Polytheism,

Many people find polytheism strange, I don't, I find it refreshing, what I don't understand is why so many people gave it up for montheism?

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  • what I don't understand is why so many people gave it up for montheism?

    Because the religions in monotheism want to keep you all to themselves, to get all your donations, your presence to make others want to go to their church etc,

    It is ultimately a power play.

  • All very true Iain, but I was hoping for something a bit more philospical

  • I was hoping for something a bit more philospical

    I honestly don't think the majority of people give it much thought - they are indoctrinated into religion by their parents typically and made to go where the family goes, so by the time they are old enough to make a rational analysis of their religion choice, they have a lifetime of learned "code" on how to worship, what is right and wrong in the eyes of their god and have many friends already in the church of their parents, so the interia is hard to break.

    The vast majority of those I know, including several church ministersm, have all talked about it this way to me at some point or another (you can tell I'm a hit at parties with this line of discussion) and most felt their "connection" when they were very young, so well before they could make a rational analysis of it.

    Of the tiny number of people I know who chose to look closely at alternative religions, none have settled on one for a long period - the religions all seem to have their strengths and failings.

    Personally I think any religion is a form of control, imposing rules from an entity who none can prove exists and where there is only the word of people who hear voices in their head to base the witings on.

    Most people seem to need to believe in something greater than themselves and will perform all sorts of mental gymnastics to justify it, but I'm just not convinced.

  • Some aspects of your experience of the Christian faith are similar to mine Little Owl.

    I used to be a Catholic Christian who felt ‘at home’ with some of the contradictions in the Bible because they could be explained by things like translation, authorship, intended audience, purpose of writing, dating of passage, or even dating of just a sentence inserted in a passage. Some writings were intended to be historical (yet may have only some known historically accurate elements ) other writings were intended to be understood as parables, allegories, teaching, sayings etc. A passage could be understood on different levels, yet sometimes nothing could explain it. 

    Regarding hell, it used to frighten the ‘bejesus’ (said in an Irish accent) out of me. Later I learned that there is no official church statement about the actual damnation of any individual human being. The fact that the Catholic Church hopes that all people will be saved and go to heaven was a revelation to me. 

    I gradually lost faith in Christianity because it has never satisfactorily explained the problem of evil and suffering, and other religions do not have a satisfactory answer either. Misogyny is alive and kicking within the Catholic Church, notably in the hierarchy, but it is also in other Christian denominations. The treatment of LGBTQ+ people has been disgusting, and it isn’t much better now.

    These days I am agnostic. Apart from a few funerals, I haven’t been in a church building for years. Yet I continue to be inspired by the Gospel accounts of ‘Jesus the Radical’. He changed the lives of the marginalised, the poor, and those afflicted by all sorts of mental and physical illnesses. He was a brave man who didn’t hide within buildings filled with priceless treasures, surrounded by impregnable walls. I don’t believe he was God, but I do believe he was a selfless  person who knew he was risking his life for the sake of others. 

    I wish you peace, and if you decide to explore your spirituality further, I hope you receive strength and consolation on the journey.  

  • there is a specific way  not to interpret the Bible and a specific way to interpret it. The wrong way, is to just read and make up what we think it means

    This is the source of many of my issues with organised religion as this approach is saying "the church has interprited the bible in the way we think is right and anyone else is wrong".

    The church then uses its organisation (ie preachers) to pass down this approach to the masses, effectively spreading this very specific interpritation.

    When you see how often the interpritation has changed through time you start to realise how often the church was wrong or how they have simply updated the interpritation to avoid losing "market share" or to push the agenda of the day.

    This starts to show that the church is much less about the word of god but about the business of the church - how to keep itself in power, keep the believers coming to them and to keep the coffers full.

    My grandfather worked in the church and explained to me some of the machinery of the business of the church and it is really just a big corporation behind the scenes.

    This is a big part of why I think faith is a great thing but organised religion is not.

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  • there is a specific way  not to interpret the Bible and a specific way to interpret it. The wrong way, is to just read and make up what we think it means

    This is the source of many of my issues with organised religion as this approach is saying "the church has interprited the bible in the way we think is right and anyone else is wrong".

    The church then uses its organisation (ie preachers) to pass down this approach to the masses, effectively spreading this very specific interpritation.

    When you see how often the interpritation has changed through time you start to realise how often the church was wrong or how they have simply updated the interpritation to avoid losing "market share" or to push the agenda of the day.

    This starts to show that the church is much less about the word of god but about the business of the church - how to keep itself in power, keep the believers coming to them and to keep the coffers full.

    My grandfather worked in the church and explained to me some of the machinery of the business of the church and it is really just a big corporation behind the scenes.

    This is a big part of why I think faith is a great thing but organised religion is not.

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