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I can't understand how you can hold all those varying world views and have them all mesh together somehow. 
NH Baritone wrote:So, why are you NOT a Jain? Or a Buddhist? Or a Baha'i?
Emery wrote:Welcome Mitchell. I read those Peck books in the 90s, and though I really liked the Road Less Travelled, he started to lose me on the demon possession books. But I find it intriguing, because he seems to have the credentials, and if there is anything to the demon possession thing, Peck is where I'd start. I vaguely remember what Different Drum was about: did he start with the possession there, or was it with Children of the Lie?
Hope you enjoy the forum, we definitely need more Christians here!

whoosanightowl wrote:Wow, very interesting post. It's going to be difficult to nail you down to anything isn't it?!I can't understand how you can hold all those varying world views and have them all mesh together somehow.
Maybe you could do a podcast with Emery and Scott and/or Tony one of these days, now that would be fun!
Welcome to the forum!
Sue

mitchellmckain wrote:NH Baritone wrote:So, why are you NOT a Jain? Or a Buddhist? Or a Baha'i?
My parents were both psychology majors and my faher was active in the American communist movement, to the point of being blacklisted from his teaching profession and taking me to visit Black Panther headquarters when I was a child. I did have some early encounters with Buddhism in literature as a child, but I only became aware of the Bahai much later in order to make any investigation as to what they were all about, and I am still very unclear about what Jainism is like. For whatever reason I found inspiration in the writings and mythology of Christianity and thus it became a language in which I could express my own discoveries on my own spiritual exploration and journey.
So.... while I may not have been raised Christian, I was born in the United States which is immersed in a culture and history that is heavily influenced by Christianity. For example, I really liked the books of C. S. Lewis, with his effort to convey Christian ideas under the cover of fantasy and science fiction. Anyway, I have every reason to believe that there are hidden premises and presumptions riddling our language, entertainment and academic studies that ultimate derive from a Christian world view that we have inherited from the middle ages. Such things are not shed very quickly even when effort is made to intentionally do so.
It seems like a rational line of argument to say that if you were born over there somewhere then it is highly unlikely that you would be a Christian. But I deny that this is rational in any way at all. Anyone born over there simply isn't me and that is all there is too it, for I do not believe in this mythology of pre-existent souls. I know it seems kind of arbitrary that so much of what we are is a product of such coincidences such as where we are born, but coincidence or not it is who and what we are. You might as well get all excited about the unfairness of cows being born a cow and worms being born a worm. You may see this as a good argument against relgion but I only see it as a good argument for pluralism.

NH Baritone wrote:Then perhaps you had better define your terms when you describe yourself as "a fairly orthodox protestant evangelical christian." This little essay (along with most of your writing here) falls outside the standard usage of those words. You essentially are saying you're a Christian by accident ... which hardly resonates with the ring of "The Good News."
NH Baritone wrote:By the way, why did you refer to your dad's communist leanings? I don't deny that it offers an interesting element of background, but you somehow thought it relevant to my question, and I'm confused as to why.

mitchellmckain wrote:NH Baritone wrote:Then perhaps you had better define your terms when you describe yourself as "a fairly orthodox protestant evangelical christian." This little essay (along with most of your writing here) falls outside the standard usage of those words. You essentially are saying you're a Christian by accident ... which hardly resonates with the ring of "The Good News."
I do not accept the validity of your paraphrase. I was trying to answer a vague question as best I could comprehend what it is that you were trying to get at. I am sorry that you did not find it informative or helpful. I certainly don't find your reply here to be helpful at explaining what you are after. Do you want me to preach "The Good News"? Are you soliciting information or hunting for an attack strategy?
NH Baritone wrote:By the way, why did you refer to your dad's communist leanings? I don't deny that it offers an interesting element of background, but you somehow thought it relevant to my question, and I'm confused as to why.
I am not debating you. And I found your question to be far to vague to really judge what might be relevant. Ok let's try this: I will ask you a similar question, and perhaps your answer will give me an idea of what you mean by your question.
Why are you not a fan of the professional go player Rin Kaiho?
Lets take care of the most likely answer that I can think of, right away. If your answer to the above question is something like, "I have no idea what your are talking about", or "I don't even know who that is". Then I will be glad to answer to your quetion on the same level, which is that I am far less familiar with those relgions.

mitchellmckain wrote:Why are you not a fan of the professional go player Rin Kaiho?

darkumbra wrote:mitchellmckain wrote:Why are you not a fan of the professional go player Rin Kaiho?
Do you play Go? I have three different boards, several sets of stones. All glass unfortunately. But... a bookshelf of about 30 Go books, several of his books included. I wish I had more time to devote to the game.
NH Baritone wrote:mitchellmckain wrote:I do not accept the validity of your paraphrase. I was trying to answer a vague question as best I could comprehend what it is that you were trying to get at. I am sorry that you did not find it informative or helpful. I certainly don't find your reply here to be helpful at explaining what you are after. Do you want me to preach "The Good News"? Are you soliciting information or hunting for an attack strategy?
Hmm ... I debated adding my last two sentences. Apparently I chose wrong. Sorry to have pricked your tender spot.
NH Baritone wrote:The point (that I apparently tread all over) was contained in the first sentence: How do you see yourself fitting into the box defined by the words: "a fairly orthodox protestant evangelical christian"?
So, the question still sits above, if you want to answer it.
NH Baritone wrote:I am far less familiar with those relgions.
Your words in my mouth are dead on. I didn't even know that Go had a professional level of play.
But I am familiar with golf (my dad & granddad played). I also understand American football, baseball, hockey, basketball, soccer, figure skating, poker and mumbletypeg. Knowing the ins-&-outs of a sport, however, hardly equates with a life-time of commitment to it, fashioning my life after the heroes of the game, or dedicating almost every Sunday morning and a sizable chunk of my salary to its spread.
NH Baritone wrote:In other words, I grew up in America, but I'm not a sports fan nor a Christian. You, in contrast, are a fan of religion.
NH Baritone wrote:So far you've also defined yourself outside of Catholicism & Fundamentalism, even though you likely grew up around those influences, as well. I'm guessing you're aligning yourself with Francis Collins, whose conversion to Christianity still baffles me, except that it seems to meet a need for social connection.
wikipedia wrote:Collins stated that God is the explanation of those features of the universe that science finds difficult to explain (such as the values of certain physical constants favoring life),
wikipedia wrote:In reviewing The Dawkins Delusion?: Atheist Fundamentalism and the Denial of the Divine by Alister McGrath, Collins says "Addressing the conclusions of The God Delusion point by point with the devastating insight of a molecular biologist turned theologian, Alister McGrath dismantles the argument that science should lead to atheism, and demonstrates instead that Dawkins has abandoned his much-cherished rationality to embrace an embittered manifesto of dogmatic atheist fundamentalism."
wikipedia wrote:Collins remains firm in his rejection of Intelligent Design, and for this reason was not asked to participate in the 2008 documentary Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed, which tries, among other things, to draw a direct link between evolution and atheism. Walt Ruloff, a producer for the film, claimed that Collins was "toeing the party line" by rejecting Intelligent Design, which Collins called "just ludicrous."
wikipedia wrote:In 2009, Collins founded The BioLogos Foundation to "contribute to the public voice that represents the harmony of science and faith." He is currently serving as the foundation's president.
wikipedia wrote:BioLogos rests on the following premises:
1. The universe was created by God, approximately 14 billion years ago.
2. The properties of the universe appear to have been precisely tuned for life.
3. While the precise mechanism of the origin of life on earth remains unknown, it is possible that the development of living organisms was part of God's original creation plan.
4. Once life began, no special further interventions by God were required.
5. Humans are part of this process, sharing a common ancestor with the great apes.
6. Humans are unique in ways that defy evolutionary explanations and point to our spiritual nature. This includes the existence of the knowledge of right and wrong and the search for God.

mitchellmckain wrote: that we have an inheritance which is completely seperate from the biological one, an inheritiance of the mind transmitted not by DNA but by human communication and it is this which truly makes us human.
mitchellmckain wrote:I am certainly open to any more specific questions that you can think of.
mitchellmckain wrote:I stumbled onto this site searching for a forum devoted to the discussion of the ideas of Scott Peck, you know the author of "The Road Less Traveled".
mitchellmckain wrote:And yet for all that you will find that am a fairly orthodox protestant evangelical christian -- not fundamentialist by any means of course, but I am a trinitarian christian.

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