Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much or how little one follows their inhereted or chosen religion is their private matter not anyone else's business. How helpful, kind and just they are in their dealings with others is the only measure which matters to fellow humans.
and you can be helpful and kind without religion.
Anonymous wrote:How much or how little one follows their inhereted or chosen religion is their private matter not anyone else's business. How helpful, kind and just they are in their dealings with others is the only measure which matters to fellow humans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not sure if other religions also use the described practicing, but I know bother Muslims and Christians who refer to themselves as a practicing Muslim or practicing Christian. To me that means that you are actively trying to live out the teachings of your faith vs it being a religion you were born into / raised in / identify with.
I have seen quite a few examples recently of people saying I am a practicing X but then they are not at all living in a way that would indicate they are trying to follow the teachings / texts of their faith. And not hiding that. So I am curious what people understand practicing Muslim / Christian to be and if you use that term, do you openly not follow the teachings of your faith and if so how do you rationalize these two things?
Practicing means ones who try. They don't claim to be perfect but like to practice and hope to do better.
Anonymous wrote:Have you heard of MAGA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would consider a Muslim to be practicing if they:
- Pray their daily prayers regularly
- Fast during Ramadan
- Abstain from drinking alcohol, eating pork, and sexual relations outside of marriage
That's kind of the minimum to me. But I know people have their own personal meanings of if they consider themselves practicing or not.
You would but someone might take bribes to do injustice favors or keeps orphan's money or beats his kids or watches porn or give/take interest from bank so is he really practicing? On other hand someone may not do all of that but tries to give charity or be kind to others because Allah says so. Are they not practicing?
Yes, covering all basics makes one a good believer but not necessarily a perfect believer. Just like not covering makes one an imperfect believer but still a practicing one. Religion is between human and God, not between two humans. If anyone says they are Muslim, who are you to judge, that's for Allah to do on judgement. Instead of judging and labeling others, you are better off focusing on your own conduct.
Anonymous wrote:I would consider a Muslim to be practicing if they:
- Pray their daily prayers regularly
- Fast during Ramadan
- Abstain from drinking alcohol, eating pork, and sexual relations outside of marriage
That's kind of the minimum to me. But I know people have their own personal meanings of if they consider themselves practicing or not.
Anonymous wrote:Have you heard of MAGA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you heard of MAGA?
Yes, but I haven't heard of a practicing MAGA.
Sure you have they wear their crosses go to church then watch child porn, sexually abuse kids. Or they are a preacher or pastor, priest, minister doing the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you heard of MAGA?
Yes, but I haven't heard of a practicing MAGA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you heard of MAGA?
Is no topic excluded from your politics obsessed vitriol? You need Jesus!
Maybe they need a less crazy President. Even a sane Republican would do. There used to be some.
Anonymous wrote:I am not sure if other religions also use the described practicing, but I know bother Muslims and Christians who refer to themselves as a practicing Muslim or practicing Christian. To me that means that you are actively trying to live out the teachings of your faith vs it being a religion you were born into / raised in / identify with.
I have seen quite a few examples recently of people saying I am a practicing X but then they are not at all living in a way that would indicate they are trying to follow the teachings / texts of their faith. And not hiding that. So I am curious what people understand practicing Muslim / Christian to be and if you use that term, do you openly not follow the teachings of your faith and if so how do you rationalize these two things?
Anonymous wrote:I would consider a Muslim to be practicing if they:
- Pray their daily prayers regularly
- Fast during Ramadan
- Abstain from drinking alcohol, eating pork, and sexual relations outside of marriage
That's kind of the minimum to me. But I know people have their own personal meanings of if they consider themselves practicing or not.