Rick wrote:Not helping, Rip. If faith helps her or anyone else get through troubled times, then what's the harm? There isn't any. Your thoughts on there being no God are no different than her thoughts of there being one, really. Neither you nor I nor Elizabeth knows the truth on that. But we believe what we want, know and suppose is the truth. Her beliefs don't hurt you one bit, and while they don't, they may help her substantially.
steveo777 wrote:Rip, while I respect you and love you as a friend, just because you lost your faith does not mean others need to follow suit. Respecting others also means respecting their faith and right to believe in something, something that gives them peace and joy.
Please understand guys, I'm not interested in taking gratuitous pot-shots at people's individual religious believes for the fun of it. I have no desire whatsoever to take that away from people whose lives are seemingly improved by faith. But I don't feel this is one of those situations, and sometimes an intervention of sorts might actually help. I love ScaryGirl and consider her a friendly acquaintance, else I'd probably rather say nothing at all. I've read her posts for years, and feel they give the reasonable impression that her life is filled with
neither peace
nor joy -- rather, a lot of pain and fear from what I can tell, and
possibly a deficiency in personal accountability. That's no way for anybody to have to live the human experience. There is plenty of harm in faith when it stunts our ability to make good decisions and keeps us from realizing that we are much more responsible for the quality of our lives that we sometimes like to think.
Again regarding prayer, consider the case of the people I mentioned in the article:
“A jury convicted the Schaibles of involuntary manslaughter in the January 2009 death of their 2-year-old son, Kent. The boy's symptoms had included coughing, congestion, crankiness and a loss of appetite. His parents said he was eating and drinking until the last day, and they had thought he was getting better.
The Schaibles were sentenced to 10 years' probation.
At a hearing Monday, a judge told the couple they had violated the terms of their probation, noting the Schaibles had told investigators that they prayed to God to make Brandon well instead of seeking medical attention.
"You did that once, and the consequences were tragic," Philadelphia Common Pleas Judge Benjamin Lerner said, according to the Philadelphia Daily News.
Prosecutors on Monday sought to have the couple jailed, but Lerner permitted them to remain free because their seven other children had been placed in foster care.
"He feels they are a danger to their children — not to the community, but to their own children," Assistant District Attorney Joanne Pescatore, who prosecuted the couple in 2010, said Tuesday.
Herbert Schaible, 44, and his 43-year-old wife grew up in the First Century Gospel Church in northeast Philadelphia and have served as teachers there. The church's website has a sermon titled "Healing — From God or Medicine?" that quotes Bible verses purportedly forbidding Christians from visiting doctors or taking medicine.
"It is a definite sin to trust in medical help and pills; and it is real faith to trust on the Name of Jesus for healing," says the message, from last May.”Sometimes faith hurts everybody, undeniably.
My comments aren't focused on ScaryGirl's encounter with the home intruder, but rather her request for prayer -- it bothered me for her sake. I'm offering the best advice I can to help improve the life, and increase the peace and joy of someone for whom faith doesn't seem to have served very well these past few years. If she wants (or needs) to continue to believe in a god and the power of prayer, then ok... maybe start taking more of the approach that "God helps those who help themselves."
I do love ya, SG... you're a good person, and I think you have much more potential than you give yourself credit for.