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Which Religion is the One True Religion?

 
 
real life
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 02:07 pm
tinygiraffe wrote:
maybe it's a stretch that i think "set forth in an authoritative manner" is related to "compelling others to believe it."

but to get back to your original question, YES, i do think it's possible to present religion in a non-authoritative manner. i suggest you not try to tell me what my point is, since you ignore them completely, 99% of the time or more.


Laughing

If you would keep your point straight, no one would have to remind you of it.

The setting forth of an idea or concept as 'truth' is the essence of dogma, is it not?

It does not matter if listeners are compelled to believe it or not.

Therefore, in this discussion of 'which religion is true' , a religion with no dogma would (by definition) not qualify since it has no ideas or concepts that it claims as true.

In essence, you can't win if you don't play. Cool
0 Replies
 
tinygiraffe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 02:28 pm
Quote:
If you would keep your point straight, no one would have to remind you of it.


it will be easier for people to keep their points straight (funny, i remembered what it was just fine) if you ever have a discussion on this forum that is either honest or consists of anything but semantic nitpicking.

Quote:
The setting forth of an idea or concept as 'truth' is the essence of dogma, is it not?

It does not matter if listeners are compelled to believe it or not.


talk about begging the question! i take it you didn't see, or once again ignored, the actual definition which i posted?

unlike you, i care what words really mean, rather than enjoy forcing my own skewed definitions onto discussions which render *all* honest debate irrelevant.

but to resolve the confusion you're obviously feigning, i'll just say that i don't have to agree with the premise of a thread to comment on it. that might be obvious to you, when you progress from pure semantics to dialogue.

...or when you stop doing things like asking people what the definition of a word is, immediately after they post one.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 02:56 pm
real life wrote:
cicerone imposter wrote:
It's not fact when you can't produce any evidence for it.


What nonsense.

Until recent times , the existence of some far off galaxies was unknown to man.

Was it therefore 'not a fact' that they existed?

Laughing



You're trying to equate the existence of your god with galaxies? ROFL
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 06:46 pm
No. He's just saying a truth is a truth whether we have learned it or not.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 07:57 pm
neologist wrote:
No. He's just saying a truth is a truth whether we have learned it or not.


I don't buy into "your" kind of truth. I don't believe in any invisible friends you claim to have that'll save you after you are dead.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 09:58 pm
cicerone imposter wrote:
neologist wrote:
No. He's just saying a truth is a truth whether we have learned it or not.


I don't buy into "your" kind of truth. I don't believe in any invisible friends you claim to have that'll save you after you are dead.
I'm not talking about beliefs. Any truth is a truth whether or not it has been learned.
0 Replies
 
maporsche
 
  1  
Reply Sat 29 Sep, 2007 10:27 pm
neologist wrote:
cicerone imposter wrote:
neologist wrote:
No. He's just saying a truth is a truth whether we have learned it or not.


I don't buy into "your" kind of truth. I don't believe in any invisible friends you claim to have that'll save you after you are dead.
I'm not talking about beliefs. Any truth is a truth whether or not it has been learned.


Isn't that different than a fact. Don't facts have to be known in order to be defined as facts.

For example, if you're playing cards and you don't know what the other guy has in his hand you can't say for a FACT that your hand is better, even though it may be.

You also can't say that it's a FACT that a galaxy is in a specific location if you can't see it.


Obviously these things may be true, but they are not considered facts until they are known.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 30 Sep, 2007 09:43 am
What is truth?
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sun 30 Sep, 2007 10:04 am
neo, Refer to any dictionary for the definition.
0 Replies
 
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sun 30 Sep, 2007 10:14 am
cicerone imposter wrote:
neo, Refer to any dictionary for the definition.
Check the link, CI. Your comments would be most welcome there.
0 Replies
 
Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Tue 26 Aug, 2008 11:41 pm
Neo claims "Any truth is a truth whether or not it has been learned."

In that case you could claim you have an invisible rabbit as a friend, because no one has "learned" that you do not.

This is just a variation of the claim: just because no one has seen a pig fly does not mean there are no flying pigs.

Garbage in = garbage out.
0 Replies
 
slavik
 
  2  
Reply Thu 28 Aug, 2008 02:23 pm
@extra medium,
Bible based Christianity.
It's the one true religion because scientific evidence says so. Christianity has the only history in scripture (the bible) that lines up with the scientific facts. People scof at me for saying there isn't reliable evidence for evolution or the big bang, but it's true. If you're seeking truth, take some time (it took me a few years) and check it out for yourself. If you look at the complexity of people and all the other complex things in the world, i think it's obvious that things didn't just evolve, they were intelligently designed....by someone like...God.

I know of miracles that God has done, but you probably haven't, so this probably doesn't help you much.

Yes, i believe everyone who doesn't believe and accept Jesus as their savior will go to hell. The exception would be if they believe in God, but they've just never heard about Jesus at all (like how people were saved in the OT).

Yes, i can convince myself, and i've led at least 2 of my friends to believe the same.
Steve 41oo
 
  2  
Reply Mon 29 Sep, 2008 02:01 pm
@slavik,
slavik wrote:

Bible based Christianity.
It's the one true religion because scientific evidence says so. Christianity has the only history in scripture (the bible) that lines up with the scientific facts. People scof at me for saying there isn't reliable evidence for evolution or the big bang, but it's true. If you're seeking truth, take some time (it took me a few years) and check it out for yourself. If you look at the complexity of people and all the other complex things in the world, i think it's obvious that things didn't just evolve, they were intelligently designed....by someone like...God.

I know of miracles that God has done, but you probably haven't, so this probably doesn't help you much.

Yes, i believe everyone who doesn't believe and accept Jesus as their savior will go to hell. The exception would be if they believe in God, but they've just never heard about Jesus at all (like how people were saved in the OT).

Yes, i can convince myself, and i've led at least 2 of my friends to believe the same.
Jeez what a ***kin retard

I could edit this and add some pertinent criticism but I really cant be bothered.
OGIONIK
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Sep, 2008 06:15 pm
@Steve 41oo,
worship and appreciate your life.

that is the only true religion, the only real one.

hell is here.
0 Replies
 
RonPrice
 
  1  
Reply Sat 3 Apr, 2010 10:24 pm
@extra medium,
I'm not sure if I have repled...if not here is an opening note.--Ron
--------------------------
Since there are so many questions raised and issues discussed concerning people’s basic assumptions about life, about their philosophy, about their religious beliefs, indeed, about their very approach to reality and the way their society goes about organizing things, it seemed like a useful exercise, useful at least to me and hopefully to some others at this site, to say a few things about: My Position and Beliefs: My Religion. I do this at this site and dozens of other sites on the internet and I use this post as an opening note. I get a wide range ofreactions.

Religion, in the sense that I am using it here, is the set of values, beliefs and attitudes each of us has as we go about our daily life at a particular moment in time, in this case, at the time of my writing of this post on the internet and in the case of the person reading this post, at the time of the response of that reader. I hope this opening note of some 1900 words provides a general, a useful, a helpful context for any continuing discussion you and I may have. If the note I strike is too long, I advise readers to just click me off, a simple enough exercise of the hand and the mind.-Ron Price in Australia.
_______________________
Apologetics is a branch of systematic theology, although some experience its thrust in religious studies or philosophy of religion courses. Some encounter it on the internet for the first time in a more populist and usually much less academic form. As I see it, apologetics is primarily concerned with the protection of a position, the refutation of the issues raised by that position's assailants and, in the larger sense, the exploration of that position in the context of prevailing philosophies and standards in a secular society, a religious society, indeed, any society past or present. All of us defend our positions whatever these positions are: atheistic, theistic, agnostic, humanistic, skeptic, cynic, realist, pragmatist and any one of a multitude of religions, denominations, sects, cults, isms and wasms.

Apologetics, to put it slightly differently, is concerned with answering both general and critical inquiries from others. In the main, though, apologetics deals with criticism of a position and dealing with that criticism in as rational a manner as possible. Apologetics can help explore the teachings of a religion or of a philosophy in the context of the prevailing religions and philosophies of the day as well as in the context of the common laws and standards of a secular society. Although the capacity to engage in critical self-reflection on the fundamentals of some position is a prerequisite of the task of engaging in apologetics, apologetics derives much of its impetus from a commitment to a position.

Given the role of apologetics in religious and philosophical history and in the development of the texts and ideas that are part and parcel of that history, it is surprising that contemporary communities generally undervalue its importance and often are not even aware of the existence of this sub-discipline of philosophy. Authors, writers, editors of journals and leaders known for defending points in arguments, for engaging in conflicts or for taking up certain positions that receive great popular scrutiny and/or are minority views engage in what today are essentially forms of secular apologetics.

Anyone concerned with the history of apologetics is also involved with the history of hermeneutics and they all confront the question of interpretation. Questions of interpretation concern biblical interpreters. They concern lawyers who debate the meaning of the Constitution. They concern psychiatrists as they reflect upon their interpretation of case histories, and anthropologists and historians who ponder the data of their disciplines.

Naturally in life, we all take positions on all sorts of topics, subjects, religions and philosophies. Often that position is inarticulate and poorly thought out if given any thought at all. With that said, though, the apologetics I engage in here is a never-ending exercise with time out for the necessary and inevitable quotidian tasks of life: eating, sleeping, drinking and a wide range of leisure activities. The apologetics that concerns me is not so much Christian or Islamic apologetics or one of a variety of those secular apologetics I referred to above, but Baha'i apologetics.

As a Bahá'í whatever proof I offer about my beliefs as I try to help others to make sense of them, this proof I offer is relative. It depends on the total context of the statements which I make. It depends on the explicit and implicit conventions concerning their meaning as well as the experiential component of my statements and much else. My findings, rooted as they are in subjectivity, relativism and pragmatism, can be verified only by individuals capable of assuming and willing to assume my point of view. This is true in all scientific endeavour: in the physical and biological sciences, in the social sciences and in the various studies in the humanities of which religion is but one of these many fields.

One can be convinced of the truth of something, have a sense of certitude and know little to nothing at all about the object. Often, faithful self-abandonment is more valuable than cerebral consent. Society and the millions of individuals in it are caught in cross-fires between noncommitment, sketpicism, cynicism and defensiveness on the one hand and the upholding of categorical imperatives, the justifying of arbitrary absolutes, the insistence on finality and agreement, irrational commitment and aggressiveness on the other.

This is the general climate in which apologetics takes place with an interdependence of diverse points of view, with passionate expressions and proofs all lying along linking lines and lines that cannot be linked. The world has become very complex for the votaries its multitudinous faith positions.

There are many points of comparison and contrast between any form of apologetics which I won't go into here. Readers here might like to check out Wikipedia for a birds-eye-view of the subject. Christians and Muslims will have the opportunity to defend their respective religions by the use of apologetics; secular humanists can also argue their cases if they so desire here. I in turn will defend the Baha'i Faith by the use of apologetics. In the process each of us will, hopefully, learn something about our respective Faiths, our religions, our various and our multitudinous positions, some of which we hold to our hearts dearly and some of which are of little interest.

At the outset, then, in this my first posting, my intention is simply to make this start, to state what you might call "my apologetics position." This brief statement indicates, in broad outline, where I am coming from in the weeks and months ahead. -Ron Price with thanks to Udo Schaefer, "Baha'i Apologetics?" Baha'i Studies Review, Vol. 10, 2001/02.
----------------------------------
I want in this second part of my first posting to finish outlining, as best I can, my basic orientation to Baha’i apologetics. To save me reinventing the wheel so to speak, may I suggest readers here google the official Bahá'í site at bahai.org so that they have some idea what the Bahá'í faith is, what are its teachings and its history. Then these same readers can post a reply to this post with specific questions and critiques. Critical scholarly contributions or criticism raised in public or private discussions, an obvious part of apologetics, should not necessarily be equated with hostility. Questions are perfectly legitimate, indeed, necessary aspects of a person's search for an answer to an intellectual conundrum. Paul Tillich, that great Protestant theologian of the 20th century, once expressed the view that apologetics was an "answering theology."-Paul Tillich, Systematic Theology, U. of Chicago, 1967, Vol.1, p6.
-------------------------
I have always been attracted to the founder of the Baha'i Faith's exhortations in discussion to "speak with words as mild as milk," with "the utmost lenience and forbearance." This form of dialogue, its obvious etiquette of expression and the acute exercise of judgement involved, is difficult for most people when their position is under attack from people who are more articulate, better read and better at arguing both their own position and the position of those engaged in the written criticism than they are. I am also aware that, in cases of rude or hostile attack, rebuttal with a harsher tone, the punitive rebuttal, may well be justified, although I prefer humour, irony and even gentle sarcasm rather than hostile written attack in any form. Still, it does not help an apologist to belong to those "watchmen" whom the prophet Isaiah calls "dumb dogs that cannot bark."(Isaiah, 56:10)
-----------------
In its essence apologetics is a kind of confrontation, an act of revealing one's true colours, of hoisting the flag, of demonstrating the essential characteristics of one's faith, of one's thought, of one's emotional and intellectual stance in life. “Dialogue does not mean self-denial,” wrote Hans Kung, arguably the greatest of Catholic apologists. The standard of public discussion of controversial topics should be sensitive to what is said and how; it should be sensitive to manner, mode, style, tone and volume. Tact is also essential. Not everything that we know should always be disclosed; not everything that can be disclosed it timely or suited to the ears of the hearer. To put this another way, we don't want all our dirty laundry out on our front lawn for all to see or our secrets blasted over the radio and TV. Perhaps a moderate confessionalism is best here, if confession is required at all"and in today’s print and electronic media it seems unavoidable.

I want to thank Udo Schaefer, "Baha'i Apologetics," Baha'i Studies Review, Vol.10--2001/2, for some of what I write here. Schaefer, a prominent Baha’i writer, scholar, lawyer and man of many intellectual seasons, emphasizes that one's views, one's faith, should not be opportunistically streamlined, adapting to current trends, thus concealing the real features of these views, features that could provoke rejection in order to be acceptable for dialogue. To do this, to be opportunistic and saying what others want to hear often puts one in the danger of losing one's identity, if not one’s honesty and integrity.

It is almost impossible, though, to carry the torch of truth, partial truth, of one’s convictions, indeed, of any set of words in any colour, through a crowd without getting someone's beard singed. If one has no beard one’s emotions can be equally fried and hung out to dry in the process of verbal or written exchange. In the weeks and months that follow, my postings quite possibly may wind up singing the beards of some readers and, perhaps, my own. Emotions, if not fried when exposed, are often behind barricades of self-defence and that is natural because what is being considered is at the centre of a person’s life. Such are the perils of dialogue, of apologetics.

Much of Baha'i apologetics derives from the experience Baha'is have of a fundamental discrepancy between much secular thought and the Baha'i teachings on the other. In some ways, the gulf is unbridgeable but so, too, is this the case between the secular and much thought in the Christian or Islamic religion or, for that matter, between variants of Christianity or even within what are often the muddy and pluralistic waters of secular thought itself.

Anyway, that's all for now. It's back to the spring winds of Tasmania, about 3 kms from the Bass Straight on the Tamar River. The geography of place is so much simpler than that of the philosophical and religious geography that the readers at this site are concerned with, although even physical geography has its complexities as those who take a serious interest in the topic of climate change are fast finding out. Whom the gods would destroy they first make simple and simpler and simpler. I look forward to a dialogue with someone, anyone who is inclined to respond to what I’m sure for some is this overly long post. Here in far-off Tasmania--the last stop before Antarctica, if one wants to get there by some other route than off the end of South America--your response will be gratefully received.-Ron Price, Tasmania, Australia(1900 words).
0 Replies
 
Victor Murphy
 
  2  
Reply Sun 4 Apr, 2010 12:06 am
There is no true religion because God does not exist!
RonPrice
 
  2  
Reply Sun 4 Apr, 2010 01:58 am
@Victor Murphy,
Well, that just about takes care of the discussion,Victor Murphy. "Advance 3 squares and pick a card." -Ron
0 Replies
 
Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Sun 4 Apr, 2010 07:56 am
@JLNobody,
"a truly open mind" is equivalent to gullibility.
RonPrice
 
  1  
Reply Sun 4 Apr, 2010 06:18 pm
@Chumly,
You raise a good question, Chumly: what is a truly open mind? Here is some help from Thesaurus:

1. Ready and willing to receive favorably, as new ideas: acceptant, amenable, open, receptive, responsive. See accept/reject.
2. Not narrow or conservative in thought, expression, or conduct: broad, broad-minded, liberal, progressive, tolerant. See attitude/good attitude/bad attitude/neutral attitude, wide/narrow.
------------------------------------------
Antonyms: narrow-minded, opinionated

Antonyms: judgmental, prejudiced
-----------------------------------------
Leave this with you, Chumly.-Ron in Australia
Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Mon 5 Apr, 2010 09:37 am
@RonPrice,
Sure but in the process you have gullibility, so I would suggest intelligent skepticism as a better alternative, especially when considering religions where anybody can claim anything by using following:

It must be true because I faith that it's true; I have faith that it's true therefore it must be true; it must be true because I faith that it's true; I have faith that it's true therefore it must be true; it must be true because I faith that it's true; I have faith that it's true therefore it must be true...
 

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