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#2
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Quote:
I was an atheist in high school and then became a Christian. The problem is that I am a Christian because I believe in God and I believe that Jesus died for our sins. But I hate watching so-called "Christians" when they get on TV or message boards or anywhere else and spout off about stuff that would embarrass Jesus if he were standing next to them. In that regard, I have more or less given up on organized religion -- finding a church to go to. I have never wavered since the beginning of my beliefs that God is very real and that Jesus is the world's best example...but I have wavered in being a part of a community. I tend to identify with "Red Letter Christians" (referring to Bibles that have Jesus's words in red) who look at public modern Christianity and all the battles they choose and all the things they say that are completely irrelevant to Jesus's message. I'm sick of hypocrites, and I don't want to be associated with them. Those who point to Leviticus to show that homosexuality is "wrong," and then turn around and tell you that Mosaic law is irrelevant to modern day Christianity. As in, sure Leviticus allegedly says that homosexuality is wrong, but it also says we should stone blashpemers and should not eat meat on certain days etc etc. The list is endless. It's called picking and choosing, and lots of evangelicals (public ones, not insinuating that every evangelical is a piece of hypocritical trash) have no problem pointing to one book of the Bible to condemn something like homosexuality while simultaneously telling you that the laws in Leviticus are not applicable to modern Christianity. Other example, head of the National Association of Evangelicls, Ted Haggard. Spending all his time talking about how homosexuality is utterly wrong, while he's simultaneously out partaking in drugs and buttsex with a gay escort. I can't stand that. I won't be a part of it. But for me, it's not God's fault that some of his believers distort His Son's message to the point that it is unrecognizable. So essentially, I've given up on organized religion, but still have not lost my faith in the importance of Christ and what he did for me. Gosh, I hope that made a modicum of sense. |