It's similar to why I like art. It's abstract and it's fun to ponder all the different opinions of meaning and purpose, the spiritual structure of reality and how we should live. It's one of the most human things to me.
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Eat, work, sleep, & life are pretty darn good.otherwise its just a never ending...eat,work, sleep life. there is more to life than meets the eye. at least religion explores that.
For me it is to be the happiest and best person I can be!I was just curious the reasons people show and express interest in religion. If you can, please explain this. Thanks.
It tells me all the truth I need to know.I was just curious the reasons people show and express interest in religion. If you can, please explain this. Thanks.
So long as it doesn't continue to deny the science
It tells me all the truth I need to know.
That is understandableI find that very hard to believe.
I see Science will be embraced.
I am also cautious to accept what many see what science is currently telling us. There is still a lot of science to come.
Regards Tony
We will never finish learning
I find that very hard to believe.
That is understandable
We will never finish learning
Agreed, but I can offer it will only benefit us an entire human race, when learning is centred around knowledge and Love of God.
I see until knowledge reaches that apex, science cannot answer or proffer all it has to offer.
Regards Tony
That is why religion interests me, I see the apex of all knowledge is to know and Love God.
I see all material knowledge points us towards that apex of Knowledge. That is why can support what investigateTruth has say said, that Faith tells him the Truth that he needs to know.
This is the knowledge that can build a Unity of mind that will only consider the use of knowledge and science for the good of all.
Regards Tony
Religion only teaches a small portion of history, and leaves gaping holes of all kinds of knowledge.
Another poster from your sect suggested that all the Truth can be found in religion. We can all see this is clearly not true at all.
I grew up in a fundamentalist Protestant denomination that eventually turned me off to religion in general and Christianity in particular, largely because that was the only church I had experienced When dating an Italian Catholic woman back in the mid-1960's, I went to several masses with her and enjoyed them, but not enough to get inspired enough to actually convert.I was just curious the reasons people show and express interest in religion. If you can, please explain this. Thanks.
I like what you wrote here, and I largely agree. My approach, however, is probably different in that the teachings of basic morality is what I tend to focus mostly on, thus feeling that science can teach us how things work but not what is right v wrong. In Anthropology, religion is considered one of the "five basic institutions" that all societies as far back as recorded history can take us.Religion seems to be something invented to explain everything instead of question everything. Often people that are isolated have to motivate themselves from within and without. Religion to me springs from these motivations to grapple and make sense of reality. I think with all that a human is and can be religion is an inevitable part of human history because it's part of mankind discovering themselves. Unfortunately it became something undesirable; a method of power and control, a method of spreading fear and obedience. I want to know if there are any redeemable qualities to be learned from religious thinking.
Any time people have to think on their entire own without any resources I like to learn if there is anything profitable and worthy that comes from that struggle. Religion seems to be apart of that struggle.
I like what you wrote here, and I largely agree. My approach, however, is probably different in that the teachings of basic morality is what I tend to focus mostly on, thus feeling that science can teach us how things work but not what is right v wrong. In Anthropology, religion is considered one of the "five basic institutions" that all societies as far back as recorded history can take us.
Even when I go mass, my main focus is to meditate on the morals being taught both through the written word and the spoken word. And I feel very much at home in all different kinds of religious settings, with the exception of those that teach a "my way or the highway" approach.
I grew up in a my way or the highway religion. I took the highway. I am especially interested in religions that may be more universally acceptable morally. I'm glad you found such settings because I would actually like to do that.
I grew up in a fundamentalist Protestant denomination that eventually turned me off to religion in general and Christianity in particular, largely because that was the only church I had experienced When dating an Italian Catholic woman back in the mid-1960's, I went to several masses with her and enjoyed them, but not enough to get inspired enough to actually convert.
But out of curiosity, I took a class in Catholic Theology 101 and became so interested that I took a follow-up course in Catholic Moral Theology that was even more interesting. However, since I was quite agnostic, there was no desire to convert, plus I thought that even though the classes were interesting, I would never use what I had learned in them. Was I wrong.
Roughly 10 years later, after attending mass regularly with my wife even though I didn't believe, something happened that was to send me off on a new course. But I still wasn't sure which way to go, so I figured the only way to know was to study. I would go to the library and just pull books on Christianity off the shelf regardless as to whom the authors were. It is after doing tons of reading and soul searching whereas I came to realize that Catholicism was the best way for me to go, and that very much pleased my Italian Catholic wife (not the same woman that I dated more than 10 years previous).
The above is the short version of the story.