In some religions the penalty for apostasy is death. Is that a moral position? Do you think that if someone converts from Christianity to some other religion that person should die? Are those religions wrong? Are those religions objectively immoral? Would their adherents say the same thing as you?
I think that is an immoral stance but I am pretty sure 5hat believers of those religions would disagree and find it moral.
Of course I believe murder for apostasy is objectively wrong, whether perpetrated by a religious authority or by the secular and atheist regimes of post-revolutionary societies.
Don't you?
If you remove a zygote from its support system (it's mother) it will die, if you remove a brain dead person from a ventilator they will die.
Why is one okay and the other not?
A zygote is not a permanently braindead human being - one has an entire lifetime of possibility and value ahead of her while the other does not. Surely you must recognize why these circumstances would warrant completely different reactions.
The number of people who victim blame or cultures where being raped is punished as adultery, which is immoral in my mind, shows this to be the case.
Do you honestly believe that the only thing making rape victim-blaming mistaken are your own personal feelings and nothing else? I very much hope you respond to this questions because I am incredibly interested in your answer.
Arguments do not begin and end with feelings. Logic and critical reasoning are objective measurements of the validity of arguments. We also know that we subjugate our feelings when it is personally convenient or politically expedient to do so.
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Sàmban
I wanted to answer your questions because I think they're fantastic questions that deserve honest answers and are a great launching pad for discussions in this thread.
What makes you so sure that you picked the right religion and the right subset of that religion?
I find the message of the crucifix to be incredibly compelling and ultimately true - you should tell the truth and stand up for justice, tolerance, and support of others, even at the expense of yourself, that is, even if it means persecution by the state (his execution by Rome), ostracization from society (his persecution by the Sanhedrin), or even the forfeiture of your physical safety.
I believe anyone who follows Christ must be a Roman Catholic because Christ created a priesthood with the right to forgive sins and commissioned to create more disciples.
The story of Adam and Eve has a lot interesting conclusions. They were supposedly created in god’s image, with no knowledge of good or evil. Yet, both were tricked to sin by the devil (remember, they had no knowledge of good/evil and were in god’s image). Why did an omnipotent being choose to let the devil near the social equivalent of naive children? Either god is an asshole or this is all part of his plan. The various acts of prophecy throughout the Bible suggests the latter. If so, then it suggests life is predetermined and there is no free will. So what’s the point?
God gave humanity the greatest gift, that of free will. Eating the fruit was an act of disobedience towards God. The connective tissue between Judaism and Christianity is that original sin was reconciled by an act of supreme submission to the will of the Father.
Why did god have a chosen people? Doesn’t that seem a bit petty for an omnipotent being? Clearly this was not what god ultimately wanted as Jesus would later come and change that.
The idea was to have one people who could shine as a beacon to all other nations.
Why was there an Old Testament and then a New Testament with a pretty drastic change in tone and laws? However you spin it, it implies something changed which then implies god has limits and is not omnipotent. Heck, the very existence of Jesus implies that god has limits (he wouldn’t need Jesus to save man; he should have had the foresight to create a “Jesus mechanism” from the start of creation).
The Old Testament was revealed to nomadic tribes, the Gospel says that these laws were structured this way "because your hearts were hard." (Mark 10:5). As humanity progressed, we no longer need harsh legalistic rules and draconian punishments to act rightly but, at the same time, we're capable of living up to higher standards, such as limited divorce, which was the topic Mark 10:5 is addressing.