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Originally Posted by viscousmemories
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Jeepers, you say that as if only "Christians" can possibly "get" that helping one another should not be burdened with a price. The PRINCIPLE of charity requires that, WHOEVER does it -- Christian or no -- should not "exact a price" for the act of kindness. Otherwise, quite simply, it's not charity, not virtue, at all.
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That's not how I read that comment at all. I don't see how saying "charity is one of the tenets of the Christian faith" is anything like saying "only Christians 'get' charity".
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Well, I was thinking more about the statement, in response to "no such thing as a free lunch," that "
around Christians, there's supposed to be." As if, near any other kind of people, there could never be a possibility of a free lunch; i.e., ONLY Christians (or other religious adherents) "get" the principle of charity or are "supposed to be" charitable. That kind of thoughtless expression or tossed-off implicit assumption just makes my blood boil. Sorry (seriously) for being so cranky and emotional if I've taken something wrong.
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Originally Posted by viscousmemories
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And anyone who does it in the NAME of a religion, such as "Christianity," has just put a price on the act and spoiled it of its virtue. IOW, if the act were truly charitable, you would never be able to find out if the person who did it was a Christian or not.
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Are the efforts of the Salvation Army and the Red Cross not virtuous, then?
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I do not deny that the efforts of the people who do charitable things are virtuous. Sometimes the only choice you have is the vehicle that's there. I'm sure plenty of atheists have done work for the Salvation Army, for example. BUT -- the organization, by naming itself as it has, claims virtue for itself AS a
Christian "charity"; thus, it has already put strings on its OWN motivations. They are an army seeking to recruit soldiers for God. They have an ulterior motive that is not only NOT charitable, it's the antithesis of charity.
The other thing I'd point out is your misperception/assumption that the "cross" of the "Red Cross" is a religious/Christian symbol. It isn't. The origin of the symbol was seeking for some easy-to-produce-in-the-middle-of-the-fray and easily-recognizable-at-a-distance emblem on a battlefield which would mark out the humanitarian medical and relief workers, i.e., non-combatants. It just so happened that a distinctive red shape on a white background (can be easily made from blood/bandage/kerchief) was assessed to be a high-visibility mark under the technological conditions of the battlefields of the time (late 19th c.). The person who founded the organization was Swiss, and the red cross is the inside-out colors and shape of the Swiss flag. Its founding was secular, for a completely secular and humanitarian purpose. Problems arose only when (was it in WWI? I forget) some Muslim troops in Turkey refused to be treated by Red Cross workers because of their mistaken assumption that the cross was a religious symbol. It wasn't then, and it isn't now, but sometimes perceptions can screw things up. That's why we even have a "Red Crescent" branch of the International Red Cross -- because of a mistaken misperception. The IRC of the time thought it better to have more aid/relief workers, and so permitted the societies in Muslim countries to use a different symbol. It was a compromise that was (1) unnecessary and (2) tragic. Look how religion has divided up something that, from its inception, was not religious at all.
Beyond that, you're right, of course. I was making a somewhat hyperbolic statement, I suppose. It isn't that Christians can't do charitable things.
Of course they can! (and do!) They are human beings socialized to be kind to other human beings. BUT -- so are all kinds of other human beings. And, IMO, labeling the charitable activity that you are doing as "Christian" carries a lot of baggage with it, including the schizophrenic doctrinal problems and contradictions inherent in Christianity; many of those doctrines and contradictions are the antithesis of virtue and charity (again, imo).
Seebs and I have had this discussion before -- applying the label "Christian" inherently and immediately tends to set up distinctions and divisions between people, when the central message (my opinion, also) is that there ARE NO distinctions and divisions between people. That's precisely WHY it
IS a "really fucking clear" tenet of Christianity to do charity to others -- BECAUSE there are (and should be) no distinctions between people; i.e., EVERYONE is "my neighbor." I'm just banging away on one of my old saws/pet peeves. Don't pay me never no mind.
Edited to add:
I'll also second Goliath's response to one of seebs's comments, that seebs's analogy was illogical or poorly drawn:
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Originally Posted by Goliath
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Originally Posted by seebs
The mere fact that people need to eat, and people need to shit, doesn't mean people should eat shit. I think trying to combine service and evangelism is subject to the same problem.
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Your analogy fails, as people do not need evangelism ....
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I think seebs's comment was an attempt to be linguistically clever, as a rhetorical device, but it fails as a logical proposition. I think Goliath is absolutely right: the analogy fails, at least in part, because, unlike the two biologically necessary -- indeed, absolutely unavoidable -- processes being used in the comparison, there is
no necessity of/for evangelism. At the most basic level, as Goliath says:
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and this is because I do not need evangelism.
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Kind of a "cogito ergo sum" proposition. I know this is true (x is not necessary), because I know that I personally do not need x.
Edited yet again to add:
I've just realized that this whole part of the discussion is pretty much off-topic for the OP, which had to do with (1) Democrats simply conceding the high ground of "morality" and "values", (2) the infiltration of evangelical Christian principles into the Republican party, including on a "corporate" model, (3) the employment by the mega-churches, as "big businesses," of tactics to convert personal spirituality into corporate/political fundraising, and (4) a call-to-arms to people of conscience to resist the oppression of right-wing, Republico-evangelistic, religio-corporate hegemony. Or something like that.
Sorry to be such a sniveling, de-railing crank. I'll get off my soapbox now.
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