Originally posted by Spiffor
Heresson:
Nope. I know religion is something very important in the construction of collective mentalities, and it has a very longlasting influence even on societies that have sopped being religious.
However, as you know, religion is closely intertwined with tradition. Most Christian or Jewish beliefs of today have nothing to do with the obvious literal message contained in the scripture. And that's fortunate, considering that a part of this scripture (mostly, some parts of the Old Testament) are outrageous to our modern minds.
When religion poses a problem, it doesn't really come from scripture, but from the religious beliefs that are held in its name. When the mainstream religion has an enlightened interpretation of the scripture (such as dismissing calls to genocide or to public stoning, for example), it poses much fewer problems than when it's mainstream to accept all or most of the scripture literally.
Christianty and Judaism are less plagued by fundamentalism than Islam (although I think any Christian should be really watchful of what's happening in the US and subsaharian Africa). Islam suffers more from the school of thought that scripture should be observed literally.
Thus, the difference between western and Arabic socieites doesn't come merely from scripture (the OT is worse than the koran anyway), but from the use of scripture by the religionists (there's a boatload of other cultural factors that have nothing to do wth religion as well, but they're for another thread). Scripture and religion isn't the same thing.
Heresson:
Nope. I know religion is something very important in the construction of collective mentalities, and it has a very longlasting influence even on societies that have sopped being religious.
However, as you know, religion is closely intertwined with tradition. Most Christian or Jewish beliefs of today have nothing to do with the obvious literal message contained in the scripture. And that's fortunate, considering that a part of this scripture (mostly, some parts of the Old Testament) are outrageous to our modern minds.
When religion poses a problem, it doesn't really come from scripture, but from the religious beliefs that are held in its name. When the mainstream religion has an enlightened interpretation of the scripture (such as dismissing calls to genocide or to public stoning, for example), it poses much fewer problems than when it's mainstream to accept all or most of the scripture literally.
Christianty and Judaism are less plagued by fundamentalism than Islam (although I think any Christian should be really watchful of what's happening in the US and subsaharian Africa). Islam suffers more from the school of thought that scripture should be observed literally.
Thus, the difference between western and Arabic socieites doesn't come merely from scripture (the OT is worse than the koran anyway), but from the use of scripture by the religionists (there's a boatload of other cultural factors that have nothing to do wth religion as well, but they're for another thread). Scripture and religion isn't the same thing.
If people could realize that when most scripture was written, the world and its ways were much different.
There are some Christian denominations that believe it is a sin for a woman to cut her hair because of a passage in 1st Corinthians.
Paul was talking to ancient Greeks and it would take not only a study of that society but also that paticular city state to understand why he might have said that.
I will say that some of the authors of scriptural texts are brilliant people. Sandskrit, Bible, Tao etc.
I agree with you - get the meaning behind the words and quite getting stuck on the words and you will gain much from some of the keenest and brightest minds that have graced our world.
Especially and including Jesus.
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