theophile wrote: ↑Mon Feb 21, 2022 8:33 am
Diagoras wrote: ↑Sun Feb 20, 2022 6:47 pm
historia wrote: ↑Sat Feb 19, 2022 12:31 pmBut, apart from this forum or any kind of debate, when you personally think about Christianity, do you picture it as just being this really basic, minimal set of beliefs? Or do you picture it differently?
As a non-theist, I'm inclined to picture Christianity more as 'being this really basic, minimal set of beliefs', than the 'acting in a certain way'. The latter is compatible (in my view) with the philosophy of humanism in many respects, so it would be too broad a characterisation to be really useful.
If we take that approach, we'd be calling a lot of folks 'Christian' who couldn't be further from the truth. I think cms highlighted that nicely in his Hitler question
But yes, there would be overlap / compatibility with humanism. That said, I'm not sure I agree with your 'too broad a characterization to be useful' comment. Is the definition of humanism itself 'too broad to be useful'?... The path of the Christian is a narrow one (if we take Jesus' teaching seriously). For instance, what humanist gives away all that they own and trusts in the world to provide?
If I might pop my 2 cent in, I do see the qualification for Christianity as both narrow and broad; narrow in that 'Faith in Jesus as the saviour' is all one needs and rites and any dogmas and doctrines beyond that really aren't relevant. And broad of course in that it encompasses everyone who believes in Jesus as the savior (Sorry Thom. Jefferson, you ain't a Real Christian).
Which brings in humanism, as Jefferson thought that the Gospels were the best moral code there was, even if he didn't believe in the divine claims. That's humanism. There are religious humanists who (so far as I can gather) reckon that we are better off to arrange and live our lives as though there was was no god there, and humanism can cover everyone from Theists to atheists and including irreligious theists and Deists, too.
In view of the topic I won't critique the Bible as a moral code, but just to say that humanism is not incompatible with the Gospels, given that they both try to devise the best way to live, so far as they can. Which brings up the point

of human (secular) moral codes diverging from the Bible. Sure, we have moved on from the OT and the attempts of Bible apologists to pretend that there isn't approval of slavery in the Bible (or at least acceptance of it) in eitherand both Old and New T, make that clear. Also the attempts to make out that it doesn't treat women as 2nd class citizens. Whether or not women being used to bake cakes and deliver letterbox flyers for the Roman Church, while then having to stand at the back at services with their heads covered and their traps shut was empowering women or not, the fact that we even have that debate shows that human social mores have moved on even from the
discussion of slavery and gender equality. So there is no reason why Christian humanists at least should quietly accept that God and Jesus are letting us do it our own way, which is better than anything in the Bible.
cue: "So look at the world.

Great job by Secularism, hey?"