I read a survey somewhere online yesterday that said about half of all Americans had either switched religion or left religion entirely as adults at some point in their lives.
What's your favorite religion related movie and why?
Why have atheists been the minority throughout history? Or am I wrong, has there been a society somewhere that atheism was the norm?
Where can I get (or do you know) a figure for how what percentage of individuals aren't of the same religion as their parents?
Religion is frequently tied to the state as sanctioned culture in history, so deviating from it is often considered violently anti-social. And cultures often have creation myths as proto-science that get sucked up into the state culture. So generally, atheism is an intellectual reaction to religion that takes place in a relatively liberal society. For an ancient culture to start saying there is no creation, no creator at the onset of the culture's existence would be pretty weird.
But there aren't really all that many films about religion, and most that exist are shallow or one-sided.
I always thought he meant, "they have no idea that this is the Son of God they just killed here. They also don't know that they only got this far because I let them. They thought they were just dealing with a potential rebel."
I always thought he meant, "they have no idea that this is the Son of God they just killed here.
I have been trying to think of an answer to this but I can't. If I were being wanky I'd say 2001 or A clockwork orange or something like that, but fortunately I'm not. I remember that Priest seemed pretty good. But there aren't really all that many films about religion, and most that exist are shallow or one-sided.
Was the spread of Christianity inevitable, so much so that it would end up predominant in Europe even without the policies of tolerance and intolerance, among other things, by the Roman emperors since Constantine?
I've been puzzled about Jesus' words on the cross: "father forgive them, for they know what they are doing". First of all, in what sense they don't know what they are doing? They don't know they are crucifying an innocent man, or they don't know they're part of salvation that way? If the latter, why they need to be forgiven? Aren't they really doing a good deed there.
We could also imagine, what would be the case if people would have known what they are doing: Shouldn't they also then crucify Jesus?
To tell the truth it seems to me Jesus is playing some kind of double role in the bible, sometimes he is the Messiah, and sometimes just an example of a victim (which I suppose originate form the fact that he was a historical figure who was thought to be divine). I'm curious, do you get that same feeling, or is it only my lack of education on the matter?
Also I'm curious that Jesus speks to the Father, if they are both (parts of) the same God. I remember he also prayed before being captured. Are the words directed to the crowd, or are they meant as a communication with .... a part of himself?
What's constant prayer?
I've been puzzled about Jesus' words on the cross: "father forgive them, for they know what they are doing". First of all, in what sense they don't know what they are doing? They don't know they are crucifying an innocent man, or they don't know they're part of salvation that way? If the latter, why they need to be forgiven? Aren't they really doing a good deed there.
To tell the truth it seems to me Jesus is playing some kind of double role in the bible, sometimes he is the Messiah, and sometimes just an example of a victim (which I suppose originate form the fact that he was a historical figure who was thought to be divine). I'm curious, do you get that same feeling, or is it only my lack of education on the matter?
Also I'm curious that Jesus speks to the Father, if they are both (parts of) the same God. I remember he also prayed before being captured. Are the words directed to the crowd, or are they meant as a communication with .... a part of himself?
Have you seen A Man for All Seasons, which tells about Thomas More, and therefore probably touches religion too? I've been going to watch it as well as the Message, which tells about Muhammed (the prophet).
Was the spread of Christianity inevitable, so much so that it would end up predominant in Europe even without the policies of tolerance and intolerance, among other things, by the Roman emperors since Constantine?
As to Jesus speaking to His Father, while being God himself, there's two answers to that: according to the Trinity doctrine Jesus was fully human, mortal and unaware of his identity with God. On another level, the Christian doctrine of the H. Trinity hadn't come into being yet. (Plotinus has mentioned that the necessary terms - Father, Son, H. Spirit - where available at Jesus' time, but the formulation of the doctrine itself hadn't occurred yet. Which leads me to the conclusion that Jesus couldn't have been aware of it; it would also be in contradiction of that very doctrine, as it states that Jesus was fully human, therefore he could not have had knowledge of things beyond himself - other than those that were known at his own lifetime.)
First - and as I've said before - the doctrine of the Trinity says nothing about Jesus. The doctrine of the Trinity states only that God exists as three Persons - Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. That tells us nothing about Jesus' humanity or his knowledge. It is the doctrine of the incarnation that states that one of the divine Persons, namely the Son, became human with all that that entails. These two doctrines are quite distinct. Someone could believe in the Trinity without believing in the incarnation, and someone could believe in an incarnation without believing in a Trinity.
Second, the doctrine of the incarnation does not state that Jesus was unaware of his own divinity. On the contrary, the orthodox view is that Jesus was aware of his own divinity. Indeed, as we were discussing a while ago, the orthodox Catholic view is that Jesus knew everything that any human being could know. Now many people today find this unsatisfactory for various reasons, and hold instead that Jesus was ignorant of may things. There are various ways of accounting for this. One is the "kenotic" model, according to which, when the Son became human he actually gave up many divine properties, such as omniscience or omnipotence. Another is the "two minds" model, according to which Jesus had a human mind and also a divine mind. His divine mind was omniscient but his human mind was ignorant of many things.
Personally I don't see why the doctrine of Jesus' full humanity would entail that he was ignorant of many things. I'm not convinced that it is an essential property of human beings that they be ignorant. Certainly there are other reasons to prefer a model of the incarnation according to which Christ was ignorant of many things - such as (a) its greater plausibility, (b) its greater fit with the Gospels, and (c) its greater fit with the notion that Jesus was really like us - but I don't think the doctrine of his true humanity is one of them.
So I have to disagree with the interpretations provided by Eran of arcadia, warpus and Atticus.
1) I thought that the Son of the H. Trinity doctrine is the same person as Jesus.
If Jesus was (not is) aware of his own divinity, why are there no references to this in any of the 4 Gospels? (And if there are, would you mind pointing them out?)
(And I disagree with your contention that the two doctrines are unrelated: there's only one incarnation of God according to Christian doctrine, and that is Jesus as the Son of God. They may be distinct doctrines, but the second has little, if any, meaning without the first.)
2) Being aware of one's divinity and knowing everything that a human might know are two entirely different and, to a point even contradictory, contentions.
(Why he should be ignorant I cannot answer. Jesus may, at some point, have become concinced of being the son of God - in a literal sense -; there are some indications of this in the Gospels. This is, however, something different from being aware of one's own divinity - which, to me at least, seems contradictory to being fully human - the latter being a necessary condition for his death.)
(3), I should think the interpretation would be that they don't know they are killing God himself.
It is also, perhaps, why Christian theology eventually decided that Jesus was, uniquely, not one kind of thing but two kinds of thing (God and human being) at the same time. So on that view, a "double role" is exactly the right way of understanding Jesus.
I read a survey somewhere online yesterday that said about half of all Americans had either switched religion or left religion entirely as adults at some point in their lives.
The switching religion in that case is, I suppose, in 99% of the cases a change between two christian denominations, which is not that "big" of a change (well at least seen form outside the Christian faith). I wonder how many people in general change religion in a big way like muslims becoming christians, hindu becoming muslims, etc