Wednesday 21 September 2011

Origins and sources of religion?

Religion is primarily a search for security and not a search for truth. Religion is what we so often use to bank the fires of our anxiety.A rational examination of the origins and sources of religion, as well as the benefits and disadvantages of religion, is unlikely to change the mind of anyone who is afraid to examine these concepts objectively.

People who approach the subject of religion with trepidation or who cannot distinguish between reality and superstition, find it difficult to apply logic to their thought processes. It is much easier to belief in miracles and pseudo-science than to acquire facts and engage in incisive, rational thought.

We can observe many members of society who appear to be intelligent and rational in the pursuit of their daily life. However, on Sundays they go to their church or temple. There they participate in incomprehensible and irrational rituals involving magic, prayer and other activities demeaning to their rational minds. Their rational mind tells them that a god does not exist and yet, there they sit and pray to him.

It has been suggested that religious people compartmentalize their thought processes in order to avoid otherwise inevitable and destructive conflicts. In this manner, rational and irrational thought processes can coexist in separate, locked compartments of the brain without connectivity. Yet, one wonders if there is some inevitable leakage from the irrational to the rational compartment, surreptitiously contaminating rationality.

Even some bright people may feel too frightened to face life without the consolations of a religion, cult or sect. Their upbringing has imbued in them the belief that it is safer not to subject the teachings of one鈥檚 church or temple or mosque to close scrutiny. Furthermore, becoming an agnostic or atheist can cut one off from the comfort and companionship of co-believers in a religion. This potentially damaging consequence of doubting one鈥檚 belief system is a strong deterrent to questioning deeply imbedded religious beliefs.

Religion may also satisfy an irrational human need for cosmic significance. Some persons yearn to be more than the grain of sand in the vastness of the universe that man really is. As long as men and women feel week and insignificant in the face of awe-inspiring natural forces, logic will not be as important as religion and man will prefer the sanctuary of imaginary, all-powerful beings.



Thus, people tend to associate in communities of like-minded people. Believers restrict their circle of friend and family to other believers. They surround themselves with mirror images of themselves.

If people wear blinders successfully, then the young and na茂ve among them hear nothing but the desired belief. No reputable person in his or her sphere of life ever disagrees with or objects to the tenets of their common belief system. As time goes on, people in a mentally incestuous society consider it normal that all seemingly intelligent people believe as the community believes.

When a believer encounters non-believers, the shock may be great. The believer asks, %26quot;How can they not believe? Doesn鈥檛 everyone believe?%26quot; The believing community usually provides a convenient answer to that question: The non-believers are evil or they are possessed by an evil power. If you hang around them enough it might be contagious.

As a result, the believer becomes paranoid and afraid of non-believers, because he fails to understand that non-believers do not need to believe in anything. Non-believers rely on reason, logic and the factual evidence of the real world.Instead, the believer sees non-believers as abnormal and undesirable. Thus, religious belief maintains itself through self-affirmation, insulation and demonization of non-believers.

It is interesting to note that the degree of involvement with the supernatural, including religion, is directly proportional to the degree of factual knowledge available to a person



ex-muslim.......young atheist!
Origins and sources of religion?
religion was originally prompted by man's fear of death, and from that devising a way to attain some measure of control and interaction with the forces of the natural world.

The %26quot;you must join our tradition or die%26quot; is an idea predominant in the %26quot;Big 4%26quot; Original Buddhism(which did a whole lot of evangelizing and coercion in the beginning) and Judaism, Christianity, and Islam(Chronological order). Some other traditions insist on conversion but they are few. most traditions outside the %26quot;Big 4%26quot; actually feel that their traditions belong to them and if you are not born of that group the traditions can't apply to you. There is sometimes the idea that if you are not of our gods you don't count and we can kill you, but that idea is kind of fading these days.
Origins and sources of religion?
JESUS!
woah woah woah



tl;dr
Was there a question in there?
Christianity was an attempt by the I AM 12-Star Nation to introduce technology on Earth.



My understanding is that the Vedas, Hermetics, and Kabalah were founded by aliens from the Sirian and Lemurian Solar-System.



Within the next two decades, contact with alien worlds will become main-stream.
One day you'll realize that your opinion(they was you see things) holds no matter against the facts(the way things really are.) Until then, read the Bible.
WHY MANY DOUBT

That Religion Can Unite Mankind: http://www.watchtower.org/e/20050101/art鈥?/a>



Religion

What Good Does It Do?: http://www.watchtower.org/e/20060901/art鈥?/a>



i think you'll be interested in these article.
Well - religion might be this or that now - but where it started is terribly interesting (and, of course, just guesses). But one guy theorizes that back in the 3rd and 4th Millennium, BCE, mankind had a different sort of %26quot;consciousness%26quot; - and the echoes of that 'consciousness' are what is built into our bible.



The book is %26quot;The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind%26quot; - by Julian Jaynes - there's used copies on Amazon. Probably one of the most interesting things I ever read. If you can't handle the philosophy part at the beginning, skip ahead until you hit Babylonian artifacts! Oh man - what he says is so amazing. Not sure if any of it is true - but it's beautiful stuff. I read through the book 3 times.