Well, one could argue that after years of religious indoctrination, it would be very unlikely that you can be objective when comparing religions.
1) It's quite presumptuous to say that someone else isn't able to be objective due to one factor, when you don't know any of the other factors involved. Obviously, being raised a Christian had an impact on my decision to accept it as truth, as well as to stick with it for this long. But it isn't the only reason, nor is it the main reason.
2) Your argument could be extended to say that nobody is able to be objective about anything they are taught as children, which means your choice to reject Christianity was just as biased as my choice to accept it. Interestingly, between 50-90% of teens leave Christianity after high school (http://www.conversantlife.com/theology/how-many-youth-are-leaving-the-church). To say that the 10-50% who don't just stay because they've been indoctrinated is silly. Moving out of your parents' house gives you the opportunity to experience life in a new way, along with evaluating what you truly believe versus what you were raised to believe. The end result will be either rejecting what you were raised to believe, or accepting it. The decision you make does not affect whether you are being objective in your analysis.
Well, my apologies but I don't see how it would be presumptuous. First of all, I didn't state it as a fact, I only questioned your objectivity. Secondly, it's almost impossible for humans to be 100% objective about anything because we are not robots. Our past experiences affect how we make decisions no matter how objective we think we might be. I'm guessing that religion is important to you, and if you are a devoted member of one religion, it's is
highly unlikely that you could compare different religions
objectively.
I'll ask this one question again because I think it's an important part of the point I'm trying to make. Don't you find it a coincidence that the one religion that you were raised with, out of all the hundreds of other options that were available, just happened to be the perfect one for you? I mean isn't it more probable that instead of this big stroke of luck, you feel Christianity is perfect for you just because you were raised as a Christian? And had you been raised as a Hindu, wouldn't it make sense that Hinduism would feel like the perfect choice for you?
I'm pretty sure that most highly religious people feel that their religion just happens to be the best one for them. That is simply not possible because religion is not something that is in our genes. Indian people do not have the "Hindu gene". Hinduism is 80%+ back there because it's part of their
culture, and if that culture had some other religion,
that religion would be the 80%+.
How can you confidently say "No" to the second question?
Because I believe something you dont.
If you had been living in India all your life and had been taught Hinduism all your life, are you seriously suggesting that you would ignore your culture, your parents and your friends, and would convert to Christianity?
Yes.
Isn't it possible that you feel strongly about Christianity because that's what you have been taught? Isn't it also possible that you would feel the same way about Hinduism if you have been taught that?
It is possible to be raised one way, and still choose the path on your own. The reason I am so firm in what I believe is because of God, not because of my parents/society/anything else.
I think your responses show a very closed mind to this subject. If you thought about it logically and with and open mind, you would accept the strong possibility that the culture you were raised in would affect what you are as a person.
Let me ask you one thing. If you are unwilling to admit even the obvious possibility that your religion might be something different had the circumstances been different, why should I even debate with you about religion? I mean what's the point, because you clearly are not interested in hearing about other theories or possibilities, you only want to strengthen your current belief. This topic is not a discussion about arbitrary things like "what is God?" where anyone can say anything and nobody can prove otherwise. This discussion is about
facts and
numbers, so you can't just say "yes" and expect everyone to take your word for it.
I think that the main mistake many people here are doing is that they don't really consider how different they could be as a person had they been raised in a different culture and different religion. It's absolutely silly to assume that a person who was raised as a devoted Catholic would have the same beliefs and values as a person who was raised as a devoted Muslim.
When I am asking you to picture yourself as a Hindu, I don't mean putting on a robe right now, painting a red dot on your forehead, and moving to India. What I mean is years and years of religions indoctrination in Hinduism since you were a child, with little or no contact in Christianity (or whatever your current religion might be). And when a person says that even though they have been raised as a Hindu and taught Hinduism all their life, they would still automatically convert to Christianity, a religion that is not part of their culture, clearly they are looking this thing from the wrong angle.
To everyone who thinks they have a "free will" and would choose their current religion no matter how they were raised, consider this. If people are truly free and capable of choosing their own religions, how do you explain that map? Why do people in certain parts of the world prefer certain religions? Are those religions in their genes?
Like it or not but statistics do not lie. It's all there in that picture. Main reason how people choose their religion is not God speaking to them, years of studying different religions, or some religious quest. Main reason is simply geographic location, or more specifically the culture, you were born in.
Think about it.