Its kind of an odd thing, but just thinking about Baptists, the tendency  
for splintering
is similar to the tendency on the Left for splintering. How many kinds of  
Baptists are there ?
I'm not sure but at least 10 of size, with the grand total in the hundreds. 
 On the Left
the parallelism is hard not to notice. Why is this so ?  
 
I donno. Maybe you have a theory or two.
 
Billy
 
==============================================================
 
 
In a message dated 6/5/2010 9:02:34 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

And then there are the differences internal to the  religions. How many 
flavors of Christianity are there? Too many.  

David

   
 
If  you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed, if you do read the 
newspaper  you are misinformed.--Mark  Twain  



On 6/5/2010 10:06 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  



 
God  Is Not One
The Eight Rival Religions  That Run the World--and Why Their Differences 
Matter
By _Stephen  Prothero_ 
(http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/29989/Stephen_Prothero/index.aspx)  

 
Stephen Prothero, the New  York Times bestselling author of Religious 
Literacy, makes a  fresh and provocative argument that, contrary to popular 
understanding, all  religions are not simply different paths to the same end… 
and why this  matters greatly for us. Readers of Huston Smith and Karen 
Armstrong will  find much to ponder in God Is Not One. 
Book  Description
At the dawn of the  twenty-first century, dizzying scientific and 
technological advancements,  interconnected globalized economies, and even the 
so-called New Atheists  have done nothing to change one thing: our world 
remains 
furiously  religious. For good and for evil, religion is the single greatest 
influence  in the world. We accept as self-evident that competing economic 
systems  (capitalist or communist) or clashing political parties (Republican 
or  Democratic) propose very different solutions to our planet's problems. 
So  why do we pretend that the world's religious traditions are different 
paths  to the same God? We blur the sharp distinctions between religions at our 
own  peril, argues religion scholar Stephen Prothero, and it is time to 
replace  naïve hopes of interreligious unity with deeper knowledge of 
religious  differences.  
In Religious  Literacy, Prothero demonstrated how little Americans know 
about their  own religious traditions and why the world's religions should be 
taught in  public schools. Now, in God Is Not One, Prothero provides readers  
with this much-needed content about each of the eight great religions. To  
claim that all religions are the same is to misunderstand that each attempts 
 to solve a different human problem. For example:  
–Islam: the  problem is pride / the solution is submission
–Christianity: the  problem is sin / the solution is salvation
–Confucianism: the problem  is chaos / the solution is social order
–Buddhism: the problem is  suffering / the solution is awakening
–Judaism: the problem is exile  / the solution is to return to God 
Prothero reveals  each of these traditions on its own terms to create an 
indispensable guide  for anyone who wants to better understand the big 
questions human beings  have asked for millennia—and the disparate paths we 
are 
taking to answer  them today. A bold polemical response to a generation of 
misguided  scholarship, God Is Not One creates a new context for 
understanding  religion in the twenty-first century and disproves the 
assumptions most 
of  us make about the way the world's religions work. 


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