Religion beat became a test of faith

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I just read this article in The Los Angeles Times. A religion columnist for the Times questions his faith after the stories he covered deeply affected him: ex-Mormans ostracized by their friends and family for leaving the Church, the Catholic Church molestation and cover-up scandal, exploitation of the desperate by TV evangelists, etc.

Part of what drew me to Christianity were the radical teachings of Jesus — to love your enemy, to protect the vulnerable and to lovingly bring lost sheep back into the fold.

As I reported the story, I wondered how faithful Mormons — many of whom rigorously followother biblical commands such as giving 10% of their income to the church — could miss so badly on one of Jesus’ primary lessons?

I sought solace in another belief: that a church’s heart is in the pews, not the pulpits. Certainly the people who were reading my stories would recoil and, in the end, recapture God’s house. Instead, I saw parishioners reflexively support priests who had molested children by writing glowing letters to bishops and judges, offering them jobs or even raising their bail while cursing the victims, often to their faces.

TBN [Trinity Broadcasting Network]’s creed is that if viewers send money to the network, God will repay them with great riches and good health. Even people deeply in debt are encouraged to put donations on credit cards.

“If you have been healed or saved or blessed through TBN and have not contributed … you are robbing God and will lose your reward in heaven,” Paul Crouch, co-founder of the Orange County-based network, once told viewers. Meanwhile, Crouch and his wife, Jan, live like tycoons.

I highly recommend reading it. These are issues that caused a lot of people to lose faith in their religion - or at least faith in members and leaders of their religion. Happily, many have found a home here. I find these sorts of articles way more interesting than those by atheists and the anti-religious. Anyway, read it if you have a chance.

Here’s the link

108 Responses to “Religion beat became a test of faith”


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  1. 101 Savethem Aug 20th, 2007 at 9:10 am

    I belong to a society where its absolute sacrilage to even for a microsecond to take a deep breathe and rethink religon.

    I for years simply avoided details and didn’t really practice but kept the belief that Christainity was the way. I started with realising the sham about Catholicism and then basically every religon got equally disregarded.

    I finally allowed myself as my logic won to believe that none of the books are anywhere near the truth - which none of us will every know. Of course FSM probably gets us a step closer ;).

    However I write this to show you some other parts of this religon sham. If you knew about the Hinduism stuff you guys would not have the time to say anything about Christianity.

    1/6th of the world’s population follow the mythology stuff and put themselves, their children and families through so much of torture. I know for I married a Hindu………. You are talking about Snake Gods, Elephant Gods, worship of a certain ‘God’s’ organ(!!) - as in part of body not musical instrument, Monkey God’s…. For worship they burn loads and loads of food, they offer food to their God’s, their God’s in their stories did horrible things like robbery, rapes and the like… I can see how average minds stick to religons like Christianity/Islam….but Hinduism…Good Lord!!!

    Whenever I see the huge relgious gatherings (any religon) I can’t help but wonder if the energy could be better utilised and deep down wonder if these people would turn up for a cause…accept their own. Selfish people beleiving themselves to be religious!

  2. 102 DutchPastaGuy Aug 20th, 2007 at 9:26 am

    @Savethem
    I know, the picture with other religions is not pretty either. And what you describe is what it is like now. Was there not a tradition in India to burn widows with their husbands (an example of which was of course provided by some very obedient Hindu godess somewhere in the Bagavad Gita) untill the English banned the pratice? If so then maybe colonial rule didn’t bring exclusively bad things.

  3. 103 One-eyed Wonderkin Aug 20th, 2007 at 9:27 am

    @savethem - have you started to question your religion? Dogma is a terrible thing.

  4. 104 Red Dutch Pasta Wench Aug 20th, 2007 at 10:19 am

    DPG, that was the practise of sutee. Supposedly voluntary, but often “encouraged” by other familymember who would otherwise have had to look after the widow. Not nice, not nice at all :(

  5. 105 ocgal Aug 24th, 2007 at 8:15 am

    A friend of mine used to have a restaurant run by her family. Paul and Jan Crouch came in several times, loaded down with gold jewelry, buying expensive wine and treating a table full of their close personal friends.They were rude, high maintenance and required a lot of service. At the end of the meal, they left pamphlets from their church on the table instead of a tip every time. After a few times, my friend’s dad went up to their table and told them that the restaurant would be adding a gratuity to the bill. They never came back.

  6. 106 Hamsterdam Aug 30th, 2007 at 7:19 am

    I seem to have traveled the same path as this fellow and arrived at the same conclusions. The question is whether a faith is validated or invalidated by the actions of those who profess to follow it. It’s not enough to say that a faith is right because that faith says that people are wrong. But it is enough to be a pirate and be touched by his noodley appendage.

  7. 107 Expie Aug 30th, 2007 at 7:32 am

    I hear that Jesus said “By their deeds you will know them”. If a persons actions co-respond with their words, they validate the faith they profess.

  8. 108 ۞ Aug 30th, 2007 at 12:44 pm

    @Savethem
    Thanks for such a heart-felt comment.
    I didnt know Hindus worship willies.
    We worship his noodly appendages, but there’s nothing unsavory about that.
    In fact the FSM is one giant savory.
    RAmen.

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