fpb

Brit Hume

Jan 09, 2010 11:23

Like many American phenomena, the advice of veteran journalist Brit Hume to Tiger Woods, and its fierce by-products, have been heard well beyond the borders of the USA. I have not, however, read anyone, on either side, who actually pointed out what was really wrong, and indeed offensive about Hume's advice. Buddhism, he said, did not give the ( Read more... )

buddhism, christianity, religion, brit hume, comparative religion

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luckymarty January 9 2010, 18:43:15 UTC
"He’s said to be a Buddhist, I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith,"

It's possible that Hume meant that Christianity offers the subjective experience of feeling forgiven, but I don't see how that's required by the words. A more straightforward (and more charitable) interpretation is that he meant Christianity offers real forgiveness and real redemption, which is what sinners need.

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fpb January 9 2010, 18:57:52 UTC
It still says nothing whatsoever about its truth. A lie can be very comforting indeed, and that is exactly what atheists say about Christianity.

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luckymarty January 10 2010, 20:39:08 UTC
The quoted line doesn't say anything about comfort; it says "forgiveness" and "redemption." Those words refer to objective realities, and therefore to truth. While it is true that many moderns drain such words of real meaning, I don't see any reason to think Hume was doing so.

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fpb January 10 2010, 20:52:19 UTC
Heck no. All that he said is "it will make you feel forgiven, which Buddhism will not". There is not one word to say that any of these feelings have any objective correlation in reality.

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notebuyer January 10 2010, 04:13:49 UTC
The key to evangelism is meeting the person at his point of need: something modeled by Christ & St. Paul.

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fpb January 10 2010, 07:57:20 UTC
But neither Jesus nor Paul ever said "try this, it will make you feel better".

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notebuyer January 11 2010, 17:20:17 UTC
The point is simpler. You start a dialog with someone where he is. You do not hit him over the head with something he's not interested in.

Something about leading horses to water instead of saying "you are objectively capable of leaping the fence if it was really important to you, so get your own damn water!"

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fpb January 11 2010, 18:28:41 UTC
If that were something one only hears now, you would have a point. The trouble is that it is heard absolutely continuously, in a sequel of variations: e.g.: "Do you find strength in your faith?", "Your faith must be such a consolation", "A Christian is happier than an atheist"; all saying, accept Christianity not because it is true, but because of how it (supposedly) makes you feel.

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