 2009, if someone formally left the Church, that fact was noted in the register of the person's baptism.

    At the end of 2007, Vatican records listed 408,024 Catholic priests in the world, 762 more than at the beginning of the year. The main growth areas have been Asia and Africa, with 21.1 per cent and 27.6 per cent growth respectively. In North and South America, numbers have remained approximately the same, while there was a 6.8 per cent decline in Europe and a 5.5 per cent decrease in Oceania from 2000 to 2007.[40]


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,903 ✭✭✭Napper Hawkins


    krudler wrote: »
    thats the thing, so many people , catholics especially, just follow whatever religion they're raised with,why? because....well thats the why. I lost my faith, or what little I had anyway when I was in my early teens, even in primary school I kinda twigged that...maybe this is all bullsh1t, the more I thought about it the more I knew it just doesnt add up, a belief system based on assumptions that people in the bronze age knew what would happen after this life (they didnt , nobody does, end of) and not only that but with such descriptive terms for stuff that not one single person in the history of mankind has any, ANY knowledge or actual experience of is just crazy to me. its all morality tales and fables that have gotten jumbled up into false truths and used to keep people in check for centuries along with being a great tax free money earning enterprise. jesus taught the way of a simple life without the need for money or treasure, the vatican is a palace with immeasurable wealth, yeah that adds up alright.
    Bang on.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    krudler wrote: »
    thats the thing, so many people , catholics especially, just follow whatever religion they're raised with,why? because....well thats the why. I lost my faith, or what little I had anyway when I was in my early teens, even in primary school I kinda twigged that...maybe this is all bullsh1t, the more I thought about it the more I knew it just doesnt add up, a belief system based on assumptions that people in the bronze age knew what would happen after this life (they didnt , nobody does, end of) and not only that but with such descriptive terms for stuff that not one single person in the history of mankind has any, ANY knowledge or actual experience of is just crazy to me. its all morality tales and fables that have gotten jumbled up into false truths and used to keep people in check for centuries along with being a great tax free money earning enterprise. jesus taught the way of a simple life without the need for money or treasure, the vatican is a palace with immeasurable wealth, yeah that adds up alright.

    Summed up perfectly.
    All I can add to this is the following statement;

    Dinosaur bones were put there by evil-doers to test your faith in God.
    Have blind faith and all will be well.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,670 ✭✭✭Doc


    krudler wrote: »
    its all morality tales and fables that have gotten jumbled up into false truths and used to keep people in check for centuries along with being a great tax free money earning enterprise. jesus taught the way of a simple life without the need for money or treasure, the vatican is a palace with immeasurable wealth, yeah that adds up alright.

    So if they did implement the 3rd point I said surely you would have more respect for them?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 22,646 ✭✭✭✭Sauve


    Thanks Doc -
    Bit of an eye-opener there, I wouldn't have thought that at all.

    Edit: Re the increasing numbers in Catholic church.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,118 ✭✭✭Babybuff


    she would be awesome.. but she wouldn't be a nun, more like wonderwoman in apostolic vestments.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,643 ✭✭✭Father Damo


    fcussen wrote: »
    What would this charity work involve? Preaching to the poor that they should accept their lot and not to try to improve their situation because they will be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven?

    What a load of sh1te.
    Denying painkillers to dying people a la Mother Teresa because their suffering and poverty will bring them closer to Jesus?

    Im going to call it here- you made this one up. Reminds me of the singer on Father Ted claiming the church bought up all the potatos during the famine and held onto them for their own use :pac:
    Telling uneducated Africans that AIDS is evil but condoms are worse?

    People in Africa like shagging around without johnnys.

    So do I after too many pints.

    Im not going to blame the pope if I catch nob rot or worse. Why? Because just like most of Africa the words of a holy man in Rome really dont enter my mind ever. Most religious people couldnt give a sh1te what the pope says, let alone promiscous Africans.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 349 ✭✭talkinyite


    I'd consider stepping foot into a church if the church was to properly apologise, disconnect itself from material greed (some churches have golden ceilings WTF like?) and pay proper reparations for all the damage that has been caused. I'm agnostic.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,192 ✭✭✭EarlERizer


    Buddha!

    Namaste :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 142 ✭✭fcussen



    Im going to call it here- you made this one up. Reminds me of the singer on Father Ted claiming the church bought up all the potatos during the famine and held onto them for their own use :pac:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9WQ0i3nCx60 (5:30 onwards). It's a testament to amount of uncritical compliment the church is given that people would think I made that up

    http://tiny.cc/6x8gj :
    The biography of Dr Jack Preger (OBE), the Catholic who heads the charity Calcutta Rescue, and who had worked with Mother Teresa before he went on his own, is scathing about Mother's needle-sharing policy:

    Yet if it is medication that they [Nirmal Hriday residents] want, their request is less likely to be favourably received. An inspection of the rules and aims of the order confirms that medical attention to the poor is low on the agenda. The priority is quite clear: the worship of Christ and the propagation of the faith...Certainly no painkillers are administered to patients; belief remains firmly vested in the intervention of the Almighty. And there are examples of medical malpractice at Kalighat that would horrify western observers. For example, needles for injections are simply rinsed in cold water after use and simple passed from one patient to the next. And patients with TB are not isolated, despite the highly contagious nature of the disease. Its spread, it is held, is in His hands...When it came to her own ailing health, Mother Teresa was a little less complacent, and more reluctant to rely on the power of the Spirit alone. She preferred to have the best doctors flown in from overseas, to have a pacemaker fitted by highly skilled heart-surgeons, and recuperate in the post-cardiac care unit at Woodlands nursing home, the most exclusive private clinic in Calcutta, and certainly no Kalighat.9

    People in Africa like shagging around without johnnys.

    So do I after too many pints.
    Im not going to blame the pope if I catch nob rot or worse. Why? Because just like most of Africa the words of a holy man in Rome really dont enter my mind ever. Most religious people couldnt give a sh1te what the pope says, let alone promiscous Africans.

    In parts of Africa, the first time many people ever hear of condoms, it's from a Catholic missionary telling them that they will anger God if they use them
    Preaching to the poor that they should accept their lot and not to try to improve their situation because they will be rewarded in the kingdom of heaven?
    What a load of sh1te.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdYKsiredbM&feature=related - 5:00 onwards


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,239 ✭✭✭✭KeithAFC


    Apologised unreservedly for the sins perpetrated by members of the Catholic Church in the past and to refuse to offer protection to said parties, help bring them to justice and to bring any future criminals to justice.
    This is the key quote here. The Roman Catholic Church is controlled and runned by criminals. The key to keeping the Roman Catholic Church going is based on corruption and bullsh*tting people. From the covering up of child abuse by the pope to feeding poor people in Africa who are in poverty lies about contraception.


    The pope is the key to all this. For the Church to continue, they need to carry on the way they are doing. The thinking people in society will reject the Roman Catholic Church but they get by OK because sadly there is plenty of people in the world who believe the bullsh*t they spout.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 776 ✭✭✭Tomk1


    Im going to call it here- you made this one up. Reminds me of the singer on Father Ted claiming the church bought up all the potatos during the famine and held onto them for their own use :pac:

    From wiki
    She has also been criticized for her view on suffering. She felt that suffering would bring people closer to Jesus.[78]Sanal Edamaruku, President of Rationalist International, criticised the failure to give painkillers, writing that in her Homes for the Dying, one could "hear the screams of people having maggots tweezered from their open wounds without pain relief. On principle, strong painkillers are even in hard cases not given. According to Mother Teresa's philosophy, it is 'the most beautiful gift for a person that he can participate in the sufferings of Christ'
    www.en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_Teresa#section_1 (sorry mobile link)
    Just do a bit of research as don't wanna thread-crash, tease spoiler: she didn't really believe in a god.
    ---
    On the topic of population, I'm classed as a member of that cult, my name is being used to prop up their numbers and they refuse to allow me to remove my name from their list of members. Just because one is branded as a child, doesn't mean they own you, that wiki-quote should note: ownership numbers inclusive of 'lost sheep'

    ---
    Back to OP
    Maybe they should follow the likes of HP and IBM and have a female-CEO, for a change, and fix it.

    There are good people in the church, there for the right reasons, just to help people/with their faith, but as with any large unchecked organisation it contains a deep seeded corruption, with a bully-ish mentality to those who what to reform it from within. You often hear the expression 'who polices the police' but never 'who polices the catholic church'

    The only reason I mention the catholic church is because that's the Q form the OP, but equal applies to the other cults


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,031 ✭✭✭✭bnt


    Good luck with that idea. The last Pope who talked about Vatican reform lasted just 33 days before his unexplained death. Both Popes since then appear to have got the message.

    Death has this much to be said for it:
    You don’t have to get out of bed for it.
    Wherever you happen to be
    They bring it to you—free.

    — Kingsley Amis



  • Registered Users Posts: 712 ✭✭✭AeoNGriM


    krudler wrote: »
    No, because the concept is still batsh1t insane no matter who's calling the shots. The damage has been done and long may it continue.

    So everything in the Universe originating from a tiny, unimaginably dense point which then exploded giving rise to everything we see around us, the galaxies, stars, planets and us is somehow less batsh1t insane then an all powerful deity creating the entire Universe and everything in it, sending his son to Earth to die for our sins so we can join them both in Heaven.

    Sound about the same to me tbh!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 34,809 ✭✭✭✭smash


    It doesn't matter who the leader is, it's all still a lie.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,930 ✭✭✭COYW


    Doc wrote: »
    What kind of cheese?

    easisingles.

    As someone looking into Catholicism from the outside, I still think that it is at the core of this country. People might not go to mass every Sunday but once a baptism, first communion, confirmation, marriage etc comes around, you can bet your bottom dollar that a heavy majority of people will be off to the RC church.

    Mention the words "orange order" and all the RC-ism comes to the fore in Irish people and they become deeply offended.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,573 ✭✭✭pragmatic1


    AeoNGriM wrote: »
    So everything in the Universe originating from a tiny, unimaginably dense point which then exploded giving rise to everything we see around us, the galaxies, stars, planets and us is somehow less batsh1t insane then an all powerful deity creating the entire Universe and everything in it, sending his son to Earth to die for our sins so we can join them both in Heaven.

    Sound about the same to me tbh!
    Except theres evidence supporting the big bang theory and none supporting the church.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,759 ✭✭✭✭dlofnep


    AeoNGriM wrote: »
    So everything in the Universe originating from a tiny, unimaginably dense point which then exploded giving rise to everything we see around us, the galaxies, stars, planets and us is somehow less batsh1t insane then an all powerful deity creating the entire Universe and everything in it, sending his son to Earth to die for our sins so we can join them both in Heaven.

    Sound about the same to me tbh!

    If they sound the same to you, then you need to read more. Preferably scientific texts.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,759 ✭✭✭✭dlofnep


    Doesn't matter who leads it - it's doctrine is still wholly immoral and lacks any evidence that is true or valid. I'll take my chances with reality.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,395 ✭✭✭✭mikemac1


    talkinyite wrote: »
    I'd consider stepping foot into a church

    You'd go if there was a wedding or funeral though


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 349 ✭✭talkinyite


    Maybe for a wedding but not a funeral. The only time I ever went to a mass was after my mate had killed himself, the priest said he was going to hell.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    AeoNGriM wrote: »
    So everything in the Universe originating from a tiny, unimaginably dense point which then exploded giving rise to everything we see around us, the galaxies, stars, planets and us is somehow less batsh1t insane then an all powerful deity creating the entire Universe and everything in it, sending his son to Earth to die for our sins so we can join them both in Heaven.

    Sound about the same to me tbh!

    ah the old "dont know where the universe started, must have been a wizard"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,844 ✭✭✭RobbieTheRobber


    AeoNGriM wrote: »
    So everything in the Universe originating from a tiny, unimaginably dense point which then exploded giving rise to everything we see around us, the galaxies, stars, planets and us is somehow less batsh1t insane then an all powerful deity creating the entire Universe and everything in it, sending his son to Earth to die for our sins so we can join them both in Heaven.
    Sound about the same to me tbh!
    I started reading your post got to the highlighted bit and broke my ****e laughing, this has to be a windup no one would ever condense that crazy story to those lines and expect anyone to believe it! :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    talkinyite wrote: »
    Maybe for a wedding but not a funeral. The only time I ever went to a mass was after my mate had killed himself, the priest said he was going to hell.

    I love how the church flip flops on stuff like that, fire and brimstone sermons but if you asked a priest to his face if unbaptised children go to hell they'd probably say no, which I think they do now despite making parents bury their kids in unmarked graves or on unconsecrated ground for decades before. Purgatory? yup, totally exists....oh wait, no thats not there anymore.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 34,788 ✭✭✭✭krudler


    I started reading your post got to the highlighted bit and broke my ****e laughing, this has to be a windup no one would ever condense that crazy story to those lines and expect anyone to believe it! :D

    thats essentially it though when you boil the christian belief down, that an all powerful space wizard inpregnated a woman through....we'll say magic, and created a son, who is also part of himself, to suffer and die for all mans sins, he also has a list of things he doesnt like, yet claims you have the free will to not do them,except if you dont you'll go to hell, because he loves you.


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