Sometimes when religion is being discussed, someone will say something like, "I don't think there is a wrong religion. I think that all religions are right in their own way."
Granted, saying such a thing can certainly help you avoid some clashes with people who following different religious paths than you do. However, where is the logic in it?
Think about this. We have Christianity, a religion that believes in one God who exists in three parts, which all merge together to form a Trinity (I'm sure many people could pick that descrption apart, but I think that gives a good general description of what many Christians believe), believes that Jesus Christ came to Earth roughly 2,000 years ago to get tortured and killed as payment for everyone's sins, and that in the end, people will either go to Heaven to be with God forever or face some type of negative eternal consequence (not all Christians believe that there's a Hell with fire and eternal torture).
In addition, you have other religions such as Hinduism, Wicca, Buddhism, Taoism, Jainism, Zoroastrianism, etc. that believe in all sorts of other various things. Some of them are polytheistic. Some of them believe in caste systems. And so on.
How can all of these religions be right?
Christians believe in some variant of the Heaven/Hell dichotomy. Some other religions believe that people get reincarnated after they die. Christianity believes that there is only one god. Some other religions believe that there are many different gods and goddesses. Obviously, someone is wrong here. It seems that way to me, anyway.
Granted, saying such a thing can certainly help you avoid some clashes with people who following different religious paths than you do. However, where is the logic in it?
Think about this. We have Christianity, a religion that believes in one God who exists in three parts, which all merge together to form a Trinity (I'm sure many people could pick that descrption apart, but I think that gives a good general description of what many Christians believe), believes that Jesus Christ came to Earth roughly 2,000 years ago to get tortured and killed as payment for everyone's sins, and that in the end, people will either go to Heaven to be with God forever or face some type of negative eternal consequence (not all Christians believe that there's a Hell with fire and eternal torture).
In addition, you have other religions such as Hinduism, Wicca, Buddhism, Taoism, Jainism, Zoroastrianism, etc. that believe in all sorts of other various things. Some of them are polytheistic. Some of them believe in caste systems. And so on.
How can all of these religions be right?
Christians believe in some variant of the Heaven/Hell dichotomy. Some other religions believe that people get reincarnated after they die. Christianity believes that there is only one god. Some other religions believe that there are many different gods and goddesses. Obviously, someone is wrong here. It seems that way to me, anyway.
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