Creepiness
2007-01-09 19:39i know hot Christians. There are a number of them on my f-list. But any Christian who follows this advice would rank pretty low on my 'hotness' scale and pretty high on my 'creepiness' scale. Seriously, does doing this sort of thing ever win any converts? Or at least, any converts who didn't already find cultthink attractive?
no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 10:07 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 10:24 (UTC)Perhaps you were TOO hot: did your eyes start glowing red? Grow horns in the top of your skull? Cloven hooves? You do read Richard Dawkins after all ;)
no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 10:56 (UTC)Yep, i can understand that . . . . moving in spiritually-oriented circles often means that one gets exposed to a lot of particularly muddled thinking1 (#note1), and it can be refreshing not to have to put up with people claiming that their theology is SCIENTIFIC because it fits with STRING THEORY and is just as VALID a scientific theory as anything else because it's not yet been PROVEN to be wrong. Yeah, right - just like science hasn't yet definitively proved that the tooth fairy doesn't exist. :-P
i'm actually planning to write a post on this very issue in the very near future . . . .
1 (). At least in contrast to my own thinking, which i would regard as being merely mildly muddled. :-)
no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 11:12 (UTC)Looking forward to the post.
no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 21:07 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-01-09 11:16 (UTC)When i was staffing stalls for social/political issues, i often faced a combination of (a) people assuming that i was a religious nut; and (b) actual religious nuts trying to convert me to Christianity. (i was an atheist at the time.) i never found an adequate way of dealing with (a), but i used to attempt to deal with (b) by quoting such things from the Bible as the genocide in Deuteronomy 3. :-)