ArchivedHoly Crusades...Very well. In all honesty, christian persecution is, IMO, deserved under the universal law of reciprocity. Besides, I thought it was some kind of badge of honor to be persecuted for your faith. Why complain if persecution is such a glorifying opportunity? As for all your other comments, I never said inhibiting one's right to worship in the way they choose is wrong; again, your attributing to me ideas that are not mine. I simply pointed out that your original statement was in error by making it appear that all a christian student has to do is wear certain symbols on their shirts and they're out of school. Such a punishment is rarely meted out and is not, IMO, a deserved penalty for believing a particular faith. Persecutors are wrong in that there is some assumed superiority involved in their thinking. The persecutor believes that they have some right - either god-given, status-given, or hierarchical - to force others into compliance with themselves. If a christian does it to a pagan or vice-versa, it is wrong. Which means, BTW, that you are wrong in your "i-don't-care" attitude towards persecution of pagans. One final thought: I'm trying to refrain from laughing hysterically at the inaneness of this statement. The fact that a person does not believe in or worship your god does not imply immorality. I know of Buddhists, Pagans, and other non-chrisitians whose morals are equal or more defined by biblical standards than most christians I've met (and I've met plenty of christians in my time). Your comment is merely a statement of pride: "Look at how moral I am because I am a christian. It makes others feel so inferior that they pick on me." Again: bunk, bull, and baloney. |
🌈Pride🌈 goeth before Destruction
When 🌈Pride🌈 cometh, then cometh Shame