SonicWaffle said:
Oh, Descartes, you and your hypothetical demon. Of course, the problem with that idea is that saying "We may never know!" and dropping the subject is pretty much impossible for our species. We're just so bloody curious.
That's Pascal, not Descartes.
I'm not sure of the reason for most Christians (because for most of the western world, Christianity is the main religion the Internet has opted to scorn), but for black Americans at least, Christianity--or what we call "the Church"--is more than simple comfort.
Religion gave our ancestors fortitude to survive the evils of slavery. It was a place of cultural support: a virtual Wakanda in a hostile, post-Civil War, Jim Crow era, KKK-infested, unsympathetic/apathetic white man-ruled United States.
Religion gave the world Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., just as much as it gave the world Osama Bin Laden.
On the flipside: empirical, rational secular inquiry built the modern world. It gave me the computer I'm typing on, the glasses I wear to see what I'm typing. We know so much more, and we've unlocked even more mysteries, by being able to question what we believe to be true. Thus, I understand why a given atheist or agnostic will fight adherence to what they perceive as blind dogma: as far as they are concerned, religion stands between humanity and progress.
My thought is that any ideas humans have can be used to manipulate, control, and coerce others--period. You have good ideas, and evil ideas, and stupid ideas, and crazy ideas. Ideas do not go away, no matter how illogical or stupid they are. Ideas can be discredited, but that's about it.
What I don't understand, then, is the compulsion of a given person to get bent out of shape when another person has an idea (opinion/belief) that differs from theirs in the slightest. This goes for the religious as well as the agnostic.
It also applies to politics, and I get more irritated when political sides are demonized than when religion is bashed: US politics have a greater direct impact on our lives than, say, whatever the fudge Fred Phelps calls Christianity. Republicans and Democrats: each party has good ideas mixed in with their crappy ones, but the only way for we the people to filter them out is to actually listen to both sides. We can't do that when Team Babar screams about God, guns and liberals, while Team Baba Louie rants about global warming, gay marriage, and conservatives.