I think Christianity borrowed significantly from the pagan mystery cults. — Ciceronianus
Without death and suffering, life would be next to impossible. — Olivier5
That made me laugh. Who could possibly be the "others" in this context? People without a culture? :-) Cultural diversity is not something confined to certain folks and not others. — Olivier5
I don't think so. Yours is a naïve messianic attitude longing for some perfect resolution of our contradictions, neglecting the value and dynamic utility of those contradictions — Olivier5
Without death and suffering, life would be next to impossible.
— Olivier5
A depressing view that I am glad I don't share. The Universe is vast and has plenty of space and resources for new life. — universeness
So the separation between church and state is also desirable because one cannot judge a king with the same moral standards used to judge day to day activities. — Olivier5
Americans are religious because the various churches don't belong to the state and they have to compete for members. But when the church is part of the state and gets tax revenue, it doesn't have to compete. It basically rests on it's laurels. So anyone who wants atheism, agnosticism and overall secularization to advance should promote state religion and the church being part of the state. — ssu
You started a really interesting discussion. Thanks. — T Clark
The Mithraic iconography of bull, lion head, snake, rock, and radiance can all be found in the religions of far more ancient cultures. — Fooloso4
l hadn't thought of "render unto Caesar" as another way of saying separation of church and state. That makes sense to me. — T Clark
It is of course a modern interpretation of the saying. His parables have a way of being timeless, maybe due to their simple, real-life setting. They lend themselves to modern reinterpretations quite easily, a plasticity which is part of his appeal I think. — Olivier5
You're quite welcome. The subject fascinates me. I think there are still many Christians who don't know aspects of Christianity's history. For example, I know Catholics, or former Catholics, who were surprised to learn Jesus had brothers. — Ciceronianus
But a near endless library documenting a brain wouldn't be concious, you need the actual interaction and network. Arguably, that could also be configured in some other manner, but realistically the point is moot outside thought experiments. — Count Timothy von Icarus
By this token, all the pharaohs ought to be historically suspect... — Olivier5
The high god "El" from Ugaritic culture is one of the names of God in the Hebrew Bible. It is found in the name Israel. Beth El (House of God) is the name of numerous synagogues, cemeteries, and hospitals. — Fooloso4
Then there are the torch bearers, Cautes and Cautopates, one with torch up, one with torch down. Representing sunrise and sunset? — Ciceronianus
The high god "El" from Ugaritic culture is one of the names of God in the Hebrew Bible — Fooloso4
"Properly read, the Bible is the most potent force for atheism ever conceived.' I've certainly met a number of atheists who reached their position after reading the Good Book. — Tom Storm
It is found in the name Israel. — Fooloso4
Use all of the will power you have to call upon/pray for/invoke these forces now, to manifest the powers at their command and destroy me before 8 am tomorrow morning. If I post a message tomorrow then this does provide some evidence of that such forces do not exist — universeness
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