Heresy is a big problem in the world. All the way from global belief down to the smallest statement, they are all equal in misconception. If I say, for example, that the truth comes out when a drunk person speaks their mind, people will assume it to be true regardless of the fact that it logically isn't always so.
If you get ten people around in a circle and had them whisper a quote all the way around it, the quote would likely become something different by the time it had gotten around. Maybe someone purposely altered the quote, or maybe it was simply miscommunication, but it still stands firmly on the grounds of heresy.
Seize today; put no trust in tomorrow_ it is one of my favorite quotes, which came from Horace. In ancient times, Horace was a philosopher of human culture and a master of poetic justice. To put it bluntly, he was not a victim of heresy, but rather it's extinguisher.
People who choose to rise above common belief and seek greater reasoning can become the makers of tomorrow. Heresy can try to deny that passage, however. For example, Giordano Bruno, a 15th century scientist, was burned at the stake by the church for fouling religious beliefs. It turns out centuries later that he was in fact right in his scientific inquiries.
Almost nothing at all about human nature has changed in it's thousands of years of existance. The world in general has become less barbaric than ancient times. On the surface anyway. But human nature shows it's face through heresy. This brings trouble to any man who wants truth.
One current issue that revolves around this is the Muslim belief. Heresy has transformed peaceful, nonviolent Muslims into an image of hate and terrorism. Here are two kinds of logic: One logic is says that there is a radical Muslim group who seeks to kill any non-believer of their religion, and so Muslims must be bent on world domination. On the contrary, another logic says that all religions have a radical group, and if they are bent on world domination, so is every other religion.
You will notice something about these two logics. One of them is extremely bias, while another is easily distinguishable to be true_
Heresy is the heart of human ignorance, yet it sets the stage for hope and comfort. It also condemns humans to an infinite struggle. Either way you choose to look at it, this cycle will keep spinning until the impossible idea of unity reigns destruction:
War
If you get ten people around in a circle and had them whisper a quote all the way around it, the quote would likely become something different by the time it had gotten around. Maybe someone purposely altered the quote, or maybe it was simply miscommunication, but it still stands firmly on the grounds of heresy.
Seize today; put no trust in tomorrow_ it is one of my favorite quotes, which came from Horace. In ancient times, Horace was a philosopher of human culture and a master of poetic justice. To put it bluntly, he was not a victim of heresy, but rather it's extinguisher.
People who choose to rise above common belief and seek greater reasoning can become the makers of tomorrow. Heresy can try to deny that passage, however. For example, Giordano Bruno, a 15th century scientist, was burned at the stake by the church for fouling religious beliefs. It turns out centuries later that he was in fact right in his scientific inquiries.
Almost nothing at all about human nature has changed in it's thousands of years of existance. The world in general has become less barbaric than ancient times. On the surface anyway. But human nature shows it's face through heresy. This brings trouble to any man who wants truth.
One current issue that revolves around this is the Muslim belief. Heresy has transformed peaceful, nonviolent Muslims into an image of hate and terrorism. Here are two kinds of logic: One logic is says that there is a radical Muslim group who seeks to kill any non-believer of their religion, and so Muslims must be bent on world domination. On the contrary, another logic says that all religions have a radical group, and if they are bent on world domination, so is every other religion.
You will notice something about these two logics. One of them is extremely bias, while another is easily distinguishable to be true_
Heresy is the heart of human ignorance, yet it sets the stage for hope and comfort. It also condemns humans to an infinite struggle. Either way you choose to look at it, this cycle will keep spinning until the impossible idea of unity reigns destruction:
War