Irritated by faith-promoting rumors
Posted: Thu Feb 21, 2008 1:08 pm
They're not just within Mormonism...but of course everyone here knows that.
A couple of weeks back I got this email, that I could not believe people forwarded. I mean, how far does common sense have to go out of the window in the name of religion and faith? I understand that for many people faith is important, but what about just plain ole common sense?
The issue has gotten so great for me, that I haven't really been to church lately. Well, that and my health, but I'm sick of the myths, and the fact that some people just don't want to face reality. Is it that damaging to your faith that Christianity was influenced by paganism? Is it that damaging to your faith that the Gospels weren't written by the Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John?
The email I got was about this Muslim man who burned his wife alive for reading the Bible. He then proceeded to bury his wife and two kids. The kids were alive. He told the authorities that an uncle had killed the wife. Apparently there was a death in the family shortly thereafter, and when the family went to bury this member, they found the two children, one about five, and the other just an infant, still nursing, ALIVE under the sand. C'mon! Seriously!
The story goes that the little girl claimed that a man in white came and fed her, and "woke her mother up to feed her sister"...for 15 days?
Tell me how a story this sensational didn't leak out to every major news organization...the muslim media isn't that rigid that it could hide such a thing.
I believe in miracles, but I also believe in reality. It's a miracle to me that I have someone in my life who loves me and is devoted to me. It's a miracle to me that I have survived multiple strokes. These things are miracles, but they are also within the bounds of reality. They are "food for my faith", but they are also things that people without religous belief can enjoy as well. As they should!
Why do people who believe in a higher power need to rely on fairytales such as the one above? Not only that, but the story was sent without a link to a newspaper or anything. It was just in a word document. And I bet you...people believed it. This is just as annoying as all of those emails I get around Christmas that demand that Christmas be the only winter holiday.
*sigh*
A couple of weeks back I got this email, that I could not believe people forwarded. I mean, how far does common sense have to go out of the window in the name of religion and faith? I understand that for many people faith is important, but what about just plain ole common sense?
The issue has gotten so great for me, that I haven't really been to church lately. Well, that and my health, but I'm sick of the myths, and the fact that some people just don't want to face reality. Is it that damaging to your faith that Christianity was influenced by paganism? Is it that damaging to your faith that the Gospels weren't written by the Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John?
The email I got was about this Muslim man who burned his wife alive for reading the Bible. He then proceeded to bury his wife and two kids. The kids were alive. He told the authorities that an uncle had killed the wife. Apparently there was a death in the family shortly thereafter, and when the family went to bury this member, they found the two children, one about five, and the other just an infant, still nursing, ALIVE under the sand. C'mon! Seriously!
The story goes that the little girl claimed that a man in white came and fed her, and "woke her mother up to feed her sister"...for 15 days?
Tell me how a story this sensational didn't leak out to every major news organization...the muslim media isn't that rigid that it could hide such a thing.
I believe in miracles, but I also believe in reality. It's a miracle to me that I have someone in my life who loves me and is devoted to me. It's a miracle to me that I have survived multiple strokes. These things are miracles, but they are also within the bounds of reality. They are "food for my faith", but they are also things that people without religous belief can enjoy as well. As they should!
Why do people who believe in a higher power need to rely on fairytales such as the one above? Not only that, but the story was sent without a link to a newspaper or anything. It was just in a word document. And I bet you...people believed it. This is just as annoying as all of those emails I get around Christmas that demand that Christmas be the only winter holiday.
*sigh*