[FONT="]
This has always troubled me. I can still recall my mother talking to me about religion when I was quite young and telling me that if a truth is in fact a truth, it should be able to withstand the test of time. Religions that change the same doctrine they previously punished followers for questioning cannot be taken seriously, and should have absolutely NO hand in determining what education should be provided to children.
On the flip side, religions that refuse to change doctrine to reflect a growing body of scientific evidence as well as with the evolution (sorry, there's that damn word again) of social mores and ethics also can't be taken seriously.
This pretty much encapsulates why I can't take any religion seriously. No matter which angle you come at it, there doesn't seem to be room for that crucial middle ground when discernment is applied. All religion, by it's very nature is extreme to me. I've yet to see an example of where that's a good thing.
[/FONT]
There are hundreds of cases where the church has amalgamated doctrines of other religions in order to win over converts. And it was all done in the name of the almighty dollar. The church is not a religion so much as it is a political entity and land holding company. Over the last few decades they have had to sell off some of their holdings to pay for all the child molestation charges and the dwindeling attendence (read dwindeling revenue).
This has always troubled me. I can still recall my mother talking to me about religion when I was quite young and telling me that if a truth is in fact a truth, it should be able to withstand the test of time. Religions that change the same doctrine they previously punished followers for questioning cannot be taken seriously, and should have absolutely NO hand in determining what education should be provided to children.
On the flip side, religions that refuse to change doctrine to reflect a growing body of scientific evidence as well as with the evolution (sorry, there's that damn word again) of social mores and ethics also can't be taken seriously.
This pretty much encapsulates why I can't take any religion seriously. No matter which angle you come at it, there doesn't seem to be room for that crucial middle ground when discernment is applied. All religion, by it's very nature is extreme to me. I've yet to see an example of where that's a good thing.
[/FONT]