Playing off Lent thread, what religion are you?

What religion are you?

  • Catholic

    Votes: 42 18.8%
  • Baptist

    Votes: 68 30.5%
  • Methodist

    Votes: 34 15.2%
  • Mormon

    Votes: 2 0.9%
  • Presbyterian

    Votes: 26 11.7%
  • Other

    Votes: 27 12.1%
  • Non-Christian

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Non-religious

    Votes: 24 10.8%

  • Total voters
    223
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bulldoghair

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It is always fun when AI weighs in. So, according to some I am going to be destroyed. And others say I will be brought back into the light. It is almost as if no one really knows what will happen.
The One who made everything good in the first place is also the One who says He reconciles all things through the cross (Colossians 1:20)- and that every knee will bow and every tongue confess, in heaven and on earth and under the earth that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. (Philippians 2:10–11). Not to mention, the Author does love good plot twists, and He’s got a soft spot for prodigals- even the really dramatic ones. So I’d say the smart money is on redemption winning. In the meantime, keep up the good work brother!
 

CEO2044

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May 11, 2009
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One of the things I have questions about with the catholic way of thinking is praying to and/or through people such as Mary. I haven’t found that in the scripture but would like to hear what Catholics understand about it.
Complex question that you will have to continue researching, but we believe Jesus’s first documented miracle (wedding in Cana) happened through Mary’s intercession. Make no doubt- we believe she is subordinate to God. We don’t pray to her, but sometimes through her. Of course, this isn’t required if it’s not something you want to do.

I’m going to link Father Mike’s covering of this in his Catechism in a Year episode. The Catechism is our church’s book and what we believe and why we believe it and should be the first reference when you want to learn what we believe. I cannot explain it better than this will:

But I’ll be honest- I get a bit bored with it- it’s something I need to work on. If this doesn’t work for you, I’m sure there are other shorter YouTube clips by him that are more engaging, like this:
 
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Lucifer Morningstar

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The One who made everything good in the first place is also the One who says He reconciles all things through the cross (Colossians 1:20)- and that every knee will bow and every tongue confess, in heaven and on earth and under the earth that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. (Philippians 2:10–11). Not to mention, the Author does love good plot twists, and He’s got a soft spot for prodigals- even the really dramatic ones. So I’d say the smart money is on redemption winning. In the meantime, keep up the good work brother!
Thank you I was curious what Chat GPT, or whatever, you used was thinking.
 
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bulldoghair

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Thank you I was curious what Chat GPT, or whatever, you used was thinking.
Ha. Id assume Chat GPT was Southern Baptist. As I said earlier, Id describe myself as a Christian universalist- this is coming from me- just a regular guy, not a professional Christian. I wasn’t always that, but over the years of wrestling with my own theology, reading Scripture, church fathers, and arguing theology with people who think God’s love has an expiration date- I have come to believe the Good News is even better than most people can imagine.
 
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Ranchdawg

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I’ve said it before but being on the spectrum I’m prone to be very logical…

I struggle when it comes to comprehending the concept of faith.

Ignorant churchgoers often told me that I can’t be logical and had to have faith.

They also disregarded my questions which stemmed from logic…

So I don’t consider myself welcome
You are always welcome to come with me to church! I enjoy your posts and on a lot of things we think alike (hope you aren't insulted). I am a critical thinker and always seek the truth. I stopped counting the number of times I've read the whole Bible years ago after I went over 7. It is an incredible book with history, philosophy, and religious content. I get something new out of it every time I read it through.
 
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QuaoarsKing

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You could technically dunk yourself in some holy water too and say the words a priest or pastor would to baptize yourself, but I bet you don’t.
Plenty of Evangelicals think you can be baptized without a priest/pastor. Remember when Hugh Freeze was baptizing his players? (And not just at Liberty...)
 
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CEO2044

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May 11, 2009
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Plenty of Evangelicals think you can be baptized without a priest/pastor. Remember when Hugh Freeze was baptizing his players? (And not just at Liberty...)
Yes. I know. They at least have someone else doing it and aren’t doing it on their own.

This is to be an extraordinary measure only- in the event someone is dying typically and there is no priest or ordained person to do so.

Even Jesus didn’t dunk Himself.
 

SoJxnVol

Redshirt
Nov 30, 2025
28
25
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Nowadays, churches push people away because it has approached an uglier form of gathering to worship which is financial status buys your way into church and a relationship with Jesus. I’m looking at you mega churches and tv preachers.
 

Ranchdawg

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Yep.

Part of the problem with living in the Bible Belt is people truly cannot understand not being all about Jesus. It’s like you tell them you don’t eat or breathe. It doesn’t make sense to them. Because of that the conversations are often condescending. Not on purpose, but they are.

a
Sadly, you are right sir. Most people that are agnostic or atheists were chased away from Christianity by so called "Christians". I know several individuals that used to attend the church that I attend. They left because a Deacon embarrassed them in front of other members. Now they consider themselves atheists. It is sad that most "Christians" don't understand that the term means Christ like. Pride leads many to "demonstrate" their faith by belittling someone they deem less Christian. I've never read where Jesus treated anyone, even his enemies, with anything but love (He did chase the vendors from the temple for making a mockery of God's Temple). I try to remember that I go to church to become a better Christian and do what I can to serve my church and community. Jesus said whoever is first will be last and whoever is last will be first and our mission is to serve one another. He never brow beat unbelievers.
 

FreeDawg

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Oct 6, 2010
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One of the things I have questions about with the catholic way of thinking is praying to and/or through people such as Mary. I haven’t found that in the scripture but would like to hear what Catholics understand about it.
Every church or group of friends ask people to pray for them, no different. What hangs some people up is thinking they are dead but you have to remind the whole heaven, ever lasting life deal.

This is the part I say gently & promise I mean no disrespect. Remember, I grew up Methodist & Baptist so this is all last 13 years for me. A lot of the “man why do they do that it’s so crazy” comes from never being taught church history. So much of this, esp reverence (not worship) of Mary, is what the early church did. All the early church fathers. A lot of what we know today as “normal” doesn’t align with the first 1,800 years of the church and originated in the last 200ish years.

Is there such thing as a perfect church, teaching, tradition, or denomination? Nope. Because we humans are flawed and screw it up. But I want to practice as close as possible structurally to those in the time of Jesus founding the church and the traditions started in those early days.
 

Ranchdawg

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A few points, and out of nothing but the love of conjecture and verbal joust. First, I would argue that my demons and I have done far less than you are giving us credit for. News flash most of the evil that humanity has experienced. It is also solely responsible for. I understand that I am a convenient scape goat, and all, but I think you are giving me far too much credit.

Second, I love the whole I am destined to lose argument? According to whom? The same forces I rebelled against. I would say consider the source before just chalking up my loss. I will give you round one did not go so well. You speak as though the end frightens me. I have never fought for victory, only for defiance.
Au contraire, mon ami!

Ephesians 6:12
King James Version​

12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.

Stop trying to blame it on us! The devil made me do it!
 

QuaoarsKing

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Mar 11, 2008
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One of the things I have questions about with the catholic way of thinking is praying to and/or through people such as Mary. I haven’t found that in the scripture but would like to hear what Catholics understand about it.
Catholic doctrine is based on 2,000 years of debates, councils, etc. They don't claim that you're going to find a "scripture" justification for all of their teachings in the first place, so looking for one isn't going to ever get you anywhere.
 

paindonthurt

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Sure you can, but you’re not doing it the way God intended and you’re asking for Him to take an extraordinary measure. Plus you’re still probably carrying it around. God never intended for us to handle mortal sin by ourselves on this Earth- He specifically gave that authority to the priests to help and act in persona Christi.

You could technically dunk yourself in some holy water too and say the words a priest or pastor would to baptize yourself, but I bet you don’t.
There is no where in the Bible that says I need to confess to a priest. Not even implied.

It does talk about the importance of sharing with believers.
 
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paindonthurt

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Catholics do not believe you need a priest to “speak to god”. They do practice the sacrament of confession for mortal sin. Practically, it’s just accountability. Similar to my friends at the larger Baptist churches who have small groups and accountability partners (albeit outside of absolution).

Anyone can not agree with that tradition, and that’s fine, but we also must be very careful with the idea of all we have to do is privately ask for forgiveness & we’re automatically forgiven with no consequence. If I was an alcoholic and that negatively impacted my wife & kids, I can ask for forgiveness from Jesus and be forgiven but that doesn’t undo all the damage my sin caused and shield me from earthly accountability. That thinking leads you to be a Hugh Freeze sleazeball.
This is my point. Fellow Christians can hold you accountable. You don’t need and are not required to have a priest or preacher to be closer to go god.

for the record, there are Baptist things I think are ridiculous as well. There are also things about catholic services I like.

but you do not need a priest to hear your confession to be closer to god or to make god happy.
 

Lucifer Morningstar

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Ha. Id assume Chat GPT was Southern Baptist. As I said earlier, Id describe myself as a Christian universalist- this is coming from me- just a regular guy, not a professional Christian. I wasn’t always that, but over the years of wrestling with my own theology, reading Scripture, church fathers, and arguing theology with people who think God’s love has an expiration date- I have come to believe the Good News is even better than most people can imagine.
I must say you are very fun to engage with. So, thank you for that. I really am curious about one particular part of your post. What is a professional Christian? I do not believe I have ever heard anyone use that terminology before. Not to imply it was poorly used. I just do not understand it. I would assume, and could be wrong, that is a reference to prosperity gospel?
 

Lucifer Morningstar

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Au contraire, mon ami!

Ephesians 6:12​

King James Version​

12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.

Stop trying to blame it on us! The devil made me do it!
I would say again that dads book was never intended to paint me in a very great light.
 

CEO2044

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May 11, 2009
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There is no where in the Bible that says I need to confess to a priest. Not even implied.

It does talk about the importance of sharing with believers.
The Holy Spirit didn’t breathe on every believer. He breathed on the apostles- the first priests. Jesus gave specifically them the power to absolve or keep bound sins.

If you don’t believe this and don’t want to use this gift— that is your right. But to say it’s not in the Bible is not true. You may interpret it differently than 2000+ years of Catholics, but it’s in there.
 

FreeDawg

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Oct 6, 2010
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This is my point. Fellow Christians can hold you accountable. You don’t need and are not required to have a priest or preacher to be closer to go god.

for the record, there are Baptist things I think are ridiculous as well. There are also things about catholic services I like.

but you do not need a priest to hear your confession to be closer to god or to make god happy.

I hear you but keep in mind this is only for mortal sin. Venial sin not required. The priest just tells you what to do to work through it. I imagine a preacher or mentor would give you feedback as well. I get the hangup but I think the spirit of the tradition fosters accountability. I’d venture to say most folks don’t confess anything to anybody. Just take it to god. I’m not saying that’s bad. It’s kinda like “good works alone don’t get you to heaven”. While that is 100% true, if that’s the mantra, it fosters an outcome on no one doing anything. Why not encourage good works along with spiritual salvation? I look at it like the church pushes that little extra step that test the human condition to be better. Ultimately for me that’s a good thing but I likely require an extra kick in the *** to do right.
 

CEO2044

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And also— these guys are great. There’s probably one specifically on confession, but I’m putting the phone down for now.

Happy Sunday!
 
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bulldoghair

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I must say you are very fun to engage with. So, thank you for that. I really am curious about one particular part of your post. What is a professional Christian? I do not believe I have ever heard anyone use that terminology before. Not to imply it was poorly used. I just do not understand it. I would assume, and could be wrong, that is a reference to prosperity gospel?
I was referring to those who are employed or get paid to read the Bible and pray.
 

Maroon Eagle

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May 24, 2006
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You are always welcome to come with me to church! I enjoy your posts and on a lot of things we think alike (hope you aren't insulted). I am a critical thinker and always seek the truth. I stopped counting the number of times I've read the whole Bible years ago after I went over 7. It is an incredible book with history, philosophy, and religious content. I get something new out of it every time I read it through.

Thanks, but to be honest, even if I believed, I’d be reluctant to attend church services because of my tinnitus…

I gotta have background noise to act as a buffer, and one person speaking in a larger quiet room are the gasoline and matches that make my tinnitus run amok…

I gave up seeing plays for that reason many years ago…
 
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Dawg Raid

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Jun 14, 2021
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Here’s a summation of my beliefs:

Salvation is by grace alone (sola gratia) through faith alone (sola fide) in Christ alone (solus Christus), based on Scripture alone (sola scriptura), for God's glory alone (soli Deo gloria).
 
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OopsICroomedmypants

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Maybe it’s not so strange if you truly believe those people really are still “alive” and are literally with God unlike your friend or preacher. Repetition is like a meditation/contemplation.

ETA: I think all religious practice not our own can seem strange and senseless until you think about the fact that almost all Christians believe a man 2000 years ago was killed by the Romans, came back alive, then flew up into the air to heaven and that only by believing this can you make up for your transgression of thinking dirty thoughts and fibbing on your taxes.
Believing that doesn’t clear you of your transgressions. Lucifer believes it too and he will be cast into the lake of fire.
 

dudehead

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Jul 9, 2006
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I’ve said it before but being on the spectrum I’m prone to be very logical…

I struggle when it comes to comprehending the concept of faith.

Ignorant churchgoers often told me that I can’t be logical and had to have faith.

They also disregarded my questions which stemmed from logic…

So I don’t consider myself welcome
You can do that without a priest


Yep, we do something similar in the 12 step community.
 

FreeDawg

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Oct 6, 2010
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Here’s a summation of my beliefs:

Salvation is by grace alone (sola gratia) through faith alone (sola fide) in Christ alone (solus Christus), based on Scripture alone (sola scriptura), for God's glory alone (soli Deo gloria).
Kudos to being able to define your beliefs. I believe many don’t know what they believe. I’d love to hear to elaborate your pov on a few things if you don’t mind. 100% friendly discussion. These are things I’ve really dove in to the last decade examining theology.

Sola Gratia- don’t know how any Christian can disagree here

Sola Fide- grace is a gift from god. We’re in agreement there. I think Sola Fide can foster the attitude that works aren’t necessary which is dangerous & we see a lot of lazy, do nothing Christians who think they are good because of Sola Fide. I’ll concede it’s kinda a chicken & egg because if you really live out the principles good works will follow. Lastly, I think we agree works without faith doesn’t equal salvation.

Sola Christus- I think we agree that Jesus is the mediator but I have trouble squaring the idea that Jesus came to Earth to found a church with no authority. I know this isn’t deep theology and more just my practicality but the whole idea is submission & that fits pretty well with the sacraments & the church’s authority (like the cannon). I just see a free for all that’s gets too far away from the beginning intentions if there is not living, breathing, church on earth with at least some authority.

Sola Scriptura- The bible is the inspired word of god. I bet we agree there. I just have trouble squaring 2 things: in the time of Jesus, the Septuagint was what Jews used & if scripture is the only authority for Christianity, how do we reconcile the 1st almost 400 years of the church pre-cannon? And further, if the authority only resides in the bible, that leaves imperfect humans to make bad theological conclusions but they are backed by being “in the bible”.

Sola deo Gloria- we are in agreement.

In summary, imo the 5 solas are great starters but I view them like an academic in the business college views the teachings of the school. Meaning, nothing is incorrect but in the field some of the theories don’t work perfectly in practice. Ultimately, I think getting too far in the weeds in theology takes away from the ultimate mission of Jesus, a united group of followers on Earth. But I do enjoy the nuts & bolts and discussion I I learn more about the faith.
 
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Pookieray

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Oct 14, 2012
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Plenty of Evangelicals think you can be baptized without a priest/pastor. Remember when Hugh Freeze was baptizing his players? (And not just at Liberty...)
Why couldn't you? There is nothing special about a Preacher, Pope, Pastor............ etc..............
 
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QuaoarsKing

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Why couldn't you? There is nothing special about a Preacher, Pope, Pastor............ etc..............
Many denominations say otherwise.

It's wild to me how people across the spectrum of Christianity (no denomination is exempt from this) take beliefs and doctrines particular to their own denomination and declare them to be objective "Christian" beliefs, when they know that lots of other Christian groups explicitly disagree.

Do Christians believe in salvation by faith alone, or can good works and the sacraments play a role? It depends!
Do Christians believe that non-Christians can go to Heaven? It depends!
Do Christians believe the Bible is the inerrant word of God, or written by humans and susceptible to errors and contradictions? It depends!
Do Christians believe that communion is the literal body and blood of Jesus, or just symbolic? (Or something in between? Or simultaneously both?) It depends!
Do Christians believe that the pope is the vicar of Christ, chosen by the Holy Spirit, and can speak infallibly on religious matters? It depends!
Do Christians believe that the Bible is the source of all beliefs, and anything not explicitly found in there isn't worth believing in? It depends!

No to mention all the minor differences in beliefs across the churches, or even what books are "really" in the Bible or not. No one group has a monopoly on what is or isn't "Christian" though.
 

Maroon Eagle

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May 24, 2006
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This is the part I say gently & promise I mean no disrespect. Remember, I grew up Methodist & Baptist so this is all last 13 years for me. A lot of the “man why do they do that it’s so crazy” comes from never being taught church history. So much of this, esp reverence (not worship) of Mary, is what the early church did. All the early church fathers. A lot of what we know today as “normal” doesn’t align with the first 1,800 years of the church and originated in the last 200ish years.

A great book that covers that change is The Democratization of American Christianity by Nathan Hatch:

 
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paindonthurt

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The Holy Spirit didn’t breathe on every believer. He breathed on the apostles- the first priests. Jesus gave specifically them the power to absolve or keep bound sins.

If you don’t believe this and don’t want to use this gift— that is your right. But to say it’s not in the Bible is not true. You may interpret it differently than 2000+ years of Catholics, but it’s in there.
Quote the scripte that makes this very clear.
 

paindonthurt

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I hear you but keep in mind this is only for mortal sin. Venial sin not required. The priest just tells you what to do to work through it. I imagine a preacher or mentor would give you feedback as well. I get the hangup but I think the spirit of the tradition fosters accountability. I’d venture to say most folks don’t confess anything to anybody. Just take it to god. I’m not saying that’s bad. It’s kinda like “good works alone don’t get you to heaven”. While that is 100% true, if that’s the mantra, it fosters an outcome on no one doing anything. Why not encourage good works along with spiritual salvation? I look at it like the church pushes that little extra step that test the human condition to be better. Ultimately for me that’s a good thing but I likely require an extra kick in the *** to do right.
Quote the scripture where the Bible tells me to go to a priest and confess my mortal sins for forgiveness
 

QuaoarsKing

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Quote the scripte that makes this very clear.
Quote the scripture where the Bible tells me to go to a priest and confess my mortal sins for forgiveness

Again, I don't know what you think you're accomplishing by asking this. The Catholic Church explicitly disagrees with the notion that everything has to be directly justified by scripture.
 
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