Though most religious people are.
Not exact matches
You can't «believe in» God because you don't know for sure whether God exist (by
most religious people's own admission, I think,
though I coud be wrong, but either way its a fact that the existence of God has not been proven).
I have actually been banned from a few «religion is always bad» atheist blogs as I try to show them that
most people's religions have very little to do with right belief — even
though their
religious professionals may wish otherwise.
A conservative comedian (They fear these
people the
most because if they use their «Alinsky» principle of ridicule on them, they'll get as good as they give) 6 A
religious person (Even
though, ironically,
most lower income democrats, like the mexicans, are devout catholics 7.
Most are allegorical,
though religious people generally feel they are literal.
But, strangely, even
though culture is becoming less «
religious» by
most measurable standards, the number of
people who believe in an afterlife is at record numbers.
Surely,
though, Christians of
most stripes have learned from history that they can not reasonably claim
religious freedom for
people who share their theology while denying it to those who don't, or who have no theology at all.
Even
though, as physicist Steven Weinberg has emphasized,
most people who call themselves
religious tend to adhere to only those bits and pieces from scripture that appeal to them, by according undue respect for ancient
religious beliefs in general, we nonetheless are suggesting that they are on par with conclusions that have been drawn from centuries of rational empirical investigation.
Though most of these sites are not religiously involved, some
people are coming up with
religious sites that will help their followers be able to date online without the exposure of meeting
people who do not believe in their religion.
Although the Supreme Court's decision in Allen has left no detectable sign of «disharmony, hatred, and strife among our
people,» the dissenting justices in the Cleveland case seem to believe that the only way to avoid «indoctrination» and
religious warfare is to educate children in government - run schools (even
though most industrialized countries provide support to
religious schools.
Even
though most LGBTQ
people live successful, happy lives, some homosexual or bisexual
people may seek to change their sexual orientation through therapy, often coerced by family members or
religious groups to try and do so.