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What would you think if a religious person said they did not believe in magic ?

Axlefoley 6 June 22
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57 comments (26 - 50)

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2

I would laugh. They believe in magic and witchcraft.

2

Probably that they are thinking movie magic with fire balls and lightening bolts.

I'd tell them love is one kind of magic... do they not believe in that?

I remember a Shirley Temple movie where she was telling some old school marm how wonderful chickens were. When she asked Shirley what was so wonderful about a chicken, she told the marm that a chicken lays eggs, can she lay an egg. That kind of innocence and laughter is also a kind of magic.

AmyLF Level 7 June 22, 2018
2

As Thor, the god of thunder, said... "All magic is technology not discovered yet" ♥ Marvel 🙂

Nardi Level 7 June 22, 2018
2

To believe in Religion is to believe in Magic, the Bible is their magic book and it is filled with stories of magical beings doing magical things. Her statement is a contradiction.

Not if, as a believer, your operant conditioning and immersion in special pleading is such that you don't consider god's interventionism to be magic, but to be something else -- such as grace or miracles or whatever. Typical linguistic sleight-of-hand.

@mordant So you can believe in magic but not if you believe that the magic isn't magical but something else? Personally I like the Lord of the Rings Trilogy over the Bible, the magic seems more plausible. 😉

@Surfpirate I'm not arguing it's not magic. I'm just explaining how believers deal with the resulting cognitive dissonance. In the same way, they think belief in unicorns or leprechauns is somehow qualitatively different from believing in an invisible man in the sky who dispenses rewards and punishments, or in the resurrection, or any of the miracles described in the Bible. Try to equate their magical beliefs with actual magic, or compare them to belief in legendary things they don't accept, and they will take great umbrage.

@RobWard Exactamundo! When the walls of the box crumble, the whole game changes. I think it's important for unbelievers (particularly those who aren't deconverts) to understand how this works for believers.

@mordant See I just like to simplify and lump magic and miracles together in a category that I like to call - BAT SHIT CRAZY. I don't care what colours the bat shit comes in because it's all crazy to me.

@Surfpirate Well that's your right and I certainly understand the impulse. However, courtesy of my first wife, who WAS "batshit crazy" (schizophrenia and borderline personality disorder) I do not toss that phrase around lightly myself. Believing in magic is wishful thinking, arguably delusional, and it is certainly uncritical and credulous rather than critical and skeptical. It leads to all kinds of dysfunction. However, even fundamentalists function well enough in society to hold down jobs and sometimes contribute in positive ways to the community. Once in awhile I've even met evangelicals who are kindly, pleasant people. I would call it "compartmentalized delusion", not literal "insanity".

The other problem with assigning stigmatic labels to people is that it dampens empathy and compassion and a focus on what we have in common, and contributes to the polarized environment we live in -- basically, lowering ourselves to the level of theists who claim we are "hateful", "arrogant", "licentious" and so forth. I don't want to gaslight them like they gaslight me.

Just a few thoughts for what they're worth. But ... I do understand what you're getting at. And sometimes the truth has to hurt. You do you. Just consider that words have meanings and we should be careful with them.

@mordant I get what you are saying, I just don't see why organized and socially sanctioned madness should be more acceptable than diagnosed mental illnesses which are outside the norm. My younger brother has schizophrenia as did his wife who shot herself in the head with her rifle 3 years ago, guess who flew across the country and bailed him out of that terrible situation before he followed her in the same manner? After I moved him back with me and helped him get reestablished the voices took exception to my helping him and making him feel weak and dependent so he tried to kill me. We haven't had much contact since then. I prefer to call things as I see them instead of dancing around the issue with a bunch of politically correct jargon, see a problem, address it is my preferred approach, anything less tends to be enabling.
Religious people believe in a sky daddy with a zombie son who will save those who subjugate themselves to him and torture for eternity those who refuse to bend a knee. How exactly is that different from the space aliens on their intergalactic council who have pressed my younger brother into service on alien worlds to fight their cosmic battles against their enemies? It isn't any different except that one is socially acceptable and one isn't - both are equally dangerous as history has clearly shown. If you find that arrogant and offensive then guess what? I'm good with that because it isn't my limitation it's yours - stop enabling.

@Surfpirate I agree that organizing a belief system and gaining social sanction for it doesn't make it right (or even less wrong). It doesn't necessarily make it lock-step equivalent to diagnosed mental illness either. Sometimes the greater harm is one, sometimes the other. Neither are positive.

And then there are the edge cases. My previous / late wife for example had an uncle and aunt who were devout rural Methodists but were almost the kindest and most selfless and giving people I've ever met. Do I call them crazy because they pray to an invisible man in the sky? I'm not inclined to. It's highly compartmentalized and constrained compared to general madness.

@mordant My brother can be the sweetest, kindest person you would ever hope to meet but when the bad voices are talking to him then he is a dangerous piece of work. Do I ignore the madness because of the kindness, the two are separate issues. Hate the sin and not the sinner as they say, whoever they are.

@Surfpirate The aunt and uncle are consistent. They don't occasionally threaten to murder people. I'm talking about people's overall reputation and demonstrated character and stability.

Trust me, after being married to someone who precipitated our divorce by standing over me in a trance-like state with a butcher knife one night as I slept ... I know what it is to recognize and value things in a loved one who is nevertheless dangerous, unstable and, well, crazy, and therefore, I am unable to continue the relationship. But not all disordered thinking is equally consequential or problematic.

@mordant We must have been married to the same woman, I woke up to my first wife with a carving knife in her hand in the middle of the night. I asked her what she was doing, she said "Nothing' and went back to the kitchen an put the knife away. Years later she tried to contract a hit on me through some business associates that were a bit shady. Crazy is crazy, I make no apologies for it, why do you?

@Surfpirate Lol -- well now I don't feel quite so unique in my acquaintance with crazy, so there's that.

I think we're not really that far apart, and for the sake of everyone else here I'm going to drop arguing about semantics and nuance. I would just point back to my final sentence in the previous reply: not all disordered thinking is equally consequential or problematic. I personally reserve "crazy" for butcher knife-level stuff. But ... if you want to apply it more broadly, that's your right.

@mordant It reminds me of the part of the NAMI course I took to help get a better handle on the issue I have with my brother's schizophrenia. They insisted that we should never say that he's schizophrenic but rather that he has schizophrenia as though that would make all the difference in the world, I say it is both because he has an illness and it defines him. The irony is that a classic symptom of schizophrenia is that the person with the illness believes there is nothing wrong with them, it's the rest of us who are crazy. We all have weights we have to bear, I just don't think that candy coating them makes them any easier to bear but that's me, to each their own but I do take exception to people who feel the weight is easier to bear if it isn't candy coated. That's not an arrogant position but a realistic one, delusions, everybody's got some. Have a great day and I hope things work out for you, your way.

@Surfpirate We must be brothers from another mother. My wife and I did a NAMI course too, mainly trying to help my son with his mental health issues that eventually killed him. We weren't that impressed with NAMI either. Considering the time invested we didn't take away much from it that we didn't already know as loving parents who know how to research stuff and be informed. In any case it didn't change the care delivery system, which is broken.

My son ended up in the county mental health system, with some drug pusher who had no respect for a personality disorder diagnosis and wanted to "manage" him chemically; to him, everything is depression; depression, per the party line, is 100% chemical imbalance; that was his hammer.

This fed my son's delusion that he didn't need to work on himself, he just needed a Magic Pill, he experimented off-label with all the meds he was given, and the rest is history. In the end no one contacted us to follow up on why my son wasn't showing up for appointments. Indeed, they found our desire as parents to be involved in his care to be annoying and inconvenient. So the NAMI approach of helping families cope and be supportive isn't much use in a system that is twenty years behind the times and still tends to assume the family is the problem. If there was one useful thing I did learn in that course, it's that until as recently as the 1990s, and still today for some caregivers, parents are the cause and the enemy.

Other than that insight -- I'd give the course a resounding "meh".

@mordant It is a complicated mess to be sure. If you have the money then you may get some help but even then it is at best 50/50.

2

I would understand that they believe in the Christian religion, or whatever religion they practice, and not in other magical things.

MsAl Level 8 June 22, 2018
1

I would say "Good for you, since your doesn't support magic."

1

When I was an undergrad and had only recently, tentatively started taking steps away from faith, I enrolled in a class in the Anthropology Department called "Magic, Witchcraft and Religion." At that time, I didn't see the connection between the three. Now, years later, it seems pretty obvious to me.

1

Religious conundrum for contemplating the infinite power of God: Is God capable of creating a rock so heavy that he himself could not lift it? If you answer the question "yes" than what does that answer really imply about Gods infinite magical power, and if you answer "no" then what does that answer really imply vis a vis the supernatural all powerful being which is called God?

1

It makes perfect since and is logical as they do not believe their religion has anything to do with magic.

If you believe that "you shall nor suffer a witch to live" than on some level you believe witches exist which is similar to a belief in witchcraft and occult magic. You cannot disapprove of something that doesn't exist. Yeah, so they do believe it exists and that they are commanded to be intolerant of it, which is different than believing its pure poppycock likened only to the imaginary tooth fairy. It reminds me of the sta-puft marshmallow man in ghostbusters movie where actor rick moranis thinks of the most harmless think he can think of to be incarnated as the zoroastrian "destroyer"

1

I'd think they were doing a bit better than the ones who do believe in magic.

1

That is so funny!

jacpod Level 8 June 22, 2018
1

Yes that is ironic but of course they would tell you that the miracles of Jesus and God were certainly not magic because it is holy - or something like that. I probably wouldn't say anything much more than Hmmm How about that

1

Remind them that magic was considered evil not long ago and people died at the hands of "good Christians" for being accused of wielding it. Unknowledgeable people can't separate magic from science. It has been theorized that Adam and Eve were cast out of paradise because they were gaining knowledge, "Fruit." So, knowledge became the enemy of the Christian.

Gohan Level 7 June 22, 2018
1

Gag.

godef Level 7 June 22, 2018
1

I'd giggle manically ...

1

Hahaha I'd claim they were a liar, liar and point to their pants on fire

1

In not believing in magic, they believe in it.
It is two sides of the same coin.
Night/day
Dark/light
On/off
Magic/no magic
Gnostic/agnostic
Theist/Atheist

Cannot have one without the other.

-It's always night on the dark side of the moon.
-It's always dark underground.
-On/off switches are human inventions for convenience; it wouldn't be difficult to build devices without a switch.
-You absolutely can have no magic without magic. In fact, we do.
Gnostic/Agnostic & Theist/Atheist are just different views toward superstition. Without that superstition these terms are meaningless.

@JimG it's always day on the lightside of the moon (still the moon)
It's always light (no matter how dark it gets, still have light) above the ground (as above, so below, so below, as above) still the ground.
If you have a device with no switch then the device would either be always on, or always off.

What use is an always off TV or an always on microwave?

The removed switch has 2 poles, either on position, or off position. (Unless it has more than 2 poles, but that is an entirely different animal - oh look, another rabbit hole to chase!!)

Yang-yin
Masculine/Feminine

Goes back to the 12 universal laws and also hermetic philosophy.

1

I would just feel sorry for their lack of imagination. It must be so boring to live in such a small box.

1

I'd say something like, "Well look, the quarter is BEHIND YOUR EAR!!" Heh

zeuser Level 9 June 22, 2018
1

You mean you don’t believe humans can do magic? Because your god would have to be basically made of magic, yea? It’s supernatural, how is that not magic?

Well your god was first known by the Hebrew people and called them his “chosen” and at the time they claimed your god was talking to them and hanging out in burning bushes and whatnot they definitely believed in magic. The people who your god called his chosen and who wrote your holy book absolutely believed in magic, and some of their greatest heros, kings, and prophets were “magicians”.
Do you know more about the universe than the prophets who your bible says spoke with god directly, do you? Neat.

1

I'd ask them if this was their card, and what were they doing with a coin in their ear........

1

I'd laugh and ask them if they believe in superpowers. Because it's either one or the other that their sky faerie uses to do everything... Unless it's really just science... Oh, wait...

1

There was no magic used from God in the story of Noah's Ark. Just that Noah was made much more superior and older than people today. As well, Adam was the smartest man in human history, people just get dumber each generation. God must I given them super powers. Butt! No magic was used, that would be evil.

I wish the bible had a dictionary to figure out all these wrong translations. Or maybe, Christians are just making it all up just Like Hollywood fantasy movie series.

"Christians are just making it all up just Like Hollywood fantasy movie series." That is the way it all started. IMHO

It is not merely a matter of translation, but of interpretation. Each sect has its own interpretational system (hermeneutic) and within that hermeneutic there are disputes about how to apply it. Making it all the more amazing that any one particular believer has the arrogance to think they are right, and all the others are wrong.

@jlynn37

Fantasy movies is the second sequel to the the sheep herders guild to the Universe.

Ha ha ha

1

I'd tell them that of course they do.

0

I always remember driving through Ireland and listening to local radio. Cutting a long story short I heard a priest comment on the air about a vision a person had, say that the church does not promote superstition. I nearly crashed the car 🙂

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