Dislcaimer #1: This page refers to a certain, some may say extreme, understanding of Christianity. I acknowledge that not all Christians are the same, that there is a huge variety of beliefs and practices among them, and that no one brand should be used to represent all of them. This page explains why I, personally, am not a Christian. I have nothing against people who find spirituality and fulfillment from the teachings of Jesus, per se. Really, some of my best friends are Christian.
Disclaimer #2:The following objections are not necessarily specific to Christianity, but apply to organized and dogmatic religion in general. I use Christianity as the sample because it's the one I know best. I was raised Christian, I live in a predominantly Christian country, and I am surrounded by Christians. But it is not my point to say that Christianity is any more, or less, deserving of criticism than any other organized religion.
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So why did I feel the need to create Timicism? Why didn't I stick with the religion I was given?
Here's why.
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There are some really great things about Christianity. In theory, one would have to wonder how anyone could not choose to be part of a philosophy of love, forgiveness, humility and equality. But theory and practice often don't work well together, and I see Christianity, as it is frequently practiced, as an excellent example of this.
The short answer to why I'm not a Christian is Christians themselves. When I look at what's being done and said in the name of "The Lord" I see Christianity as a club I don't want to join. I've spent my life battling the hypocrisy, arrogance, hate, oppression, and materialistic self-interest from people who claim to follow Jesus. People who violate all the tenets of Timicism: accept doctrine without question, are not fair or consistent in their thinking, take themselves too seriously, do much harm, and choose violence over love. If these are the people who Jesus chooses to represent him, then he's not the God for me.
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God
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This view made sense when you consider where it came from. Thousands of years ago, people couldn't really conceive of a world much beyond their own region, not to mention the entire planet. For them, it made sense that they would be the center of the universe, because their "universe" was so small. Today, we know better. The notion of God being a kind of super human is outdated.
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Intellectual Christians will often say that God wants us to use our brains (the brains that God supposedly gave us) to think logically about the viability of Christian theology, and not to just accept it without evidence. Aside from the fact that that totally contradicts the whole idea of faith, this makes God like some professor who claims to want honest dialogue, but in the end, if you don't agree with him, if you don't reach the "right" conclusion, you'll get a bad grade. People don't learn under threat of coercion like that.
For a humorous spin on this, see God Diagnosed With Bipolar Disorder.
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Jesus
I believe in Jesus. I believe in him the same way I believe in the Buddha, Charles Darwin, Susan B. Anthony, Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and Albus Dumbledore. All revolutionaries who had new and profound ideas and/or challenged the unjust system of their day. I appreciate Jesus' message and think the world would be a lot better off if more people followed his example. But I don't believe that he was the literal Son of God, and I don't believe he had a monopoly on righteousness.
Christians will tell you the only thing you need in order to be "saved" is to believe that Jesus was literally the Son of God; that he is the only path to God. My response to that is: Why? Why does it matter whether or not I accept Jesus' divinity? Let's assume that I agree with Jesus' basic message and try to be more like him. Why does it matter if I buy the theology or not? What does God, or Jesus, or the world for that matter, gain by my believing this one point?
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It's so ironic to me that the people who throw Jesus' name around the most tend to be the same people who don't get what he was about. Within a highly rigid, authoritarian society, he preached compassion over rules. He emphasized the spirit of the law over the letter of the law. And now modern Christians have taken his message and done exactly what he preached against: focusing on obsolete rules rather than on compassion. They do everything they can to hold on to their power and protect their own interests. Oppress minorities. Persecute the weak. Wage war. They have become the very hypocrites that Jesus was trying to reform.
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The Bible
Too many Christians take the Bible way too seriously. It has some good parts, but for every piece of real wisdom in the Bible, there's ten times the amount of stupid, irrelevant, contradictory, outdated, weird bullshit. People who would never think of reading the tax code or an unedited captain's log of a 17th-century Japanese sailor base their entire lives on this equally byzantine, tedious, and eclectic collection of writings. But Christians assert that the Bible is the infallible and eternal Word of God, so let's examine that premise.
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The Bible was put together, compiled and edited, around the 4th century, A.D. So where's God been since then? He hasn't had any new Words for us in 16 centuries? Are we to believe that God inspired all those thousands of pages of Words and then hasn't published anything since then? Is he a recluse like J.D. Salinger or what?
If you're familiar at all with urban legends, you will quickly see how many "absolutely true!!!" stories you've heard in your life are complete fabrications. We live in a scientific age where people are generally skeptical of bullshit, and we still get suckered by urban legends. Even I do, and I look out for them. It's human nature to make shit up, and it's human nature to believe it. That's why we need Science-- a systematic way to observe and test the truth that doesn't merely depend on people's faulty memories or perceptions.
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If the Bible really is the eternal and infallible Word of God, then why can't people even agree on its message? Christians argue about the Bible all the time: what certain passages mean, what God is really saying. I would think that if God really wanted you to know something, he'd be clearer. Why would he make his message so inscrutable? You'd think that God, the Omnipotent Creator of All Heaven and Earth, would be a better communicator.
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Perhaps these sentiments can be best summed up by an article I read in the Onion titled Mistranslated Myths Of Nomadic Desert Shephard Tribe Taken At Face Value.
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Prayer
Prayer as a form of meditation is fine. If you are praying in order to center yourself, get in touch with a higher plane, empty your mind, or feel the presence of God, I'm all for it.
But when people start using prayer to ask God for special favors, I get annoyed. If God really intervenes to help someone's team win a game, find them a mate, or keep all their family and friends healthy and happy, then I'm pissed off. I'm pissed off because God's playing favorites, and random favorites at that, because there are tons of people who pray and their lives are still affected by illness and misfortune.
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I understand the psychological appeal of believing that there is a supreme being who's going to protect you and look out for your best interests. The problem is that sometimes your best interests are at the expense of someone or something else. This kind of thinking is fine if you live in a world where other people and groups are outside the scope of your God. But when you believe in one God who created the entire world, you have to acknowledge that he should be there for everyone, not just you. The mindset that God is looking after your best interests at the expense of other people is selfish and immature. God is there for the whole world-- he has no business blessing America.
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1 comment:
Hi - I haven't read your whole post but right up front I had to comment on your statement that Christians believe that God is in the image of man. This is not Christian belief. It is nowhere recorded in the Bible nor is it given as a part of a Creed in any major formulation of Christian belief in all history. People do indeed make God in their own image and according to their own liking - but that is called idolatry - a very, very common occurrence.
I could comment further on such things as your use of moral categories (how does Timicism generate non-material, universally binding entities called moral law I wonder?), but time precludes this.
Best wishes, Jim
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