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To: HangnJudge

Not if you experience living as a Christian/Catholic in certain Indian districts and attempt to make a public manifestation of your faith and most definitely you’d risk your life if you do missionary work in the tradition of St. Paul.


12 posted on 07/28/2009 8:22:57 PM PDT by Steelfish
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To: Steelfish
Not if you experience living as a Christian/Catholic in certain Indian districts

Ask an Muslim what happens in the USA
When they make a public expression of belief...

Screwed up people are everywhere

13 posted on 07/28/2009 8:25:35 PM PDT by HangnJudge
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To: Steelfish
Not if you experience living as a Christian/Catholic in certain Indian districts and attempt to make a public manifestation of your faith and most definitely you’d risk your life if you do missionary work in the tradition of St. Paul.

Hindu violence against Christians - when it occurs - is overwhelmingly by traditionalist villagers who feel threatened by ceaseless Christian proselytizing. Unlike Muslims, however, Hindus will often and loudly declare that Hinduism is a religion of genuine peace that in no way supports or justifies violence in it's name, to the the point of overwhelmingly recommending a non-violent and vegetarian life. This especially includes the critical renouncing - by virtually all Hindus - of any violence against Christians by Hindus, as against the Hindu teachings.

In contrast, find even one Muslim who will renounce Muslim violence - which also happens to be the declared teaching of Islam itself. The two are starkly opposite in philosophies.

Also, while against the forcefulness of "missionary work in the tradition of St. Paul," Hinduism does openly accept Jesus Christ as an incarnation of God. It simply also teaches that God has incarnated many times in many ways for the upliftment and saving of humanity, as well as all other sentient and nonsentient life in the universe.

So what the philosophical, religious and sociological problem is that the Hindus find with Christianity, is that while Hinduism acknowledges and accepts Christ, this acceptance and even worship is not enough for Christian missionaries, who demand the rejection of the Hindu philosophy that acknowledges a God who has come, and will come, as needed - not just once as Jesus Christ.

And so it is not hard to see how traditionalist Hindu villagers can come to see Christians as unreasonable and aggressively against their core beliefs, especially when it is put upon them for many years in their own villages.

19 posted on 07/28/2009 11:18:10 PM PDT by Talisker (When you find a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be damn sure it didn't get there on it's own.)
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