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Ann Widdicombe
What did you think about Ann Widdicombe views on Christianity last night ?
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It was on Sunday Ch.4. 7pm The Bible : a History. She maintained that we should live by the 10 Commanments as set out by Moses 4000 years ago. She seemed particularly against any desire to obtain any worldly things. 'Thou shalt not covet thy neighbours belongings'.etc. which she described as greed . So much for world trade.
However It was worth watching as an example of blind faith.
However It was worth watching as an example of blind faith.
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dunno about blind faith really - i only watched the bit about the 10 commandments where she had a ding dong with stephen fry. her argument that this is a good moral code which is still followed/relevant today (thouh shall not kill, not steal, commit adultery, covet etc etc) seemed to remarkably ignore the circa 2,000 years of christianity where this was continuously disregarded by christians in god's name.
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The lady is typically blind to reason because of her faith.
If you examine the ten commandments as recognised by Christians, it is perfectly clear that only the first four are specifically ‘religious'; the remaining six are purely ‘social'. That is, they must form the basis of any rational and moral society.
I personally think religion is utter bunkum, but I fully support the necessity for Commandments 5 - 10 inclusive if society is to hold together.
These ‘rules' clearly existed from the earliest times, when mankind first began to live in settled communities which could obviously not have existed without them.
That was long before any of the monotheistic religions - Judaism, Christianity or Islam - were even thought of and thus long before the Ten Commandments were written.
Buddhism and Confucianism - both from around the 5th/6th centuries BC - for example, both exist perfectly happily as ethical/moral systems without dependence on gods. Even the Egyptian Book of the Dead, from over 2,000 years BC, contains most of the social concepts in the Ten Commandments.
As always with people like Ms Widdecombe, they just float over any attempt to get them to provide rational reasons for religious belief.
If you examine the ten commandments as recognised by Christians, it is perfectly clear that only the first four are specifically ‘religious'; the remaining six are purely ‘social'. That is, they must form the basis of any rational and moral society.
I personally think religion is utter bunkum, but I fully support the necessity for Commandments 5 - 10 inclusive if society is to hold together.
These ‘rules' clearly existed from the earliest times, when mankind first began to live in settled communities which could obviously not have existed without them.
That was long before any of the monotheistic religions - Judaism, Christianity or Islam - were even thought of and thus long before the Ten Commandments were written.
Buddhism and Confucianism - both from around the 5th/6th centuries BC - for example, both exist perfectly happily as ethical/moral systems without dependence on gods. Even the Egyptian Book of the Dead, from over 2,000 years BC, contains most of the social concepts in the Ten Commandments.
As always with people like Ms Widdecombe, they just float over any attempt to get them to provide rational reasons for religious belief.