Heh now that is a handy little dogmatic prinicple for the Catholic
sinner huh!

On 14 Sep, 07:59, RP Singh <[email protected]> wrote:
> When I am talking about vice it is about religious people and what they
> consider to be vice , e.g. A christian would indulge in extra-marital sex
> and then ask God's forgiveness for it. What I mean is that religious people
> are breaking the rules of their own religion all the time and later asking
> their God by means of prayer or otherwise to forgive them.
>
>
>
> On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 6:14 AM, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
> > It all sounds exactly like what I'm saying except for the part about
> > asking a god's forgiveness.
> > Who are you and who is society to judge what is vice?  How can anyone
> > know what their god deems to be vice except by the "books" written by
> > "people" in ancient times?  Don't you see how ridiculous that is?
>
> > On Sep 13, 11:30 am, RP Singh <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > A person can have a humanitarian mindset regardless of religion. You
> > don't
> > > have to believe in God to be good , you can have a feeling of
> > responsibility
> > > towards society and  consider it your duty towards it and do what is good
> > > for you and the others. Patriots need not be religious , yet they feel a
> > > great responsibility towards their country. There are so many motives for
> > a
> > > man  to do good to others irrespective of religion. On the other hand
> > people
> > > are known to indulge in vice and ask God's forgiveness later.
>
> > > On Mon, Sep 13, 2010 at 9:00 PM, Alan Wostenberg <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
> > > > Sure, "helping is primal". But the Jihadist, having a different
> > > > theology than the Christian, believes he is helping you by converting
> > > > you to Islam by the sword. Not so the Christian, for whom religion is
> > > > the "The voluntary subjection of oneself to God".
>
> > > > The island of atheists? Sure, they'd "help others" for some definition
> > > > of "help" and "others". I know something about the Christian command
> > > > to love my neighbor but don't know the official atheist dogma on
> > > > helping others.  If one acted like there were no God why would he
> > > > think he has any duty to help others?
>
> > > > On Sep 12, 8:28 am, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > > AW;
> > > > > Yes there is.............
> > > > > I'll refer you to rigsy's  sept. 6 10:15 am post as to my "theistic
> > > > > religiosity" comment.
>
> > > > > Also, people use therapy and AA like a religion- in fact, they "use"
> > a
> > > > > lot of things in lieu of religion. What about jingoism? <<<rigsy
>
> > > > > Do you think no one would help anyone else on an island of atheists
> > > > > because they didn't have a religion to tell them to do so?   Helping
> > > > > is primal and innate as nurturing; religion and faith is human
> > > > > construct and not necessity.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

Reply via email to