I have a question for you, Twinkie.
Suppose an individual Christian believes the following:
1. That individuals are saved only by blind faith in Christ as resurrected Savior.
2. That faith means obedience to the will of God.
3. That obedience to the will of God means trying everything in the believer's power to convince others that anything other than #1 is damning them for eternity, and that God wants anything but that for them.
4. That #3 is *not* the instrument or cause of the believer's salvation, but the consequence of being saved through #1.
If that is the believer's position, what exactly
should you expect that believer to do?
I'm well aware that not all Christians have, do, or will believe in this particular way.
And I'm also pretty sure, from earlier conversations here on the wisdom and inappropriateness of faith, that you tend to have scorn for such blind faith.
But neither of those are my question. My question is that, if as an empirical matter, someone believes in points #1-4, how would you expect them to approach an atheist or Moslem on a question that they see as implicating the relative value of different religious beliefs?
I guess what I'm trying to get at is this: I understand how you can, based on your own beliefs, treat Christian beliefs comprehensively with scorn, whether they are based in faith, works, or whatever. (I don't agree with your position, but I can understand its logic and I can see how that logic could lead to scorn and frustration and ridicule almost all the rest.
But I just don't get the "taking offense" part. It just doesn't seem, forgive me, logical.
Should I take offense at a rabid dog for being rabid? Put the dog down, yes. But get offended? Not hardly.
Should I take offense because one of my students, having been raised on the beliefs of student-centered education, considers me incompetent for failing to teach in accord with those beliefs? Annoyed, perhaps. Frustrated, certainly. But offended? Not hardly.
Should I be offended when an atheist argues that my faith is irrational? Sad that I can't get my point across, yes. Try to figure out another way to convince him, yes. Frustrated? Perhaps. Offended? Not hardly. If I know that the person's beliefs are going to take someone down a particular road to a particular kind of conclusion, then I taking offense is the reflection of an unreasonable expectation.
If I believe someone believes wrongly, are not the appropriate responses: (i) trying to get them to see how they behave wrongly; or, if (i) is deemed an impossible or too costly task, (ii) ignore them as "hopeless", "loony", dumbshit"?
People don't change their core beliefs just because other people "take offense" when those beliefs get expressed. Core beliefs -- like those about God and country -- are too, well, "core" for that.
This is the point that both the PC police and the Sarah Palins of the world forget: Taking offense may help the offended person feel affirmed, somehow, but its a solipsistic kind of affirmation.
Yes, the nature of many varieties of Christian belief is that not all beliefs are created equal. That "ours" is superior to "yours". Its a inevitable conclusion from our core beliefs.
But the reaction to core beliefs you cannot share should not be "offense". Pity perhaps. Scorn perhaps. Disgust perhaps. Call us arrogant, deluded, stupid, illogical, irrational, or a thousand other bad names. Those are all logical.
But taking offense? It just doesn't compute.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)