It's a very interesting question, and interesting thread to read through.
It sounds like a lot of people here have been exposed to the "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" (Johnathan Edwards) sort of Christianity. And some have found their way around that to more of the core of Christianity.
I think the hateful / judgmental type of Christianity is certainly alive and well. But that's not the only type that exists. More and more, I see Christian churches across all the sub-types being leaders in their communities in the space of tolerance and acceptance.
We have longtime family friends who are devout Catholics, and two of their three children have come out as gay or trans. And they (the kids) feel very comfortable going to church still, because the priests both here and in London (where they ended up) are totally accepting, caring individuals.
Speaking personally, I think autistic masking played a huge role in my early experience with Christianity. My parents brought me to church, I learned all the stuff. I didn't even think about it. I played along, because I was doing that in every other social aspect of my life.
And then I encountered Buddhism through a Japanese tutor, and self-acceptance (which was definitely NOT taught to me in church). And at the same time I was doing loving-kindness compassion meditations, I was reading Jesus' words. And I realised the two were teaching exactly the same thing. It's just that the churches had all decided to centre on the "genocide is fine if we convince ourselves that God commands it" sort of Old Testament brutality, and ignore Christ's actual teachings.
Anyway, very long story as short as possible: I act on Christ's teachings about tolerance, patience, not condemning, caring for all people. I personally throw out anything hateful in the scriptures as something some religious leader added to justify themselves, and I feel sad so many people have encountered that in mainstream Christianity. Because that's so opposite to what Christ was teaching.
And I hope there's some bright future after this life, but I don't know that -- no one's shown me a photo album of whatever comes after. I have SO many unanswered questions. But I keep looking and keep my head open to all possibilities.
It sounds like a lot of people here have been exposed to the "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" (Johnathan Edwards) sort of Christianity. And some have found their way around that to more of the core of Christianity.
I think the hateful / judgmental type of Christianity is certainly alive and well. But that's not the only type that exists. More and more, I see Christian churches across all the sub-types being leaders in their communities in the space of tolerance and acceptance.
We have longtime family friends who are devout Catholics, and two of their three children have come out as gay or trans. And they (the kids) feel very comfortable going to church still, because the priests both here and in London (where they ended up) are totally accepting, caring individuals.
Speaking personally, I think autistic masking played a huge role in my early experience with Christianity. My parents brought me to church, I learned all the stuff. I didn't even think about it. I played along, because I was doing that in every other social aspect of my life.
And then I encountered Buddhism through a Japanese tutor, and self-acceptance (which was definitely NOT taught to me in church). And at the same time I was doing loving-kindness compassion meditations, I was reading Jesus' words. And I realised the two were teaching exactly the same thing. It's just that the churches had all decided to centre on the "genocide is fine if we convince ourselves that God commands it" sort of Old Testament brutality, and ignore Christ's actual teachings.
Anyway, very long story as short as possible: I act on Christ's teachings about tolerance, patience, not condemning, caring for all people. I personally throw out anything hateful in the scriptures as something some religious leader added to justify themselves, and I feel sad so many people have encountered that in mainstream Christianity. Because that's so opposite to what Christ was teaching.
And I hope there's some bright future after this life, but I don't know that -- no one's shown me a photo album of whatever comes after. I have SO many unanswered questions. But I keep looking and keep my head open to all possibilities.
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