There are no Atheists

JAMES M. GILLIS, C.S.P.
 
"There are no atheists. At least no thinkers are atheists.
"Freethinkers" rise to that bait more surely than a trout to the fly and
snap at it more viciously. But it is equally axiomatic that freethinkers
do not think freely. Proof? Well, suppose a freethinker thinks himself
into religion. Ipso facto he is rated a renegade and apostate. He is
free to think atheism, but not free to think theism."
 
 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
[email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 5:28 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Possible SPAM]:Re: FW:


Cesar, 

I really applaud you in your courage and your exceptional knack in
telling it like it is to any of your colleauges, cronies from school and
boyhood friends as well and still come out of it smelling like a rose.
Its hard to fathom why the sheer contradictions, the absurdities, the
preposterousness, and the outrageousness that have been pointed out in
the scriptures and in the adherents' beliefs don't seem to bestir the
rank and file religionists among your confreres to perhaps re-examine
them critically. An appeal to reason more often than not is met by less
than cordial retort. In fact, it is looked upon as an heretical,
insolent assault on their religion's redoubt. It seems obvious that
rationalism is totally alien to their religion, to be used only by
atheists to knock it down. They seem to feel so smug about the certainty
of their monopoly on morality. You may be a secular person or an atheist
or outside religion by choice, but since you don't worship any
particular God, "you answer to no one" and hence you are depraved and
free to "rape, kill" and what have you.

I guess having been in the convent for 300 years, there are certain
things that are just very difficult to undo in a short span of time.
Stay steadfast, my friend, and remain true to yourself and to your
conscience. Your task is made out for you. I am very confident
rationalism triumphs in the end.    

......Cesar P.




-----Original Message-----
From: Cesar Lumba <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 8:11 am
Subject: Re: [Possible SPAM]:Re: FW:


Hi David,
 
You are a worthy debate opponent.  You are the only one in CRGP who
takes my arguments, slices them and argues against them point by
counterpoint.
 
Rather than going into a detailed dissection of your arguments, know
that I am not a fan of the Old Testament.  I reject the Bible's account
of Creation.  I do not believe in Original Sin because I do not believe
that a neanderthal or a cro-magnon man or woman was capable of
committing sin in my name tens of thousands of years ago.  I do not
believe in the story of Job because I do not think that God would be so
capricious as to kill all of Job's relatives, deprive him of his house,
his treasure and everything he owned just because God wanted to win a
bet with the devil.
 
I do not believe that God would test Abraham by asking him to kill Isaac
as sacrificial lamb to prove Abraham's faith.  I do not believe that we
should pluck our eyes out, or cut off our hands if we know that our eyes
and hands are an occasion of sin.  I do not believe that it is OK to
kill a son because the son has been disobedient.
 
Jesus, if I read the New Testament correctly, debunked many of the
teachings of the Old Testament.  Jesus, in fact, preached that God is
merciful and just, not wrathful, vengeful and capricious.
 
The Old Testament God is in fact similar in respects to the pagan God
Zeus and his brother Uranus, which suggests that the ancient Jewish
people were heavily influenced by the prevailing religious beliefs in
the mediterranean at the time.
 
The important thing to remember is that prayer is a private one-on-one
with God.  It is not an instrument for political and social change in
the Philippines or any other country.
 
Cesar
 
 


On Tue, Feb 17, 2009 at 1:56 AM, Laurel,David,MAKATI,CORPORATE AFFAIRS
<[email protected]> wrote:


        Perhaps there is no conflict between the ongoing discussions and
the posture of this group,  religion and good governance will be
partners in the future...
         
        Modern era: separation of religion from government
        
        In the modern era, the separation of religion from government
has been a doctrine often repeated and as often ignored, bypassed,
honored in the breach. That separation was in turn a subhead of the
distinction between "private" and "public," a dotted line fading fast as
governments farm out to private entities a growing proportion of the
public business, and private organizations play a more muscled part in
making public policy.
        
        Transmodern: "religion" will play a weightier role
        
        In the postmodern era, however it comes to be described, we
already use the word "governance" to suggest that the organized
functions required for a people to govern themselves go far beyond what
"governments" can effectively fund or cause to happen. Within this
framework, it now seems overwhelmingly likely that "religion" (defined
as "organized spirituality") will play a weightier role in governance --
and indeed, that individual spirituality will be an increasingly
important element of leadership in every domain.
        
         
        "We, for our part, are products of a secular industrial society.
But we realize that we can no longer discuss political futures without
also discussing questions of meaning, spirituality, and cultural
identity. We are therefore asking you to join us in a serious effort to
project mutually advantageous futures for our societies. In order to do
this, we will all have to set aside our superiority complexes, our
intolerances whether based on scientific rationalism or on spiritual
tradition, and our dreams of having our views prevail in the whole
world."
        
        Copyright 1988 by Harlan Cleveland and Mark Luyckx
        

  _____  

        From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Antonio Henares
        Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2009 5:16 PM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: [Possible SPAM]:Re: FW:
        
        
Hello Guys!
 
I thought we agreed to limit avid discussions like these to direct
emails and not through the email group.  Please do so as you are taking
up a lot of our inbox space.  Thanks and happy private discussions.
 
Tony Henares

--- On Tue, 2/17/09, Laurel,David,MAKATI,CORPORATE AFFAIRS
<[email protected]> wrote:


        From: Laurel,David,MAKATI,CORPORATE AFFAIRS
<[email protected]>
        Subject: FW:
        To: [email protected]
        Date: Tuesday, February 17, 2009, 3:50 PM
        
        
         
         
        "let me remind you that in Natural Theology that we all studied
at La Salle, we learned of St. Thomas Acquinas' attributes of God.  God,
according to St. Thomas, is immutable, perfect, all-powerful,
all-loving, all-knowing, can see the past, present and future all at
once because He lives in the everlasting present, etc.  If God is
immutable (unchanging) he does not go from being unpleased to pleased.
He is simply pleased all the time.???? Where did this come from?
         
        
        Matthew 12:18        Behold my servant, whom I have chosen; my
beloved, in whom my soul is well pleased.
        
        Colossians 1:19     For it pleased the Father that in him [His
beloved Son v.13] should all the fulness dwell; 
        Matthew 3:17          And lo a voice from heaven, saying, This
is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
        1 John 3:22              Beloved, if (our) hearts do not condemn
us, we have confidence in God 
                                          and receive from him whatever
we ask, because 
                                          we keep his commandments and
do what pleases him
         
            Your version of natural theology has taught you that God is
not a compassionate God, but merely a logical one, this is half-baked
according to Aquinas himself:
         

                                "Consequently, for a Christian to engage
in Natural Theology, thereby claiming that it is possible to prove that
God exists and is one, does not diminish the fact that it is still
necessary to believe (with religious faith) in Christ, the Trinity, the
Resurrection, and the Forgiveness of Sins. By the same token, the
acceptance of the conclusions of Natural Theology does not entail or
necessitate religious faith. 
                                In fact, Aquinas generally believed that
the prospects were pretty poor for unaided human reason to achieve very
much success even in its own sphere of Natural Theology.- Thomistic
Natural Theology

         
         "That more or less denies the possibility of a wrathful and
vengeful God that we see in the Old Testament, a God who would punish
Job, kill his loved ones, turn him into a pauper in order to prove Job's
faith to the devil."
         
        
        Cesar, are you therefore implying that you do not believe in the
Old Testament ? Or do you allude the old testament as merely "symbolic"?

        What about Jonah 3:4-10  "God spared the Ninevites because He
saw their work and acts of repentance". 
        You also conveniently gloss over Gen. 18:16-22.
         
        However, since you impliedly prefer the New Testament, Romans
8:34 states "Who
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=5101>  is the one
who condemns
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2632> ? Christ
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=5547>  Jesus
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2424>  is He who
died <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=599> , yes
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1161> , rather
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3123>  who was
raised <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1453> ,
who <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3739>  is at
the right <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1188>
hand <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1188>  of
God <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2316> , who
<http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3739>  also
<http://ww w.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2532>
intercedes <http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=1793>
for us". what about Matthew 25:31-46? What does your logic deduce the
intercession to be all about?
         
        Speaking about God's wrath in the New Testament:
         
        

        Colossians 3:6 (New American Standard Bible)

        
         "For it is because of these things that (A
<http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians%203:6;&version=4
9;#cen-NASB-29524A> )the wrath of God will come [a
<http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Colossians%203:6;&version=4
9;#fen-NASB-29524a> ]upon the sons of disobedience" 
        So there you have it, if we disobey, he gets angry, plain as
day.
        Your theology also leaves no room for Jesus Christ's redemptive
role. Ever heard of God's forgiveness? How do you reconcile forgiveness
and immutability? God's justice and mercy?
         
         
        There is a difference between praying to God for guidance and
praying for God to intercede and solve the country's problems. 
         
        What is the difference from God's viewpoint?
         
        "He doesn't pray, however, for God to solve Pampanga's problems"
         
        How do you know this? Do you base this conclusion on the single
event when you were present?
         
         
         
  _____  

        From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Cesar
Lumba
        Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009 11:36 PM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Re:
        
        
        David,
        I saw Among Ed in person, in conference and at work.  He was
talking to people, listening to them, listening to our group.  He was
looking for solutions to Pampanga's many problems.  Not once did he ask
us to hold hands an pray, even though he knew we were a group made up of
La Sallites and Ateneans.
         
        He prays in private, but of course.  And he prays for guidance.
He believes that God walks with him.  He doesn't pray, however, for God
to solve Pampanga's problems.
         
        There is a difference between praying to God for guidance and
praying for God to intercede and solve the country's problems.
         
        Father Reuter's exhortation to Filipinos is the latter kind.  If
Filipinos are praying hard, they should pray harder so that God will
intercede and help Filipinos.  I guess there is nothing wrong with more
prayers, but please, Father Reuter, do not suggest that prayer is an
instrument of social change.
         
        As CRGP members, we must think and act that the outcome of all
our exertions is dependent on how hard we work and how focused we are in
our work.  Supernatural events, like God coming down and helping us, no
matter how hard we pray, simply do not occur in our daily lives.
         
        As far as your request that I cite emprirical proof of God's
attributes of immutability and perfection, let me remind you that in
Natural Theology that we all studied at La Salle, we learned of St.
Thomas Acquinas' attributes of God.  God, according to St. Thomas, is
immutable, perfect, all-powerful, all-loving, all-knowing, can see the
past, present and future all at once because He lives in the everlasting
present, etc.  If God is immutable (unchanging) he does not go from
being unpleased to pleased.  He is simply pleased all the time.  That
more or less denies the possibility of a wrathful and vengeful God that
we see in the Old Testament, a God who would punish Job, kill his loved
ones, turn him into a pauper in order to prove Job's faith to the devil.
         
        Since God is already perfect and enjoying perfect happiness, to
say that He would be swayed by prayers is to deduce that he can go from
a condition of being displeased or not pleased (neutral) to pleased.
That just doesn't happen in the case of God.
         
        St. Thomas Acquinas' Catholicism is in the Natural Theology
texts that we all studied at La Salle.  I am an Acquinian and so is
Cesar Paulin.
         
        Cesar
         







  _____  

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