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Reply to "No more Horus and Mithras please"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]There’s at least one atheist poster and one Christian poster who can’t seem to go of the mythological Horus and Mithras. Please give it up. It doesn’t matter if there’s anything to them being precedents to Jesus or not. Believers don’t rely on evidence; they rely on faith. If they do weigh evidence about religion, they will eventually come out with their faith grown stronger, because that’s how it works with faith. If faith is deep, it will ultimately win out over any doubts, no matter how compelling the common sense or empirical evidence pointing away from faith claims. This is not to say that people with true religious faith are not logical or intelligent. Some are highly educated, hold demanding jobs and have studied religion in depth. In many denominations, doubt itself is a not a bad thing and people are encouraged to let themselves doubt when questions arise. If a person investigates and weighs the evidence – not just about Horus and Mithras – but any challenge to their faith, and ultimately decides against faith, it just means their faith wasn’t strong enough. People who don’t lose their faith should not revile those who do. They should pity them and pray for them. If they change their minds before they die, Christianity still promises them eternal life. [/quote] I agree with the idea that believers should question their faith constantly, and that believers should meet any serious challenge with equally serious investigation. The thing is, Horus and Mithras are a joke. They don't fall into the category of serious challenges to faith. I'm one of the over-educated history majors who sees them as more of an amusement. Trust me when I say that I read very widely, and I'm well aware of legitimate challenges to my particular faith and to the idea of God in general. H&M don't come anywhere close to being serious challenges, or to being the "evidence" the HM poster is always claiming, because as a historical matter the whole argument is wrong on the historical facts. The HM argument seems reasonable only to people who know almost nothing about religion or history, who don't know enough to ask the more provoking questions, and who are happy to go with something that's obviously based on bad facts. That's what makes HM so amusing to this history major who welcomes a good history discussion, with bonus points for the ludicrous aspect.[/quote]
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