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29019. anomie - 2/26/2008 7:45:36 PM

Jen, you too are blind to your own bias. Your idea of discussing Islam was to focus on extremists imams or Muslim fringe groups, and to point out certain passages of the Koran that tended to support your critique. If you discussed anything else, I missed it.

But now when others pointed to extremist Christian groups, or periods of history, or when Old Testament genocides and absurdities cited...these you describe as cliches and stereotypes.

Try as you might, you can't prove any moral superiority over Islam. In fact, Christians don't even subscribe to a personal morality of any kind. Their God is just no matter what. If you can worship the God who laid the plans for the invasion of Caanan, instructing Joshua to slaughter children, then you can worship just about anything. But then that's all cliche and stereotype to you I suppose.

29020. concerned - 2/26/2008 8:04:02 PM

If you can worship the God who laid the plans for the invasion of Caanan, instructing Joshua to slaughter children, then you can worship just about anything. But then that's all cliche and stereotype to you I suppose.

Well, first of all, as I posted, I am an agnostic.

You are hopefully aware that agnosticism is not Christianity in any form.


Secondly, Muslims *do* worship 'that' God, and one who is guilty of much nefarious wrongdoing that the Christian God isn't, besides.

29021. concerned - 2/26/2008 8:16:29 PM

Considering that Leftists wish to claim absolution for the 150,000,000 excess deaths that their political philosophy has caused during the 20th Century, simple fairness requires Left Wingers to overlook Christianity's excesses before the middle of the eighteenth century.

IAC, criticism of Christianity that relies on actions taken in its name before the Enlightenment really lack relevance in a discussion of comparative religions today.

I'm sure anomie would agree with this, presuming that he is a reasonable person.




29022. anomie - 2/26/2008 9:09:28 PM

Concerned, I applaud yuor agnosticism. I was responding to Jen on the invasion of Canaan.

You are totally whack if you think I absolve leftist of any of their atrocities. I havn't seen anybody here defend Stalin. Where are you getting that premise from?

I am a reasonable person. That's why I don't compare historical and radical Islam with modern mainstream Christianity. Various canvases of history require different brushes.

29023. concerned - 2/26/2008 9:18:16 PM

Unfortunately for your viewpoint, there are several fundamentalist Muslim regimes (Afghanistan, Iran, Saudi Arabia) in the world today, but no such thing exists wrt Christianity.

So we have:

1)forced conversion to Islam
2)dhimmitude
3)sharia
4)fundamentalist regimes
5)no human rights
6)widespread poverty
7)human slavery
8)strong anti-intellectual bias

all characteristic of Muslim countries, but not of Christian countries.

You have established exactly zero reasons as to why Islam is not more objectionable than Christianity, while I have listed quite a number of very important and irrefutable reasons why Islam *is* more objectionable than Christianity.

29024. anomie - 2/26/2008 10:01:37 PM

All of which may be precisely because of historical lessons-learned and the Western "anti-Christian" watchdog activism that guards against religious interference of all stripes. As Judith daid, we happen to have Christians knocking on our doors, and I might add sniping at our secular freedoms in this country.

I repeat, I don't defend Islam and if we confine our timeline to the present, I will agree that Islam on the whole is much more objectionable from a seclurist POV than is Christianity. But that doesn't mean we can take a watchful eye off Christianity for a moment. Some segments are straining at the bit to get our schools and politics Christianized, and force us all to participate with everything from public money to public reverence.

So by listing a few "facts", you have established very little in comparing the overall merits of the two religions. And we haven't even discussed the hideousness doctrinal issues of each one.

29025. concerned - 2/26/2008 10:23:36 PM

Well, ok. I can go along with that. By all means keep a watchful eye on Christianity.

Isn't it strange, though, that the secularists who have 'triumphed' over Christianity in Europe are beginning to admit unequal law (Sharia) to some of their selected citizens.

29026. anomie - 2/26/2008 10:27:22 PM

Not only strange, but shameful. I assume you're talking about the Archbishop of Canterbury in the UK. I hope they put a stop to it before it starts.

29027. anomie - 2/26/2008 10:28:10 PM

Not to mention dangerous and harmful to the children involved who have little choice in things.

29028. jexster - 3/16/2008 2:25:28 AM


The atheist delusion

29029. jexster - 3/16/2008 2:33:16 AM

29023

a list of lies

Thomas Hussein's ignorance of religions is absymal
But this should surprise no one. After all, he's admitted "agnostic" and so has no place discussing anyone else's faith.


Pathetic..the simpleton pulls his "knowledge" of Islam off of heretic christian hate sites. Allah only knows where his blather about Christianity comes from

what a froot loop



Pope Approves Permanent Muslim Catholic Dialogue

29030. jexster - 3/16/2008 4:03:58 AM

Credo

29031. jexster - 3/16/2008 6:10:52 PM

It's HOLY WEEK.


Tomas Luis De Victoria haunting and commonly sung at the Veneration of the Cross on Good Friday

Brokeback Mountain - O Vos Omnes




ntiphon:

O vos omnes qui transitis per viam:
attendite et videte si est dolor sicut dolor meus.

Responsory:
O vos omnes qui transitis per viam:
attendite et videte:

* Si est dolor similis sicut dolor meus.

V. Attendite, universi populi, et videte dolorem meum.

* Si est dolor similis sicut dolor meus.


Image:English.png English translation

Antiphon:

O all ye that pass by the way,
attend and see if there be any sorrow like to my sorrow.

Responsory:

O all ye that pass by the way,
attend and see:

* If there be any sorrow like to my sorrow.

V. Attend, all ye people, and see my sorrow:

* If there be any sorrow like to my sorrow.


29032. jexster - 3/16/2008 6:27:51 PM

The Reproaches of Good Friday


St. Thomas Episcopal
NyC








    Setting adapted from Tomás Luis de Victoria
    (c. 1548-1611)
    POPULE meus, quid feci tibi? aut in quo contristavi te? Responde mihi. Quia eduxi te de terra
    Aegypti, parasti crucem salvatori tuo.
    Agios o Theos! Sanctus Deus! Agios ischyros! Sanctus fortis! Agios athanatos,
    eleison imas. Sanctus immortalis, miserere nobis.

    Quia eduxi te per desertum quadraginta annis, et manna cibavi te, et introduxi
    in terram satis optimam: parasti crucem salvatori tuo.
    Agios o Theos! Sanctus Deus! Agios ischyros! Sanctus fortis! Agios athanatos,
    eleison imas. Sanctus immortalis, miserere nobis.
    Quid ultra debui facere tibi, et non feci? Ego quidem plantavi te vineam meam
    speciosissimam: et tu facta es mihi nimis amara: aceto namque sitim meam potasti:
    et lancea perforasti latus salvatori tuo.
    Agios o Theos! Sanctus Deus! Agios ischyros! Sanctus fortis! Agios athanatos,
    eleison imas. Sanctus immortalis, miserere nobis.
    Popule meus, quid feci tibi? aut in quo contristavi te? Responde mihi. (less)


O my people, what have I done to thee? or wherein have I afflicted thee? Answer me.
V. Because I led thee out of the land of Egypt, thou hast prepared a cross for thy Savior.

The two choirs then sing alternately:

O holy God!
O holy God!
O holy strong One!
O holy strong One!
O holy immortal One, have mercy upon us.
O holy immortal One, have mercy upon us.

Two cantors:

Because I led thee out through the desert forty years: and fed thee with manna, and brought thee into a land exceeding good, thou hast prepared a Cross for thy Savior.....

29033. jexster - 3/20/2008 8:24:05 PM

Good Friday Liturgy: Crux Fidelis, Vexilla Regis, and Agnus Dei

29034. jexster - 3/23/2008 6:57:47 PM

Easter Eve Benediction and Closing Hymn

29035. jexster - 3/23/2008 7:11:14 PM

Litany of the Saints

29036. judithathome - 3/26/2008 7:35:05 PM

I was just listening to an interview with this reporter about Tibet...it was on NPR, Terry Gross' Fresh Air show; she is always so good. It was rocking along and good questions were being asked and answered and I was really enjoying it. She and the reporter were talking about the Dahli Lama and I stepped out to retrieve the mail from the mail box; I came back in and heard this third person...on tape, as it turned out, not in the studio or on the phone.

This guy is some high-up Christian mucketymuck and he is telling about how when he met the Dahli Lama in person, he conversed with him for a bit about the plight of Tibet and then when he was just about to leave, he confided in the Dahli Lama that though he was a good man and doing a lot for his people, he didn't really know anything about religion because he hadn't accepted Jesus Christ as his savior and the one true God and that he would never be saved and go to heaven unless he did.

I was floored. And it made me realize that THIS is what chaps me so much about Christians...it's all fine and good for them have their faith and to believe and to one day meet up in their heaven for eternity. But they shouldn't presume to denigrate another man's faith simply because he doesn't believe as they do. It's not faith...it's not the truth...it is arrogance. And arrogance is a sin.

29037. thoughtful - 3/26/2008 8:30:06 PM

Hah! Have you ever seen the show about wife swapping? I saw it once and in it, they swapped the wives of two xtian families for 2 weeks. The first week the wife is supposed to live by the new family's rules and the 2nd week the family is supposed to live by the new wife's rules. What was interesting was that, though they were both xtian families, one was very fundamentalist evangelical, and the other was more liberal and the father had a couple of degrees in theology. Well the fundamentalist wife had the well-educated liberal father in tears because she was so hurtful to him about, yeah he knows a lot of book learning, but he knows nothing about true xtian ways. She also had no compassion or guilt or any sense of responsibility for having hurt him so badly. Onward xtian soldier.

In the fundamentalist family, rather than have his daughter exposed to the ideas of the liberal mother...about how it was ok for the daughter to consider having career interests (Shocking!!!) he actually took the daughter away from the house and her influences. When the liberal mother showed the kids how brainwashed they were by the father, he had a long talk with the kids explaining to them that he wasn't brainwashing them, but protecting them from outside influences....though he had just admitted to the liberal mother that he was in fact brainwashing them and saw no problem with that. amazing.

29038. judithathome - 3/28/2008 3:10:52 PM

I missed that one but I watch that show occasionally. If I see it listed in rerun, I'll definitely watch it.

I love that show exactly for the reasons you mentioned...how everyone goes into it wanting to "share their ways" but usually end up being rigid and dogmatic...the worst was that heavey-set lady called the God Warrior. She was loony.

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