News3 mins ago
Some Nice People are Religious
19 Answers
I do not believe in God, spout any part of the Bible and I'll dismiss it as fiction.
However, some of the nicest people I know are religious, many different faiths between them but as a person they are really nice people.
Should I attribute their niceness to their religion or do I assume that they are nice people anyway and would do good even if they weren't religious?
However, some of the nicest people I know are religious, many different faiths between them but as a person they are really nice people.
Should I attribute their niceness to their religion or do I assume that they are nice people anyway and would do good even if they weren't religious?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ll_billym. 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.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
"a religion, even if it calls itself a religion of love, must be hard and unloving to those who do not belong to it."
you can either criticise the religious for being nice and not strictly following dogma
or criticise them for following dogma and not being nice
the ones that follow dogma and are nice are generally disliked because they follow dogma and possess th ability to be nice and often beyond reprehension.
personally i like nce people, whether they follow islam, westlife, kerri katona, sol invictus, or manchester united. i can still like them. i just can't be doing with nasty people.
you can either criticise the religious for being nice and not strictly following dogma
or criticise them for following dogma and not being nice
the ones that follow dogma and are nice are generally disliked because they follow dogma and possess th ability to be nice and often beyond reprehension.
personally i like nce people, whether they follow islam, westlife, kerri katona, sol invictus, or manchester united. i can still like them. i just can't be doing with nasty people.
Unfortunately, in the real world there is such a thing as being too nice or too kind. To be kind is to be of like kind. An unearned, undeserved kindness that is not reciprocated invariably has negative consequences for both the giver and receiver.
The laws of causality and of equal and opposite reaction apply no less to matters of morality. Turning the other cheek is only a virtue if you had it coming to you. Justice demands commensurate treatment for both offender and victim. A kindness bestowed blindly and without consideration is an insult to kindness bringing injury to those attempting to be kind without just cause or good reason.
Anything of value carries with it a price which demands the compensation of acknowledging respecting and honoring it for the value that it is. Goodness is not created out of thin air but arises from knowing what good is, being able to recognise it when one sees it, rewarding its creators commensurate with their production of and allegiance to it.
Evil left to its own devices is self-destructive and self-annihilating and exists only by virtue of the good that is sacrificed to its cause. Religion, in the inculcating of its dogma of worshipping sacrifice, suffering and death through the emotional blackmail of its followers, offering the less innocent an alleged escape from personal responsibility, a trapdoor to self-loathing, rendering both unable to make a proper distinction between what is in fact good and evil, is one of the main causes of and contributors to the evil so prevalent in the world today.
Reason, in providing the species that inherited the potential to discover and use it the ability to distinguish good from evil and to understand why one should be preferred over the other, is the milk of human kindness.
The laws of causality and of equal and opposite reaction apply no less to matters of morality. Turning the other cheek is only a virtue if you had it coming to you. Justice demands commensurate treatment for both offender and victim. A kindness bestowed blindly and without consideration is an insult to kindness bringing injury to those attempting to be kind without just cause or good reason.
Anything of value carries with it a price which demands the compensation of acknowledging respecting and honoring it for the value that it is. Goodness is not created out of thin air but arises from knowing what good is, being able to recognise it when one sees it, rewarding its creators commensurate with their production of and allegiance to it.
Evil left to its own devices is self-destructive and self-annihilating and exists only by virtue of the good that is sacrificed to its cause. Religion, in the inculcating of its dogma of worshipping sacrifice, suffering and death through the emotional blackmail of its followers, offering the less innocent an alleged escape from personal responsibility, a trapdoor to self-loathing, rendering both unable to make a proper distinction between what is in fact good and evil, is one of the main causes of and contributors to the evil so prevalent in the world today.
Reason, in providing the species that inherited the potential to discover and use it the ability to distinguish good from evil and to understand why one should be preferred over the other, is the milk of human kindness.
Personally, religion did not give me my principles, and I hope I am a nice person (well I am most of the time). I grew up in a family where people were nice to each other, were nice to other people in all walks of life, and respectful. It had nothing to do with religion. I have lots of religious friends who practice various religions, in fact one of my closest friends is very religious indeed. I doubt whether it is religion that makes them nice. It is upbringing.
None of my religious friends have ever tried to push their religions at me either.
None of my religious friends have ever tried to push their religions at me either.
Jesus asked this...
(Matthew 22:37-40) He said to him: “‘You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind.’ 38 This is the greatest and first commandment. 39 The second, like it, is this, ‘You must love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 On these two commandments the whole Law hangs, and the Prophets.”
If you love your neighbour, you will be nice to others...
So it really is a Bible based attitude. Whether they know it or not.
(Matthew 22:37-40) He said to him: “‘You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind.’ 38 This is the greatest and first commandment. 39 The second, like it, is this, ‘You must love your neighbor as yourself.’ 40 On these two commandments the whole Law hangs, and the Prophets.”
If you love your neighbour, you will be nice to others...
So it really is a Bible based attitude. Whether they know it or not.