Tuesday, January 19, 2010

On christian suppression of dissent

Christian has had a huge effect on the world we live in. Jesus message was revolutionary, and it's ideas have been influential western culture. Being brought up christian I have an appreciation of many of the ideas within christianity. But I also have an awareness that all is not right within the christian movement. In recent years I have been increasingly concerned with how the modern christian movement has a tendency to suppress disagreement. It includes the way christians treat non-christians, and also the way christians treat their own mind, suppressing any questions they might have.

I'm talking about doctrine and theology, as well as subcultural attitudes. In terms of doctrines, doctrines such as the notion that church dogma is from God, and therefore questioning it, and using your own mind is in essence an act of rebellion. Merely holding a view that differs from 'what God has ordained', is sinful, and requires repentance. And if you aren't repentant, there is the doctrine of hell; that all those who are outside the church are destined to burn in eternal torment. Put these together, and and there is the threat; agree with us, or face the consequences. This means christians can be scared to ask questions, not wanting to be a rebel against God. At the same time, this means christians can treat non-believers with contempt, as by holding a different view, they must be in active rebellion against the Lord.

In terms of sub-culture, it can be a little more subtle (and often overlapping with theology). There is the separation of christians and non-christians, often fueled by christian disapproval of non-christian activities. Combined with a tendency for christians to marry only christians, this means christians are often 'locked into' christian subcultures, making it difficult for them to ever question the status quo, and making life outside of the subculture seem foreign and off-putting should anyone ever consider leaving christianity. And then again, there is the mixture of sadness / betrayal / contempt that christians express towards those who are on the outside, for those who refuse to accept christianity.

What's my problem with it? Well, I have a number of reasons, which I have already hinted at. First, it can cause christians to treat non-christians badly, by treating them as rebellious for simply holding a different view. Especially christians who have 'drifted away', who are viewed with much sadness. Second, it can cause christians themselves a lot of unnecessary difficulty when going through life, it requires them to hold onto views that they may feel aren't quite right, which can create an internal conflict. It also causes fear and worry if they question, and causes sadness and betrayal if anyone they know question and decide to become non-christian. Thirdly, it gets in the way of the truth, as christians are required to put their better judgment aside and accept whatever doctrine a particular church teaches. So christians can get in the habit of accepting things without proper evidence, and can become obsessed with what is right or wrong, and fail to make decisions based on what is best.

I think I need to unpack this idea a little more, but for now I'm going to leave this for your comments. Hopefully you understand, at least in broad terms, what I'm getting at when I talk about the christian suppression of dissent. In further posts, I hope to post more about the assassination of reason, to post an answer to the objection that if God commands it we should follow anyway, and to post about where this comes from, and how this fits with what Jesus says. We'll see how things go.

In the meantime, what are your thoughts? Am I overly critical of christianity (bear in mind this post is a criticism of one aspect of christianity, so it's going to be critical :)? Can you think of other examples of suppression of dissent? Counter-examples?

Thursday, January 7, 2010

2009

Time to copy what others are doing!

What did you do in 2009 that you’d never done before?
Moved cities, made new friends, went on man-runs (with a man-friend), found a wine I appreciate, on another occasion - drunk more that I've ever drunk before (but still no hangover)

Did you keep your new year’s resolutions, and will you make more for the next year?
Probably? Most of my resolutions are continuations of what I want to change in life in general, so they often fade into my general self-improvement for the year.
And yes. I've made 4. My subconscious made 1. To not eat at McDonalds. Not sure what's going on down there, but you gotta respect the subconscious.

Did anyone close to you give birth?
I was going to put 'my brother'. But then I realized his wife did, and gave birth to Josh, who is an awesome wee guy.

Did anyone close to you die?
Thankfully not

What countries did you visit?
None

What would you like to have in 2010 that you lacked in 2009?
One of my resolutions is to have less stuff, so physically, not much really. Though a partner would be nice. But that implies ownership? So not that either.

What dates from 2009 will remain etched in your memory, and why?
First day of med school?

What was your biggest achievement of the year?
Can't really think of one big one. I achieved lots of little things? Adapting to second year student culture all over again, passing med school, creating a number of cocktails, learning some vegeterian recipes...

What was your biggest failure of the year?
Being too nice and paying too much attention to percieved social protocol

Did you suffer illness or injury?
Nothing major

What was the best thing you bought?
42 Below Feijoa Vodka (I'm wondering if it's starting to sound like I'm a alcoholic...)

Whose behaviour merited celebration?
Friends, new and old. Particularly those taking steps to extend themselves, facing up to challenges and the like. And particularly those who are just lovely and nice.

Whose behaviour made you appalled and depressed?
People unable to appreciate the world outside of their paradigms. Not really appalled or depressed by them, but saddened.

Where did most of your money go?
Mostly to Necessities. Some on entertainment (new computer, movies, eating out, etc...)

What did you get really, really, really excited about?
Holidays! Moving into a new flat! Looking forward to moving to another city and a hospital in 2011!
(ok, I'm pretty sure most of that is just excited about, or really excited about. really really really excited about only happens once a decade?)

What song will always remind of you of 2009?
The first track of viva la vida by coldplay. Because I played it when driving down, and I've kinda associated it with new beginnings.

Compared to this time last year, are you:
a) happier or sadder?
Probably experienced about the same amount of happiness and sadness as usual, but emotions are come and go. Overall I'd say more content.
b) fatter or thinner?
Unsure. About the same. I don't weigh myself regularly
c) richer or poorer?
In terms of liquid assets, probably poorer. In terms of total net worth, hopefully slightly richer. In terms of life, far richer

What do you wish you’d done more of?
Non-last minute Studying. Being friendly to randoms.

What do you wish you’d done less of?
Procrastinating (internets, TV). Staying up late doing nothing because I didn't want to go to bed.

How did you spend Christmas?
Relaxing with the family in the sounds.

Did you fall in love in 2009?
I had a "crush" on a few people here and there, but nah, nothing solid eventuated.

What was your favourite TV programme?
Eek? Flight of the conchords?

Do you hate anyone now that you didn’t hate this time last year?
I hate a lot of events, trends, movements, but not people

What was the best book you read?
None really stand out (mosto f the books I read were text books...)

What was your greatest musical discovery?
Sound tracks!

What did you want and get?
A life with lots of cool friends in an strange and unfriendly city. (ok, it isn't strange and unfriendly, it just felt like that moving there)

What did you want and not get?
A solution to my singleness (not necessarily a girlfriend).

What was your favourite film of this year?
Maybe district 9.

What did you do on your birthday and how old did you turn?
I got older, and had a party, along with a leaving party.

What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?
If I'd been completely honest about everything, and everyone had just accepted it, and said, good on you for that. Ah well, next year huh?

How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2009?
For most of the year - Studenty but smart.
For the end of the year - Wannabe Doctor :P

What kept you sane?
Being able to withdraw, whether running or biking, whether listening to music, whether writing or dreaming, but to go away and chew things over, and to remind myself of my purpose.

Which celebrity/public figure did you fancy the most?
I don't know, they're all the same :P

What political issue stirred you the most?
Perhaps gay marriage in california? Politics doesn't really stir me up...

Who did you miss?
All my chch friends when I went to dunedin. And then all my dunedin friends when I went to chch. And then all my other friends when I was reminded of them. So a lot of missing in 2009 I guess.

Who was the best new person you met?
I guess my nephew josh who's only a baby is probably the best at being new. (ha ha...)
Aside from that, I met a lot of people, and they were all the best at their own things. Can't really nominate one person...

Quote a song lyric that sums up your year.
... it's not the easy thing, the only thing that you can bring, is all that you can't leave behind...