Aggregator gang
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2019
- Messages
- 60
I say the question of whether certain members are "true followers" or not tends to skirt "no true Scotsman" territory, distracts from the main topic (whether religion is a net positive or negative for society at large), and eventually gets bogged down in semantics. IMO as long as their "lineage" (read: dogma, creed, institution, prominent characters, etc.) can be clearly traced to the ancient belief, then it can at least be argued that the ancient belief is at the very least a source or inspiration for the virulent, invasive species that currently bears its name. Case in point: rabid fundamentalist Christians in the USA -- nothing like Jesus nor his teachings, but are arguably the result of centuries of dogmatizing/interpreting/proselytizing/cherry-picking those very teachings. So these people might not be "Christians" in the sense of following all of Jesus' teachings, but they are absolutely religious.Post Script: various forms of: Hinduism, Buddhism, Shintoism, Shamanism, Paganism (which is pointless to say because that basically encapsulates any polytheistic religion) don't forcibly spread their religion and/or beliefs. Other forms, or, more specifically, people claiming to follow them, do forcibly spread. But, like with people claiming to be Christians, but actively NOT following the teachings of Christ (and instead following the teachings of "important" people who came centuries or millennia afterward), can we really call them practitioners of the faith they claim to follow?
And I will leave it after saying that...
I would also emphasize here the importance of differentiating belief and religion: the former is personal, the latter is organizational. I have nothing against the former, but life experiences have made me extremely wary of the latter. Surviving a religious civil war tends to do that to you.
“With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil - that takes religion.”
-- Steven Weinberg