Blooming Personalities C/D 30Th November
Quizzes & Puzzles4 mins ago
... is it at least a 90° one? 😃
No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Naomi, I'm an atheist, you're an atheist and Dawkins is an atheist, but we're all different, which means that some of us atheists may be cultural Christians, like you, and others may not be. I would have put Dawkins in the second camp, given his vociferous criticism of religion - he's more of a radical atheist. For example, if you look at what he says about faith schools being indoctrination and a form of mental abuse, he clearly doesn't appreciate that element of Christian culture.
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Why is it a problem for you that others think similarly then?.
To 'need' more? Why? "
because there is more to culture than "appreciating" something
a "cultural christian" atheist has nothing "culturally" going on except tradition for the sake of tradition: i like christmas carols, i like churches, so i want to keep them. but culture is a lot more than just tradition alone it is also an expression of values and all christian values are rooted in belief in jesus as a divine being. without that you have nothing but the surface level appearance of a culture, what is underneath is dead and stagnant. there is no way to create anything new or do anything at all other than pass on traditions for the sake of passing them on.
it makes no sense at all to call yourself a cultural christian if you aren't a christian!
I agree with him, ellipsis. I too am highly critical of religion and in particular of the concept of sin and the notion that unless human beings become sycophantic and subservient they are doomed to hell - Roman Catholic schools being the worst offenders as far as Christianity goes. Also of other educational establishments that deny science in favour of fantasy. Dawkins once interviewed a science teacher who, in line with Islamic literature, taught that the mountains were created to pin down the earth - and her teenage students believed it. All of that is child abuse.
We have friends who are highly religious - Baptists. Their son is gay and their daughter divorced. They are distraught, convinced that because their children have offended God, they are doomed for eternity. That, frankly, is wicked - and that is what Richard Dawkins and I object to. If you want to see true evil, look no further than religion.
So if you think of three atheists: Rod supports the children of Catholic parents going to Catholic schools; Jane doesn't have an opinion, she thinks it has nothing to do with her either way; and Freddy thinks there should be no faith schools, including Catholic schools. I would say that not all of Rod, Jane and Freddy can possibly be cultural Christians.
No, he doesn't. I'll agree with naomi on this. He is being honest with himself, considering everything he understands.
Perhaps I have a more fluid understanding of Christianity than most, I don't know. But if someone is genuinely considering such things and decides that being a good person (in accordance with Christian mores) is enough - then I have no problem with that. And nor, I suspect, has Jesus.
Hope no-one tells my vicar! Actually, it wouldn't matter, he works on people and how they work in the world, the goodness they do and the evil they reject. Hope this makes sense, never tried to vocalise (type it) before.
Sorry,Khandro, I got carried away answering the immediate points.
I don't think Dawkins has become a Christian. I do think that he has matured from his previous scornful attitudes into an understanding of the value of Christianity to the world.
So, a partial change at least into understanding the value of that which he previously scorned. Not total, obviously.
I hope my younger daughter (on his web page) eases off on me as well.
Nothing very erudite, just feelings - and nice to lose an enemy and gain a partial supporter.