I just answered a question from a friend on Facebook that
related to my religious bents. I have often been critical of religious
viewpoints when I find them to be intolerant of others views or incessantly
intrusive. For example, I was in a restaurant in Thomasville many years ago
when a man I didn’t know stopped at my table, put his hand on my shoulder,
began speaking loudly in tongues and then declared me a sinner and invited me
to his church. Needless to say I didn’t go and he was tossed out of the place.
That kind of crap really annoys me. But honest people with honest beliefs deserve
respect. They have a right to believe and practice their beliefs as they see
fit. They do not have a right to impose their beliefs on others, however subtle
that imposition might be. Prayer in school is a good example of religious coercion.
Not everyone in every class is interested in praying, or in praying to a
specific deity who they don’t follow. The perfect example is the Christian
parent who went into a rage when a Muslim wanted to pray to Mecca on a prayer
rug in a public school classroom. I wish I could find the reference but, alas,
it eludes me. You get the point? Freedom OF religion also demands freedom FROM
religion. Otherwise we have the basis for a Theocracy, and the Middle Ages, the
Inquisition, Sharia law and other equally exclusive religion-based systems are
prime examples, to become totally despotic and repressive.
Below is my answer to AW on Facebook:
“As you may know, years ago I was headed for a life as a
priest, and was headed for a seminary education. I had a crisis of intellect I
suppose you might call it and couldn't find a belief in God strong enough to
carry me through. I have always been interested and attracted to the actual
teachings of prophets, but could never find a believable "God" in the
world. I went back and forth from agnostic to atheist and I am probably some of
both. I think that people who unequivocally declare "God is REAL" without
a shred of real proof are as wrong as those who declare "There is NO
GOD", since proving the negative is also impossible. I appreciate those
who believe deeply yet keep a perspective of tolerance and have no use for
those who are intolerant of any viewpoint. I hold hands around tables where
people are praying, get completely overwhelmed in cathedrals, and light candles
for my mother, a lapsed catholic, because she would have wanted that. I love
Jesus as much or more than many Christians I know, for his total commitment to
human suffering and ordinary people. I do not worship him or any deity.”
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