Anonymous wrote:They know that there is no God and that their religion is a power game. They have no remorse because they don't actually believe what the little people believe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are human.
Its more than that though. Its thinking errors that both draws these people to religion and uses religion to mask their real personality.
That's not how I see it. I am a person of faith and see leaders everywhere betraying basic humanity. It's not related to religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are human.
Its more than that though. Its thinking errors that both draws these people to religion and uses religion to mask their real personality.
Anonymous wrote:Abusers realize that religious people are taught to follow authority no questions asked so they seek out a religion/church/congregation where they can thrive as an abuser.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The whole idea of "forgiveness" in Christianity (or in some brands of Christianity) has always been very unsettling to me.
[b]And yes of course, these kinds of horrific crimes occur in people of all faiths. But the idea that God/Jesus always forgives... is an extremely, extremely dangerous attitude imho.[twitter]
This right here. At least the Catholics recognize that forgiveness requires repentance and a commitment to go forth and sin no more (although many of them act like going through the rite is all it takes).
Anonymous wrote:The whole idea of "forgiveness" in Christianity (or in some brands of Christianity) has always been very unsettling to me.
[b]And yes of course, these kinds of horrific crimes occur in people of all faiths. But the idea that God/Jesus always forgives... is an extremely, extremely dangerous attitude imho.[twitter]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People do awful things to each other. It's not more or less common among religious people.
This is what I think. It just is more attention getting when it's a religious person or a religious establishment that's doing it. Religion is also a good cover for bad behavior.
Maybe. But the people committing the acts as a whole are religious whether in leadership positions or not. That means there is a link to the actual religion.
PP here. Yes - I agree with this too. I don't know, because I'm not religious and I've never done anything really awful, but I think that knowing that you'll be forgiven by the big guy upstairs allows for a lot of bad behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People do awful things to each other. It's not more or less common among religious people.
This is what I think. It just is more attention getting when it's a religious person or a religious establishment that's doing it. Religion is also a good cover for bad behavior.
Maybe. But the people committing the acts as a whole are religious whether in leadership positions or not. That means there is a link to the actual religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People do awful things to each other. It's not more or less common among religious people.
This is what I think. It just is more attention getting when it's a religious person or a religious establishment that's doing it. Religion is also a good cover for bad behavior.
Anonymous wrote:The whole idea of "forgiveness" in Christianity (or in some brands of Christianity) has always been very unsettling to me.
And yes of course, these kinds of horrific crimes occur in people of all faiths. But the idea that God/Jesus always forgives... is an extremely, extremely dangerous attitude imho.
Anonymous wrote:People do awful things to each other. It's not more or less common among religious people.
Anonymous wrote:Put people in institutional settings with positions of power over others, limit their ability to express their sexual needs in healthy ways, and add the belief that the guy is a Godly person with high morals, and you end up with molestation. See the entire history of the Catholic Church for reference.