KrazyJeeper said:
Much like the victors of war write the history.
True! And Christians were victors more often then not, so if that statement were true (and I agree that it is) then academia should be Western/Christian biased (which it is) This is why Western Civ is a requirement, but Islamic History, Eastern Civ, etc is not. It's ethno-centric no doubt about it.
Dekies said:
The history of religion in college/school would be from a state/religion point of view; also from my experience the instructors are often very biased in their selection of what history books they use (prefer/bias). If someone is REALLY interested in the history of “religion†study it on your own. Just my personal experience.
But in your original post you said:
Dekies said:
So, you invited me look into history with that statement. When I did, you disagreed with the info, and all of a sudden history's "biased"... and that if you REALLY want to study the history of religion you should "study it on your own."
It seems that whenever someone disagrees with a particular historical take, the "History is biased" angle comes out. But those very same people site history as springboard to back an arguement.
And again, while I agree that it's subjective, you still need to show me something that will "hold up in court" so to speak. Because even more subjective, is your personal opinion of what history was.
Studying it on your own isn't the most objective way to discover things. One's individual biases are just as active and perhaps more so. Atleast a textbook has millions of readers both Religious and non, to scrutinize it's writings. And, Anthropologically you can support or refute, much of history, and thus rewriting it. Unfortunatley, humans aren't perfect and bias will always play a part. I could use the same arguement of bias to suggest your angle is refutable. After all, I have no emotional investment in believing which belief system- be it Christian, muslim, jewish- is the correct one.
Now then, I want to clarify,
When I made the statement: "Catholicism WAS christianity from around 107 AD on.." I meant that in the sense that - they were the "Big player" on the christianity block, and most ot he doctrine used today survived as a result of their rise to power.
Similar to saying: "Jordan WAS the NBA in the 90's" ... That statement doesn't literally mean that Jordan WAS the NBA. There were other players as I recall, but it makes the point that he was the reason a lot of folks even watched basketball in the 90's.
“Catholicism WAS christianity from around 107 AD on†NO! catholicism is/was/will never be what Christ taught.
Irrelevent, and I wasn't refuting this. But modern nondenomination Christianity never is/was/will be what Christ taught either. I know it makes people feel warm and fuzzy inside to think so, but I'm sure most Christians would agree that much of the teachings have been ba$tardized over the years.
The point I was making was that the actual nondenom Christian religion of the time of Christ did NOT survive as a separate entity of Catholicism, or Orthodox etc. This was what I'd need you to show me proof of, to make me believe that modern nondenom Christianity is the same as what was around during the time of Christ. Otherwise, it's someone's interpretation of those teachings.
I’m coming from a point of view of what is the actual technical definition of Christianity/Christian. Lets just use definition of the American Heritage® Dictionary:
n.
1. One who professes belief in Jesus as Christ or follows the religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus.
2. One who lives according to the teachings of Jesus.
I agree 100%. I wasn't refuting this.
Remember, my response was due to your comment on Terrymason's post, who's statement you critiqued: (see earlier in thread)
Terrymason said:
Remember, Islam started ~700 years after Christianity, so they are still developing. Now, ask yourself what Christian people / leaders would have done if you published cartoons of the pope back in the 1300's. They'd have tried you as a heritic and burned you.
He was generalizing in the very same sense that you are defining Christians. So, your definition supports his statement, and isn't in line with your response:
Dekies said:
You are mixing christianity and catholicism , not the same. But I agree that catholicism used (dark ages) the same techniques that the muslims are using today, kill. The history is there...
The history IS there, but evidentally it's biased.
My point was, he was talking about all Christians as an entire body of belief. Those who believe in "Jesus as Christ or follows the religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus." --just as your definition says. So, that actually clarifies my point.
Clearly you wanted to seperate Christians from Catholics, and that's fine (although is seemed as if you were suggesting there was something wrong with Catholicisim). But he wasn't talking about nondenom Christians. He was talking about Christianity as a whole. And that was all I'm talking about.
I. Christianity
__A. Denominations
____1.Catholics, orthodox, protestants, non-denominational christians.
He was talking about the "Christianity" in bold.
Just semantics...tis all.
Great discussion guys, I appreciate what you've all had to say on this.