Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christianity. Show all posts

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Revelations from the woods



Belief.

Last night I talked with a super talented young musician who was the victim of a car-jacking.  He was shot in the neck and for a while, didn't know whether he would live or die.   He said, at times like that, 'your true colors appear.'   He said he was a Christian and his belief carried him through it.  He said he never felt closer to God.  His manner was admirable.  Graceful and humble; and his musicianship - expressive and impressive, especially for such a young guy.

Not being traditionally religious, I thought about this a lot in my alone time - a great time to process.  (Alone time in abundance is rare for most people.   Married people and parents can't relate to this, as they have really never been alone for any extended period in their lives.  Maybe it's the abundance of alone time that makes such social interaction all the more valuable and vivid, as well as serving as a great opportunity for real reflection).

Positive thinking, kindness, love and religion are all the same vibration.   Positive thinking in the powers of the universe - it is in us all.  Critical thinking is important to a point, but sometimes to release preconceived notions can make for a better understanding, more diversity of experience, better human relations and respect.  Trying to change people by disparaging them for their beliefs is such a waste of energy, that is why politics suck. I do believe in standing up for what I believe in but I haven't had the energy lately to be involved with politics.  Sometimes, religion loses it's way and becomes divisive as well.

I used to use the irritating rhetorical question, "Is that what you believe?" ... all the time.   Glad those days are over.  Belief is such a loaded concept.  It often doesn't make for a very useful construct in human relations.  Being a skeptic by nature has not helped me in that regard.  I'm ready to leave that behind because 'doubting' is 'a religion' - in and of itself, and not a good one.  It can alienate people and be divisive.  It is limiting and conservative.  It's puts people unnecessarily on guard.  Who am I to judge something that is beyond my experience?  The goal is love and kindness in any human relationship and there is sometimes a rub with belief and skepticism.   Even healthy skepticism doesn't need to be demeaning.  Polite inquiry should rule the day, not sarcastic challenges.

That is why politics is such a bust and so little cooperation takes place.   Opponents beliefs are often used to demean them.   It's not black and white. There is only the diversity of experience and cultures.

I find myself attracted to the good.  I feel like I want to share some music.  I hope to play in church sometime.

Life is good.  I'm happy to be able to learn something new whenever I can.  I'm really enjoying learning  new music.

Windy and 68ยบ on the bluff today with winds gusting to 27 mph.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Creationists can't get their story straight in their 'war on global warming'

The Christian group, Family Research Council (FRC) mocks Al Gore as "Chicken Little" and cites 600,000 year old evidence to dismiss his global warming projections.

Say what?

According to Christian fundamentalist creationists, the world is just 6,000 years old. What gives?

The FRC clearly supports creationism -the numero uno core principle cited on FRC's website is:
"God exists and is sovereign over all creation. He created human beings in His image." ... and, "God is the author of life"
The FRC supports creationist education in schools. An article on their website declares:
"creationism just might evolve into part of the curriculum for South Carolina. Only then will kids begin to understand education's 'missing link'."
Sounds creationist enough to me. Yet, in mocking Al Gore and his dire warnings on global warming, the FRC cites Rep. Joe Barton's (R-Texas) 600,000-year-old scientific evidence that Gore's carbon dioxide claims are false. The problem is, Barton's evidence is 594,000 years older than the date that God created the world and the universe, according to creationists. Whoops!

The Republican/Fundamentalist War on Science rolls pathetically and confusingly forward. It must be noted however that there has been a call to action by at least one Evangelical group on the threat of global climate change.

(For a concise explanation of the political aspect of the Republican War on Global Warming, see my previous post on the subject).

Monday, April 2, 2007

"Natural History Museums Turn Countless Minds Against Christ"
The alternative? A $25 million Creationist Museum set to open in Petersburg, KY

Science Turns Countless Minds Against Christ

Forget those big city museums - the Smithsonian, the American Museum of Natural History, the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, you wouldn't want your kids thinkin' we evolved from monkeys, now would ya? Solution? Keep 'em home schooled and as far away from an Anthropology textbook as possible. (you might as well hide the Geology and Archeology texts too... they all lie ya know). You need to take 'em up to Kentucky for an educashun at the Creation Museum, where they'll see the Garden of Eden, complete with dinosaurs together with Adam and Eve. Here, they'll learn the world is really just 6000 years old. The museum website proclaims:

"Set to open in June 2007, this “walk through history” museum will counter evolutionary natural history museums that turn countless minds against Christ and Scripture."
Museum founder Ken Ham said that if the creation story in the Bible is not true, then none of the Bible is true.

By the way, Ham's website gives multiple options for contributing money to this $25,000,000 museum. Get out your credit card. You can become a 'partner of the museum' by purchasing a framed poster for $1000+.

So... science turns countless minds against Christ? Sounds like a liberal atheist conspiracy. If so, it's not working... according to a recent poll, half of Americans reject the theory of evolution.

There is an explanation for this mindset - a reason why Americans are susceptible to the Creationist/Intelligent Design hoax. The question must be asked ... how many Americans can actually understand the details of, and evidence supporting evolutionary science? According to the National Science Foundation, fewer than one-fifth of Americans meet a minimal standard of civic scientific literacy. That topic, I explored in a previous post.

UPDATE:
Evangelist Chuck Missler Disproves Evolution With Jar Of Peanut Butter [VIDEO]