Agnostic.com

17 5

I just left Christianity, and they talk a lot about this "darkness" that Jesus delivered them from. I've been wondering, what is this darkness? Is it other religions as well as Satan? When the British tried to colonize the other nations, they tried to teach them Christianity, so were they concluding that the so-called evil was other religions? I might never know, but it is fun to come up with theories!

BongoCat 4 Oct 7
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

17 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

0

They are trying to scare people into there way of thinking. The religious fools prey on the week minded people of world for there cause.

0

Depends, but to me is it seems to include everything. If you had addiction problems; darkness. Doubt; darkness. Depression; darkness. Fear; darkness.

If you can label it under 'Things that won't make me feel good all the time', that's "darkness".

If Jesus has saved them from it, indicating that non-believers, who live in a natural state without religion are still in it; the darkness is unlikely to be another religion IMO.

0

My god, it's just a chance to theorize. Stop just flat out telling me that it represents the bad times in life! I just want to know what else the darkness is!

@Donotbelieve Sorry, I want to theorize what else is in the darkness besides Satan.

@Donotbelieve Meh. I like talking with people, so I don't really care whether or not the darkness is real. I just want some theories to think about.

@Donotbelieve Based off of history and off of a type of government (Theocracy), I believe that the darkness in a religion is other religions, because:

  1. It is against their own beliefs, so naturally they reject it.
  2. It says "deliver from evil" which I think implies that a person who has a different religion needs to be "cured" of it.
    I don't have a third reason but I would like to hear some of your questions!

@Donotbelieve Oh, no you're fine! Honestly, studying a 3,000 year old book for 18 years can get kind of boring. I just like to theorize, and my sources were drying up.

1

The word Devil came from Nordic people who fought with Persians. They took a word that meant a type of angelic being to the Persians and recast the name. Satan was completely recast by Christians as well, he was completely different in the Old Testament. Northern Egyptians did the same thing to Seth when they conquered the southern kingdom. Before that Seth was a good God.

Wow, so it's a big train of copyright then, huh?

The word Devil is modern English variation of the Middle English Deuil, a translation of the Latin Demon, which is, itself a translation of the Greek Damon which means divine messenger or ancestral spirit, in the Celtic Faerie and the Nordic Alf or if you enjoyed Lord of the Rings, the Elves. The Greek term Damon was used up to around the 6th century by Rabbi frequently to describe angelic beings, Seraphm because Archaic Hebrew was extremely limited linguistically and modern Hebrew isn't much better, so Rabbi frequently used Pheonican, Aramaic or Greek wherever classically educated as they were much more evolved languages, so could communicate ideas far more accurately. The whole trick about Judaism is being originally a verbal tradition and not written down for well over a thousand years of avid practise, so the early attempts and thus primary source documentation of books that include the Old Testament are in fact very poor representations of the ideas being discussed. A Damon would be regarded as a purely angelic creature among the mythology which includes early Christianity up until around the 12th century, when things took a darker turn for fear that devotees might turn away from strict clerical dictates and seek their own insights regarding morality and personal decisions, so particularly in north-western Europe damon, daemon and the middle English translation devil came to mean what they mean today, to scare followers into blind adherence to clerical statements and interpretations. As for Satan, it's a Hebrew term which simply means "arguer" and could be used as a title for public legal advocates facing counciliary trial, ie. it also means "lawyer," as a title but as a verb it actually just means anyone who argues simply for the sake of arguing rather than any interest in the subject matter of the argument. An adult who acts like a petulant toddler, basically. Not a big deal intellectually but very dangerous when armed. Hebrew being an odd language often a tongue in cheek verb is used to provide a professional title, or a nickname is used as the basis of a noun by referring to the actions of the one whom owned the nickname. Lucifer is believed to be the Greek translation of Nebudchanezzar II's war titles Shining light, Morning Star, etc., which was used loosely in a document around the 3rd century IIRC by a well known Rabbi to denigrate a contemporary ruler, writing in Greek and referring to him using Nebudchanezzar's nickname as a way of calling him equally inept in his community responsibilities. This document was dredged up in the Middle Ages as a scriptural reference and due to the period the reference stuck as a Proper noun and as a nasty term obviously is identified with arguer (satan) and angels that don't say exactly what the clergy says (devil/demon). Most fundamentalist Christian mythology, the fire and brimstone elements was invented from around the 12th century and has no real relationship to its own referenced source. It was largely adopted from cross cultural pagan sources.

@JasonKM Wow. You did some research, didn't cha?

@JasonKM Yeah thats pretty much what I was trying to say 😉

@Seminarian Just reinforcing your point by tossing in a bunch of details. I mean I think we can infer the kind of people, identifying as Christians and running around telling others to be afraid of the Devil haven't, in fact undertaken any scholastic research of their religious assertions and therefore can only be assumed to be intellectual bullies for cause of purely personal agendas. Like a school thug trying to steal your lunch money, they try to buddy up to you, at first too and then subjugate for the sake of domination. An ideological bully is still just a common thug. Perhaps the "darkness" some of them refer to is their own behavioural guilt and disappearing into extremist fundamentalism is their sense of salvation, which is in fact denial and self disassociation. I mean in any normal conditions they're a bit off, church fundies, aren't they..

@JasonKM I agree 100%. I mentioned how important it was for a Unity Minister to understand Bible history and sources in my Hebrew Scripture History class this week. Most people aren't into this stuff any more (including my fellow classmates), but, I told my fellow seminarians that undoing some of the damage Fundy Christians do is one of our most important functions. These poor souls show up at our doors all the time. Good post by the way, I appreciated it.

2

Christianity is all about men asserting power over others to gain money, obedience, and control over women's bodies, using guilt and the threat of hell.

The Bible doctrine is MUCH more misogynistic than the current church teachings..women were commanded to wear veils, stay at home and obey their husbands, have children, not speak in church.

Since the Bible is just a bad copy of the Sumerian texts, carved into the walls of Babylon 2000 years before the Bible is written, it's nonsense and there's no reason to bother worrying about it. The Hebrew god is based on the blood-thirsty alien Sumerian leader, "Anu."

What happened to all the theories?

@BongoCat I have no interest in religious theories. It's all nonsense anyway.

@birdingnut So THAT'S why!

At least there is nothing specifically in the Bible that prohibits lesbianism. I think those old Jews were kind into it. Later, women ran most of Paul's churches, and earlier financed Jesus' ministry as well. The later Pauline letters that relegated women to secondary roles are known as Pseudo Pauline. ( Ephesians etc.). They clearly had an agenda as you described. Paul was a classic Stoic who happened to be gay as well. So you 've got to consider the source. Right?

@Seminarian I consider the "Source" to be bunk, and not worth a moment's time wasted on it.

@birdingnut I noticed you capitalized "Source". Do Traditional Christians do that when referring to God? Just curious. I never went to church growing up, I believe that was a good thing, but whenever they attack me now, I'm at kind of a disadvantage.

@Seminarian No, just a typo. But many people who lean toward quantum physics-style suedo-spiritual beliefs call the collective energy/intelligence of the universe, our "Higher selves," or "Source." I sort of lean toward that myself, but mostly just think of "god" as just being us, not a separate "Source" being. I've seen no evidence that anything other than ourselves is "in charge."

2

Religion is based on fear, so if you’re not with them everything else is evil or darkness. It’s a recurring story line in the buybull.

So the so-called priests are just narcissists in a uniform? Cool.

1

Sadly, I think it is us.

Well, that's kind of a downer. Got any other ideas?

Waiting on those new more positive ideas.... any day now...

@BongoCat Just keep living a good life to prove them wrong.

@Fernapple Yeah! I'm going to go get some ice cream now! WOOHOO!

3

Speaking from my background in Christian fundamentalism, the "darkness" is the absence of "the light of the gospel" and "the light of the gospel" implies that it's the gospel "as understood by us". So basically the narrative is, I was wandering lost and confused in darkness like a lost sheep and now I'm not. So the darkness is just this amorphous wasteland one experiences as an outsider to the "correct", "clued-in" group.

Implicit in these notions is that there is a "one true faith" or "one right dogma" that one can find. The problem, of course, is that everyone claims to have it.

Hmm... can you translate that into less formal words please? (and I do understand what you're saying)

3

They talk a lot about many things that are all imaginary....the so called darkness is just one if them. It is whatever a fertile mind can invent. We who know it is all made up need have no fear of the darkness but pity those who still believe that It is out there!

So basically religion is just one big story told in different ways and is passed down from parent to and it's just an imaginary world that someone wrote a book abo- OH MY GOD

@BongoCat Sarcastic!

@Marionville It's all coming together now! DER JUST NARSSISTS IN UNIFORM! Oooooh My God!

1

Jesus brought candles.

Har-dee-har.

@BongoCat "I am the light".

@chucklesIII No he glued them onto his cross then he said "This is the light"

@BongoCat

@chucklesIII omg xDD

4

I’m sorry if this post feels like a lecture or me talking down to anyone. These are just my thoughts on this idea.

when you live in a mindset where there is an objective good and an objective bad, everything that is “not your good” is just one step closer to the “bad” in the world. Everything that is not directly associated with Jesus or Christianity is cautiously applied for fear that it “leads us astray” from the truth. This is why there is such an industry for kids shows, activities and even colleges that “promote your christian values”; they need entertainment that is “christian” so they can isolate and demonize as they see fit. God forbid they listen to metallica or read Harry Potter. I’ve even had people tell me that Dungeons and Dragons is a “gateway to hell”, despite the existence of paladins, priests and other clear symbols of holiness and purity you can find in that game. It’s all a method to keep people from exploring anything besides the religion.

So religion basically dictates what gets demonized and what stays "pure". I get it. (but seriously D&D is a gateway to hell are you kidding me?)

@BongoCat dead serious. Dice rolls straight to satan

3

In the book Things Fall Apart, set in Nigeria during early British colonization, one character explains, quite well, to the minister how their two religions are so alike, yet the white conqueror refuses to see what is right in front of his face. The real darkness is in men's refusal to see what is real. For christians and other religious types, they believe they know innately what is real and refuse to see anything else, lumping all into their darkness.

Yeah, they aren't accepting of other religions because it's not their custom. You know when you try to write with your non-dominate hand? That's what they feel like when they look at other religions. Different. And they feel repulsive. So they think they are right and everyone else is wrong. (like spiritual narcists)

2

The darkness is imaginary. It's part of the story.

What's the story representing then?

@BongoCat, it's supposed to represent a journey from hard times (darkness) to good times (light). But just because a story says it doesn't mean that it's right.

@ldheinz Can't we achieve the journey ourselves WITHOUT the help of some super natural human being with a cult following and no proof it exists except a huge old book?

@BongoCat, of course we can. We're a lot more likely to get it right, too.

@ldheinz Yeah, because my grandmother forced me to go to church with her, and then the youth minister was going on and on about this verse that "if you give god 1 thing you will get 100 more in return" and that's just stupid and lazy to me

@BongoCat, their beliefs are so ridiculous that it would be hard to NOT come up with something better.

@ldheinz Mhmm. It's like a competition for who can conjure up the stupidest beliefs.

3

in judaism, you cannot be delivered from a darkness of that sort because, for one thing, there isn't any -- no original sin, and no concept of someone removing from you the sins you've committed, either by confession or by dying on a cross for you, for example. also no fear of hell (except in european folklore), as the christian concept of hell is not based on the jewish one (i've heard it described as having to sit way in the back of the room). i suppose that's one reason jewish sermons don't deal in fire and brimstone!

there is no satan as the christians know him in judaism either. there is ha-satan, a kind of prosecuting attorney working in the service of god, not a devil, not a tempter, despite the story of job, and a minor character indeed.

there is one kind of darkness from which one can be delivered, in jewish thought, and that is the darkness of ignorance, left behind only through education.

if i believed in a god and sought a religion (two different things), i am sure i'd still be a jew AFTER careful thought, but for sure a reform jew, because i would still find it hard to believe a god cared what i ate or wore. this would not be because i was raised jewish, because i was not raised religiously at ALL. most of what i know about the religion, as opposed to the culture, i learned later, and i've been an atheist since i was 15. but i have to say from everything i've seen and read i could NEVER be a christian. christians are too focused on an afterlife and competition to see who can be more christian. culturally, i am still a jew, but i am definitely an atheist. i've been an atheist for 51 years (since i was 15) so i'll quote otis redding: "it's too late to stop now."

g

p.s. you think the british were bad? try the spanish! oh yeah, evil was other religions! the only thing from which there was no redemption, though, was homosexuality. jews and muslims were given a chance to kiss the cross and not be thrown upon the pyre. gays were given no such choice; they were thrown on first, which is the source of the derogatory term "faggot"; they were used to start the fire. it's good to be inquisitive, but that inquisition was not about learning (or teaching). it was about punishing "the other."

Yes, I know about the Spanish. They utterly destroyed the Mayans, Aztecs, and Incas. Man, old time religious people were harsh.

@BongoCat oh yes, them and more. they weren't alone but they were relentless.

g

@genessa Especially with the smallpox pandemic they caused. It was probably super easy to cause a genocide back then, just send a sick person to a underdeveloped civilization and boom! Millions of people dead.

@BongoCat particularly the native americas-americans, via the blankets. that wasn't just the spanish. but hey, they liked to burn people up too (and beheadings were cool; columbus' guys liked to behead random islanders).

g

@genessa It's like during their military training, their moral code got burned to a crisp. Makes me sick.

@BongoCat actually i think it was during their religious training.

g

@genessa Well, they could always come here!

2

Who cares? It was their rationalization for colonizing them and stealing their labor and natural resources.

Yes, it was their reason. I just like to theorize.

3

Priest to atheist: You are a blind man in a totally dark coal cellar, at midnight looking for a black cat that is not there!
Atheist to Priest: You are a blind man in a totally dark coal cellar, at midnight looking for a black cat that is not there... only you claim to have found it.

Exactly what I think of every priest.

2

I would assume they are talking about John 8:12 which states: I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life. To Christians if you don't accept Jesus you walk in darkness. With recent events unfolding as they have I see it as the direct opposite of reality in that they are trying their best to bring darkness into the world with a type of theocracy that will set human rights back decades.

gearl Level 8 Oct 7, 2018

I see this very same thing. This is why Pence and DeVos are in the administration. The New Apostolic Reformation and others are in on this. Many Evangelicals feel that we are a "Christian Nation" and they would do anything possible to have that in writing. Imagine some of these ideas in place and church and state can be together while we have a proper place for the Museum of the Bible that has been built. In a few generations the faithful would willingly give all to the ruling government because it would be their duty to do so. A Fascist theocratic government that is fighting to come into existence. The only thing that can stop this is "we the people."

While other governments of the world have envied America our top money ruling classes have decided to pay less by having a government much like those others in the world around us. It's all about money today. You only matter as long as you can pay.

That's why they had to re-right the testament. Set laws in place. You can be a murderous psychopath, and you can be super religious, but you can't be both.

@BongoCat oh dear, i must disagree. you can and must be both... as long as you don't consider "the other" to be human.

g

@genessa Well, maybe you can be both but then the religious part kind of falls apart when you become a psycho because it basically goes against your beliefs, God isn't telling you to do this, but you do it anyway. That's what I think at least.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:195509
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.