j$ wrote: Literature / writing hopefully informs, inspires but also creates dialogue. There's a huge difference between discussing the points of a book and using someone else's work to tell people what the points of life are. J$
"Bang on, yo!" One of my all time favorite phrases is, "Question everything."
And with that-- My little contribution to the ongoing "joyful noise" is on the history of Christianity ... Ancient Christians had strong beliefs in magic, superstition, and talismans... There was a long, bloody road betweeen Jerusalem and Jimmy Swaggart and other great debates such as the earth being the center of the universe and "Would Jesus Wear a Rolex?"...
The gospels/scrolls were originally written in Aramaic. Different parts as they were discovered/revised/ suppressed/ destroyed (Agnostic Gospels and the Apocrypha among them) were translated into probably no less than 5 languages by distinctly different cultures (including Jewish, Greek, Arab, Egyptian). *Centuries* before they became "familiar" to most "Modern Christians" as the "King James Version" of the Bible, which, if memory serves, Sir Francis Bacon was actually the final "author"/editor of. Bacon studied a number of cultural philosophies and was involved in Freemasonry and the Knights of Templar, among other,more obscure "factions" (secret societies) of the era. Religion even within it's own structure has always had its share of inner turmoil and revision to accomodate the culture it was supposed to "support and uphold".
C. Hack makes several decent points as well, fracas and general comments on "post juvenilism" aside (Cuz I can be a "third swing retarded teen" ANY day of the week right along with the rest of ya, maybe tomorrow, even-- But for right now I'm talking about the...) mythological/ cutural references and the way that religion is used to fascilitate structure and "place" in society. (He was obviously feeling more in the mood to type than I.)
Also, while I have varying levels of "agreement" with some of the conclusions presented, I would likely be among the first to agree that there are many "similarities" among the vast numbers of creation stories, myths, legends, and religions of the world. From the time we knew enough to think, people have been trying to find ways to explain the "inexplicable", define morality, place in society, provide "structure", etc.
I *could* point out the ways that religion of any given faith has been used as "justification" of action, illustrate how greed and genocide was "rationalized" to holy "endeavors"-- Allowing the "faithful and devout" to slaughter at will, acquire the style of living to which they "would like to become accustomed", all while still being able to "sit in the front pew at church". (Modify statement to fit religion/ historical event of choice.)
Whether you're talking about the Crusades, Galileo, slavery, terrorism, etc, etc. etc... History is written/ rewritten by the conquerors. So, what’s the difference between the word of God and the word of man? Guess that all depends on who you ask, what you believe, who you’re willing to kill and what you’re willing to die for, doesn’t it?
..But enough of my grist mill fodder... Go read something...
BTW-- I kinda liked the "DaVinci Code"...fun read.
To Do Is To Be. --Socrates
To Be Is To Do. --Plato
DoBeDoBe, DoBeDo --Sinatra
I could 'see' you-- humming away (a few pill bottles on the sideboard)...But it just didn’t measure up to the insanity that is Freudian Slip...