Message from @Polybius
Discord ID: 424406193612783617
What are some good religion books I should read?
<:jesus:417536063540559872>
The God Delusion
Idk if the religious books Nick has suggested are a part of his blog book list but these were mentioned after the Styx debate
Not pictured is C.S. Lewis' Mere Christianity which I believe he said is a really good introductory book.
Gonna be the first I check out once I finish what I'm currently reading.
Summa is rough
Even the kreeft takes
In the original language
That's awesome @Dr. Ron /Pol/#7878 are you reading it currently?
I have an english copy I haven't gotten to yet
@Polybius Mere Christianity is great, it has the best explanation of the moral argument for God that I've seen
And CS Lewis' writing is beautiful
Real reading hours fellas hope everyone's extra comfy tonight https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DM9A0xEWsAAGs6I.jpg
time to
READ
Interested to hear your takes lads
howdy
I tend to think of life as a crucible and God as a smith providing cleansing fire. Every single thing that happens happens for an innumerably greater reason that the human mind cannot begin to fathom. Somethings he does are simplistic, and some he does are almost extra dimensional in their reasoning. Everything has a purpose, a place, and a time. Inevitably every event which befalls man is to further purge undesirable aspects from our spirit and soul. Life, and subsequently, evil, is akin to slag, it must be purged and separated by fire.
There is an unbelievable amount of theology dedicated to this very question. This is simply my understanding of a portion of it.
@Polybius
I like it
Oh that was just me.
But I’m fairly sure Thomas Aquinas puts it better than I can.
I hope nobody takes offense to anything I post from this book, I'm not posting as an endorsement or to be incendiary just genuinely interested.
Oh I understand completely.
But yea, @Thomas they showed the cosmological argument from Aquinas and it was very interesting
I'd like to read that book Nick recommended on him
Folks sometimes get defensive when I say that to be traditionally Catholic and traditionally American is a contrarian idea.
An Even Shorter Summa
At first glance I don't see why it would be
Because to truly, and really be Catholic, is to regard all that isn’t, all that goes against doctrine, as a heresy to be purged.
And they aren’t wrong in this.
America allows and even promotes multiple heresies going all the way back to its founding.