La pregunta para ateos., (question for atheists) |
La pregunta para ateos., (question for atheists) |
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#1
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![]() oooh yeah. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Member Posts: 1,333 Joined: Feb 2006 Member No: 376,533 ![]() |
'Kay, so this is how people (usually) come to find atheism. (In a nutshell.) They question their belief in their god and their religion, they do a little research, badabing badaboom, they're nonbelievers. (Yes, I know I'm being horribly inaccurate here, but just go with me.)
As an atheist being raised in a fairly religious family, I find myself questioning my atheism sometimes, the same way a believer may question their faith. I know that atheism is not a faith, but sometimes I wonder if faith could be right and atheism could be wrong. Discuss? Feel free to move this to Debate if you like. |
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*RiC3xBoy* |
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#2
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How flexible is religion? Can one's definition of what Catholicism be different from another? If so, wouldn't the belief that one religion means dot dot dot be a religion in itself. Thought about it for awhile, could not really get a good answer to it.
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*kryogenix* |
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#3
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QUOTE That's why I said, you gotta have faith. What if two people have faith in contradicting ideas? Both ideas cannot be the truth. Moral relativism doesn't make sense at all. Saying that there is no moral truth implies that it would be a lie to say that there is a moral truth. See the contradiction? Choosing morality is not like choosing your favorite color. How flexible is religion? Can one's definition of what Catholicism be different from another? If so, wouldn't the belief that one religion means dot dot dot be a religion in itself. Thought about it for awhile, could not really get a good answer to it. No. If your beliefs don't line up with the Catholic Catechism, your beliefs are not Catholic beliefs. |
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