Looking for one in the greater Raleigh area. I'd prefer catholic groups but it's not a make or break deal. Just looking for a younger crowd, current group I'm with has an average age of ~45 years old....
11/15/2006 11:11:37 AM
Vintage21 is a young church with small study groups - interdenominational though, not Catholichttp://www.vintage21.com
11/15/2006 11:31:57 AM
im not religious, and i personally find church to be quite boring. of all the churches i've been to, vintage21 was the most easily digestible and i appreciated that a fair number of the people there came in jeans and tshirts.
11/15/2006 11:59:17 AM
So...yeah...I'm going to go ahead and shamelessly plug Vintage21 as well.The Vintage21 college group meets every Wedneday night at the bowling ally on Hillsborough street. It starts at 7:30 and there's always some free food. Just follow the signs once you walk in. That is a more stuctured program led by the college director at Vintage21.There are also home groups which are more autonomous and led by laypeople. I'm more of a fan of these kinds of groups because people take turns leading and they're generally more organic. Either one is good.
11/15/2006 12:14:30 PM
I frequent the CCF (Campus CHristian Fellowship). The weekly meeting is on Tuesdays on Hillsborough St on the level between the street and Pi Bar. However, they have weekly bible studies that the students run so its very informal and relaxed.Not for everyone but has kept me coming for two years.http://www.ccf-ncsu.org/
11/15/2006 12:16:08 PM
i'll second CCF. I went there when I was a student a few years ago. Good group of people to study/worship with. def not in the Catholic tradition though.[Edited on November 15, 2006 at 12:56 PM. Reason : even if they have ripped to shreds the site i built for them © 2003 ]
11/15/2006 12:53:05 PM
i recommend packguy381's big tent revival
11/15/2006 12:58:42 PM
First Assembly of God on Blue Ridge Road has a young adults group Thursday @ 7pm. Look for the oxygen signs. Its more of a worship service with a speaker. http://www.raleighfirst.org
11/15/2006 2:01:01 PM
tj - i recommend v21 also and you should know how opposed to religion i've been in my past
11/15/2006 2:11:10 PM
I recommend reading the book yourself and taking what you like from it.
11/15/2006 3:54:54 PM
yeah but then you miss the opportunity to learn from and experience with othersi mean, i consider myself a pretty sharp guy, but there's no way i could grasp by myself all the wisdom from a book with so much depth to it. it helps to hear how others' experiences shape their understanding. [Edited on November 15, 2006 at 5:04 PM. Reason : pick and choose]
11/15/2006 5:01:39 PM
I agree that others' viewpoints can help in understanding, but only once your own position/interpretation is solidified. Obviously, an opinion can change, but it shouldn't be swayed easily.
11/15/2006 5:32:42 PM
if you just so happen to be looking for a youthful, laid back church that'll probably have small groups, hit up the Four Square church just outside of Raleigh (google it, I can't recall its exact name)they have a full band for music, show up in jeans, laid back...good stuffedit: it's Hope Chapel in Apex: http://www.foursquare.org/locator/churches.sd?iid=30304[Edited on November 15, 2006 at 5:39 PM. Reason : http://www.foursquare.org/locator/churches.sd?iid=30304]
11/15/2006 5:36:53 PM
Church of Euthanasia
11/15/2006 6:56:11 PM
Thanks for the info everyone.
11/15/2006 7:11:49 PM
i'm not christian at all, but i went with a friend one time to v21, and those people seemed really nicei think sometimes they have their bible studies at a bar
11/15/2006 7:29:36 PM
http://www.ncsu.edu/chass/philo/rel_courses.html
11/15/2006 7:38:17 PM
11/15/2006 7:39:44 PM
11/15/2006 7:47:33 PM
^ that sounds pretty cool.
11/15/2006 8:03:25 PM
yo if i've only been to church like 4 times ever in my entire life, am i going to hell?i'm catholic if that helps
11/15/2006 8:15:29 PM
yes and no
11/16/2006 7:35:20 AM
it dependswhere do retards go when they die
11/16/2006 7:43:58 AM
the same place a tree goes when it dies, or a broken tv goes when it dies... a landfill somewhere in new jersey
11/16/2006 7:27:21 PM
^^^^ bous is right...you won't necessarily go to hell because you've only been to church 4 timesbut you probably will because you're catholic
11/16/2006 10:15:05 PM
I'm taking Intro to the New Testament next semester. I'm kind of worried about being the only atheist in a sea of bible thumpers.
11/16/2006 11:21:00 PM
i took that class, and i didn't find it to be full of Bible thumpers at alland i also maintain that atheism is a kinda ridiculous stance to take...agnosticism is a wholly different matter. I can understand having faith in God, but why go to the trouble of believing on faith that there is NO God?
11/16/2006 11:28:41 PM
Sometimes I think about whether I should be more open minded and embrace a more agnostic view.But then I think about it and the idea of a higher power is almost preposterous to me, so I stick with my atheistic views.
11/16/2006 11:33:00 PM
i cant wait til we find life on other planetsthe universe is so big there has GOT to be SOMETHING
11/16/2006 11:41:14 PM
you're absolutely right.
11/16/2006 11:56:33 PM
i'm atheists when it comes to ghosts & unicorns.i don't think they exist.i don't have sure faith that there is no way they could exist, but they just don't seem plausible to me.i don't think god exists, atleast not any god as defined by in mainstream religion, and while thats not 100% faith that god doesn't exist... its still what i think of as atheism since i don't believe in god.i think people of faith like ascribing faith to people without it because thats how they view the world. but you don't really need faith in "not god" to not believe in god. the faithless just don't always think in terms of faith.
11/18/2006 7:25:18 PM
The son of the Almighty God, and one associated with resurrection. Apollo. The one from the religion where a woman causes the downfall of man (Pandora), and the surviving pious couple have to repopulate the world (Deucalion story), the religion of immaculately conceived demi-gods who come back from the dead (Theseus, Hercules), and the one where gods do water to wine type magic (Athena & Dionysus, where the story actually represents the cultures achievement of creating wine as a way of preserving fruit nutrients throughout winter. The one where babies are abandoned or sent down rivers, and later come back as leaders (Oedipus). Why does the Vatican store pictures of Apollo that later artists used as a base on how to depict Jesus, why does every modern hospital, ambulance, and medical facility have the staff of Aesculapius (the Greek symbol associated with acts of healing and resurrection)? Because these are stock type characters that you’ll find in Zoroastrianism and the stories of Gilgamesh (had a great flood, flooding was a part of farming which is a big part of ancient life) and countless other myths before and after Jesus came on scene. And these stock type literary characters represent cultural achievements, physical migrations of people, economic changes, and people’s hopes and desires. Yahweh seems no different than any of the gods who came before him or after him.Here's that sketch based of time, location, and other descriptions of what Jesus probably actually looked like, if he is a real historical figure and not just myth.------Things like that make me think based on the evidence, Yahweh isn't real. Its not a faith that "not Yahweh."
11/18/2006 7:27:00 PM
sounds like dude is tryna pick up chicks
11/18/2006 7:31:47 PM
the last several posts -> way off topic[Edited on November 18, 2006 at 7:58 PM. Reason : ]
11/18/2006 7:52:34 PM
it was a response to this"and i also maintain that atheism is a kinda ridiculous stance to take"so i think it was called for.and it was a discussion of religion, so i think it was on topic more so than a lot of threads and the paths they take
11/18/2006 7:58:47 PM
eh, so goeth the wolf web
11/18/2006 8:01:34 PM