Ernie :
" I  suspect you use "faith" in the latter sense..."
 
Absolutely. What you'd expect from any Baptist,  even a renegade who
these days is part Buddhist, part Zoroastrian, etc,  etc.
 
About liturgical churches, with their emphases on  tradition / traditions.,
while I have few negative feelings, I also have  little empathy.
Rituals, at least speaking of ceremonial rituals,  sacraments, 
outside of the least number possible, don't do  anything
for  me whatsoever and seem to me to be 
a  complete waste of time.
 
The  subject is :
"  actual *religious understanding* about who we are and what we should  do"
 
That's the bottom line and the top line and almost all  the lines 
in-between.
 
If  someone wants to wear a "sacred thread" or make use of "holy water"
I  don't get all bent out of shape, but such practices, as I see it, are  
theater,
not  spirituality.  Maybe some theater is OK in life but that  manifestly
is  NOT what "religion" is really all  about.
 
Faith is a matter of the heart and the mind, especially  the heart but
only  if this also means an alive and fully engaged mind.  They are  
inseparable.
Traditions have their place, and can have value, but they are  strictly
secondary.  I cannot possibly see things any other way.
This is what I assume and assume that others 
necessarily also assume. 
 
But, I think you are right, many people simply don't think this way at  all.
I'd like to persuade them of the value of my way of thinking but  maybe
what they all need is to become Baptists first.
 
Something like that.
 
This is tongue in cheek, but maybe you get what I mean.
Religion as "add-on" to life, as tradition,  isn't religion as "faith"  at 
all.
 
Billy
 
=============================
 
 
 
4/16/2012 2:59:45 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

HI  Billy,  


On Apr 13, 2012, at 9:07 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
wrote:

So the question comes down to this,  for anyone : Do you believe,
deep down inside, that religious  faith really is crucial to your life ?
That, in a sense, nothing else could  possibly be more important ?
For if anyone answers "yes," then a foundation exists to
move mountains.  Maybe an awkward metaphor but
hopefully the idea is clear enough.



As usual, I think it is important to separate out two distinct  issues.


One is religious tradition, which is very useful in a whole bunch of  ways, 
but at the end of the day, not really essential to living a good life.  
There are multiple incompatible but equally valuable rituals.


The other is an actual *religious understanding* about who we are and  what 
we should do.  


THAT is incredible vital, and changes  everything.


I  suspect you use "faith" in the latter sense, but most people don't, 
which  causes a whole mess of problems.


--  Ernie P.





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