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Awww.... I'd love to hear what you have to say! Message me??
I found that book I told you about. It's called:
"Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me): Why We Justify Foolish Beliefs, Bad Decisions, and Hurtful Acts"
by Carol Tavris (Author), Elliot Aronson (Author)
You can read a preview of it on Amazon.com
Yeah, I love reading books about psychology and this book is really one of the best ones I've read recently.
And yes, they explain about religious beliefs and why some people are so fanatical about it.
Well is there anything specific you'd like to hear about?
Syd Valentine said:Awww.... I'd love to hear what you have to say! Message me??
After a life of Secularism, Atheism and Buddhism, I converted to Catholicism in my early 30's.
I certainly had a idea of what Christianity was, who doesn't in this culture. I had even read the New Testament in college for a Western lit class. But my views were prejudiced by popular notions of what Christianity stood for.
As a Buddhist, I thought perhaps Christ was a Sammasambuddha, an englightened being who sought to teach others, but I certainly didn't think of him as divine. In fact I was totally Atheistic. Atheism and Buddhism are completely compatible since Buddhism teaches that either there is no God/Gods or if there were God/Gods they wouldn't be worth bothering with.
Ultimately, I reached an impasse since Atheism and Buddhism are at their core nihilistic. Atheism because it is morally relativistic and Buddhism because it's ultimate goal is the destruction of all matter, of all being.
My conversion didn't occur like a flash of light. I didn't have an epiphany. My conversion resulted from rational inquiry and debate. I would argue with a friend of mine in law school. I thought he was an odd bird since he was highly intelligent, articulate and a devout Catholic. Something I thought was impossible given my prejudices.
He convinced me to read St. Thomas Aquinas "Summa Theologica". Aquinas was startling because in his work I encountered a great intellectual and a great philosopher. He laid out a very rationale argument for the existence of God, without relying upon any notions of faith. Every argument I had, he had already made and carefully refuted it. After about a year of Aquinas, I had to admit that it was rationale to believe in God. (I would warn any Atheist against reading Aquinas if you wish to keep your beliefs.)
It took another 2 years before I was actually believed in the existence of God. And another 3 years of reading St. Francis De Sales, St. Therese of Avilla, Archbishop Fulton Sheen, C.S. Lewis, et. al. before I was convinced enough to be baptised and entered into the Catholic Church.
Has being a Catholic made me a holier person? Certainly not. But it has made me to a very small degree a better person. I am now a little less selfish, a little less immature, more caring of others, more willing to admit when I'm wrong.
Has it made me a happier person? In a way yes. I'm more contented and have more certitude. But in another way, no. Because I now see clearly my failings. It certainly hasn't shielded me from all the vagaries life has to offer. I now pray more and interestingly I meditate far more now then when I was a Buddhist.
My wish is that everyone here find a degree of peace, contentment and happiness. And know that I include you all in my prayers and I hope you pray for or at least think good thoughts of me.
SFPJ
I'm Catholic....but I'm not a PRACTICING Catholic...I don't attend church as often as I should, I do my own form of worship here at home. Kind of hard for me to do with 2 kids 5 & under and the hubby is deployed right now! LOL...
This year for Lent, I've given up Taco Bell (which is MY FAVE fast food).
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