I did READ THE THREAD (in capital letters). Please read my post again (in lower case)....Captain Blackout said:When dealing with beliefs you will automatically have to deal with extremists. This thread alone is proof of that. The real question is how will you deal with them.cuddly_tomato said:"What these Christian groups are doing is wrong, immoral and unethical! We will do exactly the same!"Stakhanov said:http://www.humanism.org.uk/bus-campaign If you read up on this campaign you'll see that Dawkins was a supporter but not only was the campaign not his idea, he only gave 5,500 pounds out of a total of 136,000. Notice also that this was a response to a 'Christian' group who stated that unbelievers would burn in hell. Not so good.
[CITATION NEEDED]Stakhanov said:Lack of empathy? Every major religion, with a very few notable exceptions, states that unbelievers are going to be eternally punished. Where's their empathy?
I think that you are confusing religion with certain extremist religious people. Please, don't anyone go quoting the Bible when they know it is not the commonly held view of Christians that the Bible is to be taken literally. I share your distaste for the notion of a benevolent and loving god who condemns souls to hell for all eternity for not applauding loudly enough, but in all honesty the number of religious people who believe this to be the case is rather small, so doesn't really apply unless we are discussing extremists (which we are not).
A truly wise man knows how much he doesn't know.
BTW: What are you attempting to accomplish here? Even non-literalists believe in eternal hell, and when you include Judaism and Islam there are a LOT who fall into this category, literalists and non-literalists alike. There are better approaches than: "Please don't anyone go quoting the bible.." depending on who you're talking to. For example READ THE THREAD before you post and you'll see such an example.
There are of course other approaches. Inviting people to take it to 4chan. Not that I'm mentioning anyone here, of course.
I never mentioned Hell beyond the application of it in the Bible. Yes, non-literalists believe in Hell, but the notion that anyone who doesn't follow everything that is spoken of in the Bible is destined for Hell is very much a minority belief in the western world among religious people, whether they believe Hell or not. In the view of a Hell believing Christian murderers might be destined for the hot place, people who stay at home on a Sunday but never-the-less don't do terrible things probably wouldn't.
My comment "don't go quoting..." was there to forestall the argument of "but the Bible says this...", which is negated by the fact that even if it does say that that had nothing to do with my actual point. I am trying to separate the religious from the religion here.