Constructive gadfly
stevendedalus's Articles In Religion
March 18, 2004 by stevendedalus
Let’s face it. The Middle East doesn’t like us — an overwhelming majority approves of suicide bombing against us. Yet what would they do if it were not for our oil consumption? If we could to some degree become energy efficient perhaps we could get by without OPEC, though I doubt that Venezuela would forgo exporting oil to us. And there are still Mexico and Ecuador to feed our appetite, along with Canada. And with a caring EPA, ANWAR could be gingerly explored without undue damage to its prist...
March 26, 2004 by stevendedalus
The conservative monopoly on values is bogus. And by the way just what are values? Family values cross political lines, and there can, you know, be family togetherness even without saying Grace at the dinner table. Besides, family together at the kitchen table is a forgotten art — at best having fresh bakery rolls together on a Sunday morning. Both sides of the aisle have the same problem in trying to reach their kids. Of course, it’s helpful to have money whereby you can kidnap your kids f...
July 10, 2004 by stevendedalus
The origin of religion is murky but there can be no doubt that primitives on awakening to a subhuman conscious world were inexplicably mystified. That they found themselves vulnerable to unpredictable phenomena soon drove them to surrendering to powerful elements over which they had no control, and ultimately worshiping thereof. Injury and disease led to witch doctors; death led to witchcraft under whose imaginative rituals the spirit of the deceased would hopefully endure. Eventually witc...
May 12, 2004 by stevendedalus
Notwithstanding that this blogger thinks that military intelligence — indicative of all US intelligence agencies — has brains in the seat of its pants in taking pictorial evidence in a digital world that was bound to leak out and thus invoke more chaos — such as the horrific beheading — in an already dangerous Iraq, the current commotion over the prison abuse is a legitimate concern not only that a handful of ignorant, poorly trained reservists were in the main responsible for its own inhumanity...
April 3, 2004 by stevendedalus
Putting aside my recent blog wherein I disputed the degree of power attributed to God, I am a Catholic, non-practicing, because it was in the main responsible for allowing the great artists of the Renaissance to flourish, giving pictorial grandeur to a religion the mostly illiterate faithful could finally understand why they had embraced it unwittingly. Though I disagree with its unwieldy authoritarianism, there is no disputing the symbolic beauty of Catholicism. In paraphrasing James Joyce, i...
March 31, 2004 by stevendedalus
  Islam has now become an imminent danger; no longer can the West continue to overlook its basic principle of jihad, whether violent or non-violent: the clear fact is that it professes an unmitigated surrender to the will of God by an authoritarian clergy that does the thinking for the masses, thereby reducing the value of the individual to having no rights whatsoever and living for an afterlife only. That it is in competition or outright intolerance of other world religions is of no conseq...
March 3, 2005 by stevendedalus
The difference between divine intelligence and evolution is barely perceptible until the creationists butt in and resort to the unsustainable six thousand year formula. Divine intelligence underlying creation is not far from Darwin’s “natural selection” whose inference is that “selection” did not start from a vacuum, but rather chemical reaction, however seemingly haphazard, somehow leaped from the inorganic to the organic by an inscrutably maddening but logistical design.   Copyright © ...
January 13, 2005 by stevendedalus
Why is evolution so upsetting to those who believe otherwise? Cannot those who believe in Adam and Eve still accept the theory that they were not created overnight — what’s the rush? If science shows beyond a doubt that the universe is fourteen billion years old and the Earth four billion years old and for more than half its life but a ball of fire, is it not reasonable to assume that God was in no hurry to put out the fire? That Adam and Eve or humankind as we know it took a good deal o...
December 30, 2004 by stevendedalus
Evolution is acceptable in theory and praxis by most theologies except for the origin of humankind springing from apes. The Big Bang is acceptable by the many provided it does not exclude the underlying spiritual impetus. Politics was born from the god of deceit and all too evident in modern times when the advertisers cleverly polished it to the degree of glossy delusion. Only mathematicians see the universe as an elegant equation. The history of mankind has never been in ...
December 23, 2004 by stevendedalus
I admire people of faith with childlike innocence unvarnished by theo-ideological passion. Those who truly believe that upon their death they will join or await their loved ones in heavenly bliss. However, those with damnation in their hearts that conjure up ferocious hierarchies that will intrude upon the living terroristic judgments to thwart the tranquility and splendor of faith, I have no use for. Neither do I possess saintly patience with physicists who lay claim to theory in solving the...
December 13, 2004 by stevendedalus
Creationists must go ballistic when reports of Hubble’s peering back into time approaching 14 billion years. Is it a matter of human ego that the universe was created by a Judea-Christian God? Surely, the believer of the Big Bang must feel hurt that he has not been graced by the will of God. For where lies the satisfaction whose beginnings is a mere piece of erratic stardust? Copyright © 2004 Richard R. Kennedy All rights reserved. Revised: December 13, 2004. http://stevendedalus.joeuse...
December 13, 2004 by stevendedalus
The clamor for Creationism to be taught in public schools alongside evolution is absurd. Evolution is a theory concerning species as they were and have become by virtue of cell production; it is not a theory on how the universe came to be. Creationism, on the other hand, is a mythical or religious treatise of cosmology and the miraculous, instant bursting forth of species. For Creationism to be offered in a curricula, it should be one of many comparative religions, which, of course, will open ...
August 29, 2004 by stevendedalus
If religion is so ingrained in millions why is so much time devoted to justify it? Do people of faith really need “evidence” that a fishing boat discovered in the Sea of Galilee is the one which Jesus was on board? Nor should those with faith care that crucifixions victims’ feet were nailed by straddling the feet to the back side of the cross, contrary to artist’s imagination of one foot over the other. Perhaps it is simply to render material artifacts to a jaded faith or to justify vindi...
August 10, 2004 by stevendedalus
A compelling argument for the validity of the separation of multiculturalism and state — and religion for that matter — lies with Quebec’s current predicament. What with its division of language and culture between English and French languages, Anglican and Catholic, Canada’s history has always been naturally multicultural. According to a Times article, the province of Ontario passed a law permitting religious authorities, under limitations, to arbitrate civil liberties if the citizen was w...
February 23, 2008 by stevendedalus
If you didn't give a damn what family friends or anybody thought of you what religion would you choose or are you comfortable with your present faith? Or perhaps you'd prefer none at all?