there’s enough pieces of the holy cross to assemble a few extra … you know, just in case …
Religious Cringe
About
This is the official Lemmy for the r/ReligiousCringe***** subreddit. This is a community about poking fun at the religious fundamentalist's who take their religion a little bit too far. Here you will find religious content that is so outrageous and so cringeworthy that even someone who is mildly religious will cringe.
Rules
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All posts must contain religious cringe. All posts must be made from a religious person or must be showcasing some kind of religious bigotry. The only exception to this is rule 2
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Material about religious bigots made by non-bigots is only allowed from Friday-Sunday EST. In an effort to keep this community on the topic of religious cringe and bigotry we have decide to limit stuff like atheist memes to only the weekends.
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No direct links to religious cringe. To prevent religious bigots from getting our clicks and views directs links to religious cringe are not allowed. If you must a post a screenshot of the site or use archive.ph. If it is a YouTube video please use a YouTube frontend like Piped or Invidious
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No Proselytizing. Proselytizing is defined as trying to convert someone to a particular religion or certain world view. Doing so will get you banned.
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Spammers and Trolls will be instantly banned. No exceptions.
Resources
International Suicide Hotlines
Non Religious Organizations
Freedom From Religion Foundation
Ex-theist Communities
Other Similar Communities
Hi, I am interested, could you provide some source for that? I sadly couldn't find anything with a quick google search
I couldn't find the passage, but Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire had a quote along the lines of, "there were so many relics of the holy cross claimed in churches across Europe that one could assemble them into a small forest".
Take it one step further: outside of the New Testament, all the "evidence" that Jesus ever existed at all is circumstantial at best and from a handful of religious Jewish and Roman historians with enormous confirmation bias.
Historians who specialize in that time and area are (for obvious reasons) amongst the most frequently religious academics outside of actual theologians, so most of them have enormous confirmation biases as well.
Well, it obviously says it happened in The Bible, what else do you need? /s
The Bible says in The Bible that The Bible is true.
Can't argue with that logic.
I should write a book that says it’s true and use it as evidence as why I should be entitled to free ice cream whenever I want.
And if it was wrong, it's the Lord testing your faith to see if you are a True Believer™.
Sound logic.
Right. Because nobody would ever create a fake relic lol
The first poster goes by the name "Godless Engineer" on YouTube, it's a great channel with a lot of insightful atheist content, and pretty funny too.
There's only one thing I need to have that proves those crosses are the one real cross. The infallible St. George Michael said it best: "Yes I gotta have faith. Ooh, I gotta have faith. Because I gotta have faith, faith, faith. I gotta have faith, faith, faith."
One can read Josephus and Jewish literature that says he wasn't the Messiah. The historical record is there.
Was he the Messiah? That's where the evidence is lacking.
I'll take another moment to again promote, The Passover Plot. It's a remarkably good scholarly historical look at the life of the man as best we can understand it. I came away respecting Jesus as a very clever religious guy who deftly engineered himself to be on that cross because he was fucking brilliant and he believed he was the one. Great read!
The only religious artifact that I am genuinely curious about is the shroud of Turin even if it's not from that time the imprint thing is still like wtf
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shroud_of_Turin
It was likely made between 1260-1390 and the imprint is made of the pigments ochre and Vermillion.