6/4/2007 1:03:43 AM
even I agree with Joe here, that says something.
6/4/2007 1:09:22 AM
^ holy shit. dogs and cats living together. the world is coming to an end [Edited on June 4, 2007 at 1:16 AM. Reason : oops : beatup :]
6/4/2007 1:12:21 AM
6/4/2007 3:18:42 AM
while i appreciate your general skepticism re: Christianity... you apparently don't know much about Mormonism or the the accepted professional and academic definition of cults.and FWIW, Church of Scientology gave some significant amounts of money and supplies to Katrina victims and other disaster victims (Tsunami of '04, for instance), as well as regularly promote drug/alcohol rehabilitation outreach programs for low income inner city people.... So lets put the Scientologists in charge of some federal shit, right?
6/4/2007 4:09:35 AM
of course, the Christians' patience and tolerance only goes so far ... take me for instance. i used to be part of a mainstream Christian church, but i "just couldn't get over" some of their doctrines. you know, like the whole God thing, and the Jesus thing, and the Virgin Mary thing, and the Miracles thing, and the Resurrection thing, and the whole Satan's-gonna-burn-my-ass-in-Hell thing...so I left on my own accord. but I'm sure if i would have stuck around to argue these things for too much longer, they woulda told me to beat it. [Edited on June 4, 2007 at 4:56 AM. Reason : ]
6/4/2007 4:51:31 AM
6/4/2007 2:08:29 PM
just for starters, you've confused Scientology with Christian Science ... and you're mischaracterizing C.S. when you suggest that they would seek to impose their faith healing views on non members.with all due respect, i think you're quite well-informed on a number of subjects, but I've got to say that Mormonism, and the nature of cults as distinct from religions isn't one of them.
6/4/2007 4:19:11 PM
6/4/2007 5:37:59 PM
i grew up in a southern baptist church too. my experience is the same as Duke's ^.and ive been to a number of other churches over the years some more fundamentalist, some less so.all of them (southern baptist, american baptist, methodist, lutheran, disciples of christ, etc., etc., ad nauseum) the members, layity and full ministers would totally spend as much time as you wanted discussing any aspect of the faith. you could disagree all night long, and if at the end you couldnt agree, you could agree to disagree. Hells Bells, you could even say that you didnt really believe that Jesus was the Son of God, and if you kept coming back, you'd always be welcome. i cant imagine why such a person would want to come back, but still...what you would never get was a letter from the Elders saying that since you missed your "Church Court" date, they were informing you that you had been "found guilty" and were no longer welcome.
6/4/2007 8:10:55 PM
6/5/2007 1:50:39 AM
okay, points noted. good comeback. truthfully, Mormonism is a religion that is dangerously close to the line where academics and professionals characterize the diff between cults and religions.probably a majority of academics will grant Mormons the benefit of the doubt and not relegate them to cult status. but the deciding factor is often due to political considerations, because it really is damn close. close enough that a sizable minority of religious scholars continue to make a pretty good case for them being more like a culti tend to be swayed by the latter group. you apparently prefer the former. at this point all we have left to do is descend into pedantic debate, and try not to bore the onlookers. I can agree to disagree. (but for the record, excommunication proceedings not uncommon, and many people get them even though they strive to be "good mormons". but they run afoul of some doctrinal point or another. and so they get sent to hell, along with their family, unless their family renounces them.... okay, okay, i'll stop. )[Edited on June 5, 2007 at 4:13 AM. Reason : ]
6/5/2007 4:10:41 AM
6/5/2007 7:41:18 AM
6/5/2007 8:41:47 AM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/06/04/AR2007060401379.html?hpid=opinionsbox1
6/5/2007 10:19:12 AM
wow !!! did i just read a letter of a dude being kicked out of his religion. that's fucked up.
6/5/2007 11:41:35 AM
^^ That article sums up why some people like Thompson. Of course, the author probably would never understand why that is.
6/5/2007 12:18:15 PM
6/5/2007 12:37:40 PM
i used to think he was Vigo the Carpathian from Ghostbusters II
6/5/2007 1:22:18 PM
he would be a good VP.....kinda like Cheney
6/5/2007 7:02:53 PM
If a religion being strict is the definition of a cult, then I guess you can say catholicism, mormonism, and even the church of england (foundation for all protestant beliefs) are cults.Big Deal. Its pretty obvious that these people, and nutsmacker, had no desire to be a part of the mormon church, so receiving those letters shouldn't come as a surprise.Anyone who "wants" to be a part of the mormon church and disobeys the teachings can stay a member if they DESIRE to be obedient.
6/6/2007 8:20:30 AM
the difference between religion and cult is the number of followers
6/6/2007 9:58:57 AM
*and the ridiculousness of their views.
6/6/2007 10:00:05 AM
^^ there are more mormons than Presbyterian, Lutheran[Edited on June 6, 2007 at 12:16 PM. Reason : .]
6/6/2007 12:11:28 PM
6/6/2007 1:53:03 PM
Fun fact, if anyone hasn't noticed, all of the Law & Order episodes on TNT these past few weeks have featured every executive DA except fred dalton thompson, or the episodes where he isn't featured
6/6/2007 2:44:45 PM
^^ those stats were actually found from members on record. Thats about as official as you can ask for. Surprising isnt it.^ I was watching one I think on monday, and Fred Thompson was definitely the DA in that episode. (but they lost the trial, so maybe they are trying to only show episodes where he doesnt shine) [Edited on June 6, 2007 at 4:07 PM. Reason : .]
6/6/2007 4:05:41 PM
Weird, because all the ones I've seen in prime time have featured the female DA or the old guy before her.
6/6/2007 11:59:58 PM
...Another hallmark of cultists is that they lie about details of their cult.
TOTAL U.S. ADULT POPULATION 18+ 1990 = 175,440,000 2001=207,980,000 1990 2001Christian Religious Groups Number % Number % Catholic 46,004,000 50,873,000 24.5Baptist 33,964,000 33,830,000 16.3Protestant - no denomination supplied 17,214,000 4,647,000 2.2Methodist/Wesleyan 14,174,000 14,150,000 6.8Lutheran 9,110,000 9,580,000 4.6Christian - no denomination supplied 8,073,000 14,190,000 6.8Presbyterian 4,985,000 5,596,000 2.7Pentecostal/Charismatic 3,191,000 4,407,000 2.1Episcopalian/Anglican 3,042,000 3,451,000 1.7Mormon/Latter-Day Saints 2,487,000 2,787,000 1.3Churches of Christ 1,769,000 2,503,000 1.2Jehovah's Witness 1,381,000 1,331,000 0.6Seventh-Day Adventist 668,000 724,000 0.3Assemblies of God 660,000 1,106,000 0.5Holiness/Holy 610,000 569,000 0.3Congregational/United Church of Christ 599,000 1,378,000 0.7Church of the Nazarene 549,000 544,000 0.3Church of God 531,000 944,000 0.5Orthodox (Eastern) 502,000 645,000Evangelical 242,000 1,032,000 0.5Mennonite 235,000 346,000Christian Science 214,000 194,000Church of the Brethren 206,000 358,000Born Again 204,000 56,000Nondenominational 195,000 2,489,000 1.2Disciples of Christ 144,000 492,000Reformed/Dutch Reform 161,000 289,000Apostolic/New Apostolic 117,000 254,000Quaker 67,000 217,000Full Gospel 51,000 168,000Christian Reform 40,000 79,000Foursquare Gospel 28,000 70,000Fundamentalist 27,000 61,000Salvation Army 27,000 25,000Independent Christian Church 25,000 71,000TOTAL Christian 151,225,00 86.2 159,030,000 76.5
6/7/2007 5:46:26 AM
wow ... 2001 .. nice stats. Here is the first thing I could find for 2007 stats."The American Religious Identification Survey (ARIS) 2001 was based on a random digit-dialed telephone survey of 50,281 American residential households in the continental U.S.A (48 states)"http://www.ncccusa.org/news/070305yearbook2007.htmlThe 2007 Yearbook reports the largest 25 denominations/communions in the U.S. (noting an increase or decrease in membership since the 2006 Yearbook reports).1. The Catholic Church, 69,135,254 members, reporting an increase of 1.94 percent.2. The Southern Baptist Convention, 16,270,315 members, reporting a increase of .02 percent.3. The United Methodist Church, 8,075,010 members, reporting a decrease of 1.36 percent.4. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 5,690,672 members, reporting an increase of 1.63 percent.5. The Church of God in Christ, 5,499,875 members, no increase or decrease reported.6. National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc., 5,000,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.7. Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, 4,850,776, reporting a decrease of 1.62 percent.8. National Baptist Convention of America, 3,500,000, no increase or decrease reported.9. Presbyterian Church (USA), 3,098,842 members, reporting a decrease of 2.84 percent.10. Assemblies of God, 2,830,861 members, reporting an increase of 1.86 percent.11. African Methodist Episcopal Church, 2,500,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.12. National Missionary Baptist Convention of America, 2,500,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.13. Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc., 2,500,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.14. The Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod (LCMS), 2,440,864, reporting a decrease or .93 percent.15. Episcopal Church, 2,247,819, reporting a decrease of 1.59 percent.16. Churches of Christ, 1,639,495 members, reporting an increase of 9.30 percent (This increase reports the church's growth since its last reported figures in 1999.)17. Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, 1,500,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.18. Pentecostal Assemblies of the World, Inc., 1,500,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.19. The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, 1,440,405 members, reporting an increase of .53 percent.20. American Baptist Churches in the USA, 1,396,700, reporting a decrease of 1.97 percent.21. United Church of Christ, 1,224,297, reporting a decrease of 3.28 percent.22. Baptist Bible Fellowship International, 1,200,000, no increase or decrease reported.23. Christian Churches and Churches of Christ, 1,071,615 members, no increase or decrease reported.24. The Orthodox Church in America, 1,064,000 members, no increase or decrease reported.25. Jehovah's Witnesses, 1,046,006 members, reporting an increase of 1.56 percent.[Edited on June 7, 2007 at 10:25 AM. Reason : .]
6/7/2007 10:10:31 AM
^*as reported by the churches themselves.
6/7/2007 10:47:01 AM
Why are you are measuring the number of Mormons against individual Protestant denominations? Few Christians, Protestants and Catholics alike, consider Mormons Christians. A more reasonable comparison would be either Mormons vs. Christians, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, etc. or Mormons vs. Protestants, Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, etc. depending on which classification you choose for LDS.Comparing against individual Protestant denominations is a bit silly if you are talking about followers of a particular religion.Either way, I would think most of you would be far more troubled by Romney's apparent lack of principles than his being Mormon (apparently the only position he hasn't flipped in the last two years).
6/7/2007 11:20:56 AM
Can we get a L&O *doink doink* up in here? *exits SP*
6/7/2007 1:26:28 PM
^^^^ There is nothing wrong with the ARIS sampling method. its is the standard statistical method for polling, and combined with their very large sample population (50,000+ rather than typical political polls of 1,043) it has a VERY LOW error margin.
6/7/2007 1:48:22 PM
You are a retard ... They do not count dead people as members. And if they did, it would probably be higher than that of the catholics Really though, who's fault is it that the sects cant agree on doctrine.I'm just pointing it out as such.So when I ask someone what religion they are, I should always just expect them to say "Christian"??My neighbor never called himself a *Christian Preacher* but rather a Presbyterian Minister. He says the doctrines are different enough that there is a real need to have separate sects, so I say we should all respect them as such also.Anyhow... This did all start with Fred THompson .. maybe bickering about religious stats is more interesting, I dunno. My point was that there aren't quite as few mormons as people might expect, and so I was trying to help people have a better perspective about how *few* mormons there are by comparing religions/sects/cults whatever you want to call them that people around here are more familiar with. [Edited on June 7, 2007 at 2:07 PM. Reason : .]
6/7/2007 2:02:03 PM
everybody's carving out an empire
6/7/2007 2:04:33 PM
6/7/2007 2:07:46 PM
thank you god
6/7/2007 2:09:09 PM
6/7/2007 2:59:02 PM
isnt Thompson about 6'5" 250?also Im starting to think he's got a better chanceLook at Reagan, Arnold, Jesse the Body, etc
6/7/2007 3:01:28 PM
^^ or the biggest increase in membership over the gap from 2001 to 2007. ... Either way, wasn't the point that was trying to be made.
6/7/2007 3:15:01 PM
^ sorry aint buyin it. Mormons have been flatlined throughout most of modern US history as 1-2% of the population. they dont just double their proportional representation overnight
6/7/2007 3:27:50 PM
well if catholics and every other religion in that list can claim people that dont really go to church, but are members of record, then so can the mormons. Its a fair representation of the membership, and definately more accurate than a poll of 50000 people.I dont think they grew that much either, I just think the first poll was flat wrong, and old, so I choose to believe the newer information that compares the churchs all based on what they have on their membership roles, not a poll.
6/7/2007 3:35:56 PM
6/7/2007 5:47:01 PM
Thats cool ... either way, numbers speak to you however you choose to see them as well... I think its something everyone does. Nice job at trying to be insulting in the midst of discussing totally unrelated points. I swear, Extreme Anti mormons never cease to amaze me. Always trying to win over the masses with cheap shots.I think we succeeded in one thing and one thing only here... We ruined a thread that started with a serious discussion and ended with the usual.
6/7/2007 7:23:36 PM
i see you are fixated on having the last word.
6/7/2007 7:45:30 PM
6/10/2007 4:40:30 AM
6/10/2007 10:50:32 AM
6/10/2007 12:23:35 PM
I prefer when we have politicians crusade for issues, such as getting rid of poverty, protecting the environment and iconoclastism.
6/10/2007 1:28:52 PM