KDB,
Thank you for your perspective. I like Nightrain and others were brought up in traditional Catholic households. I never understood the animosity between differing Christian sects, until, like you, I decided to look for myself. I read the bible and saw for myself the discrepancies. And it really made me mad... and a bit of a radical. Even my short time in the seminary made me question the "truth" being taught.
I became cynical, a bit of a radical. Until a wise person told me it was OK, Jesus was a radical too. His intent was not grand cathedrals, puritanical countries, and coerced morality. He wasn't about robotic repetition of meaningless words. His interest was in the relationship between you and the rest of the world. Quite simple! It really wasn't anything new, in fact it was quite similar to what Siddhartha Gautama, Buddha, taught his followers 400 to 700 years before Jesus. Some interesting theories speculate that perhaps Jesus studied some form of Buddhism in his early years. There is of course no way to know that for sure. But as a people with soulful purpose, and curiosity we can certainly read and study, drawing our own wisdom from the words, and perhaps seeing some commonality.
BUT, my point is to say that the relationship you and I have with the world has been the focus of people since civilizations began. The focus of these two great teachers (and many others not mentioned) was that the root of our interaction with the world must be compassionate. The common word seems to be love. A further, and even older principle, is that of Yin and Yang. (I must clarify: I am no expert on this... simply a novice pilgrim seeking wisdom!) Yin-Yang was part of an ancient Chinese philosophy of simply "light and dark," good and evil, and was basically a philosophy of balanced thought. As with all archetypical ideas it has been morphed into many practices over the centuries. But lets just take the simple concept of light and dark, mix it with Buddha's paradox of suffering and joy, and then throw in Jesus's teachings on love... And I'd say we have a pretty legitimate blueprint for our interrelationship with the world.
I am a BIG proponent of breaking things down into their simplest form. This I believe: 1. We ARE spiritual beings on a journey of faith. 2. On this path we must be persistent. The road is bumpy and filled with trepidation, there are detours at every corner. Cynicism and its' darkness are traps for the weak. 3. Our strength comes from mindful and earnest observation of the world, and the gift of discernment. 4. Distractions are everywhere, choose your passions, avoid the abyss of entanglement... in other words concentrate on what you are living. 5. Walking this path called life will yield wisdom if you shed the ego... the I/me of everything. Free from one's self, one can offer compassion to the world.
So in conclusion, and before I reach maximum word capacity. I
do not think Christianity is dead, no more than any other philosophy on our existence. There is darkness in every symbol of humankind. To single out the beauty of Christianity or any other religion for rebuke (in my opinion

) is a wrong turn on the journey. Absolutely there is darkness there... YES! It is everywhere it is a part of the light that is also there. Where do we place our energy, the fuel of our soulful journey?
NOW, I will put my Administrator hat on. This discussion is valid and enlightening for all of us. That is the purpose of the forum. However we reserve the right, as a privately owned forum, to maintain decorum and civility. THAT decorum and civility is based on the sole judgement of Administration and the forum's owners. This has worked for many, many years, and why we are admired and successful. With that said, any word or words deemed inciteful or derogatory will be edited out. This is not for debate, nor for discussion on the open forum. Private communication is always welcomed.
Blessings,
Tman