The moderates are justifying the rationale used by the extremists. If God can command me not to eat shellfish, or not to allow the gays to marry, what can't he command someone else to do? How can we be opposed to Islamic extremists, killing for their God, if we in truth have no idea what God wants, and yet we accept that he is real, and he wants us to live a certain way? There is no difference between their commandments and ours, except one of interpretation, yet cafeteria Christians pick and choose which parts of the Bible they like, excluding things about stoning adulterers and burning witches, for no reason other than they personally don't think God wants those things (see, that is Old Testament -- God changed his mind and did away with all that by a nifty re-interpretation of what Christ supposedly came to do - to abolish the law, not obey it). Fundamentalists say 'you can't do that, you have to accept OUR interpretation.' How do they know? Nobody has any evidence one way or the other.Assassinator said:Choose? Well, I won't put it so black and white. Afterall, some people have religion almost literally hammered in them: they don't know any better. You've also got to rationalise the fact that the majority still doesn't use religion to justify evil actions. Islamic extremists, the Westboro church, they're all minorities.caross73 said:Ultimately the people decide what to believe. I think they have to be educated when they believe silly things that can be used to justify atrocities. Unfortunately, they think the silly rationales are harmless, and should not be criticized (deeply held beliefs - stop being such an arrogant theophobe), when in fact it is precisely the idea that Faith is an acceptable justification for behavior that allows one to do almost any evil that strikes one's fancy. Faith can be used to justify good things, as well as bad, but when you cede your actions to an ultimate moral authority, such as God -- well, you can see what has happened in the past. Do the people have a choice in which parts of scripture to believe? If its truly divine, then I don't think they do. You can't reject something on the basis that God wouldn't want that, when a dozen other people on the same grounds say he would!
How do you decide what to believe is a VERY important question.
How they decide, well that's a very interesting question indeed, one I can't answer.
If you really believe, that God is real, and he has given you an order in the form of a divinely inspired text ... who are you to say 'nah, this part of it is great, but that part of the scripture is for chumps.'
See, the funny thing is, the fundamentalists at least aren't hypocrites. They aren't picking and choosing -- they are consistent - this is God's word and there can be no reinterpretation. The moderates however, well, they have no way of saying their interpretation is any better than any one else's unless they have access to some OTHER source of morality than their gut instinct and the God they don't take seriously.