irina wrote:We all need a core of security in a big and scary world. We need something that is bigger and more powerful than us. Religion fills this void. So can superstition. I'm a convert to Catholicism. I have lived with Muslims. Faith enriches life but there cannot be only one right religion. I am a conservative political writer but I have liberal Democrat friends who share my ideas about morals, poverty, etc. We disagree about how to make these things happen.
I believe God can do anything and that science proves how truly great is God. I have fundamentalist friends who limit God to the 6000 year old earth idea. We had a volcano explode in the northwest, Mt. St. Helens in 1980. My fundamentalist friends were thrilled that scientists found wood petrifying (petrified wood) within a few years of the eruption. This proves it doesn't take billions of years to get things done on earth.
As far as pro-life or not, in the US that discussion is becoming politically perverted beyond recognition. My biggest disgust is that it is always "pro-choice" or "pro-life" but no one is pushing the idea that before that point is reached, everything should be done to prevent the need for a horrible "choice". Sexual activity without moral restraint is encouraged all across society. Meanwhile ObamaCare thinks it can "prevent" chronic diseases through various draconian measures like limiting the size of soda people can buy! Nobody dares speak of REALLY trying to prevent unwanted pregnancy! Unfortunately "pro-choice" has become big business.
True, and I don't want the discussion to deteriorate into religion/politics...My points were that we hold beliefs that even given an overwhelming amount of good evidence against, we cling to like a life raft. I spent my whole life in a conservative Baptist home, with Christian parents who strongly believe in Noah's Ark and Adam and Eve. I spent 3 years researching the validity of evolution and an old earth, and had to finally admit, after months of agonizing, that they were factual. I did change a core belief, but it was very, very hard. I have seen people in this forum flip-flop from Lizzie did it, to Lizzie didn't (or vice versa) but usually they held no strong opinion to begin with. Those of us posting currently will almost certainly never switch our opinion of guilt/innocence, we all seem to hold very strongly to it. Actually, to change opinion is the mark of mature reasoning and open-mindedness.