That's one
hope of humanists: That people choose belief systems based on fact.
Not exact matches
The secular
humanist public schools are always on about persecution,
hoping to entice kids into believing that if they leave their faith they will be part
of the «majority» and therefore safer.
Only after we have recognized the Christian
hope in this form, are we in a position to ask the
humanist or the Marxist if his work for the renewal
of society and for the future generations
of mankind actually exhausts the meaning
of hope for the man
of the new world.
One day, I
hope there will soon be communities for every different type
of atheist, agnostic and
humanist.
I consider myself a Secular
Humanist with a primary focus
of hoping to help in the survival
of humanity.
Neither Catholic speaker critiqued atheist philosophies and the dehumanising consequences they engender, the loss
of freedom,
hope and social cohesion, and the violence that often characterises not just Marxist atheism but
humanist secularism, as in the French Revolution, for example.
I can't prove God's existence just as much as scientist can't prove the big bang... there is evidence
of both but to reach a conclusion takes faith... one side leaves
hope and the other does not... maybe I'm agnostic too because I don't claim to know everything about why I'm here, I have to have faith... Honestly, I'm sick
of the extremes on both sides... the conservative judgmental Christian, who never thought through things as to why the believe what they do (ie Dinosaurs, cavemen, evolution, etc.) and the intellectually arrogant atheist and
humanists.
Similarly, Mayernik's account
of the fifteenth - century founding
of Pienza by the first Renaissance -
humanist pope, Pius II (born Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini), is redolent with memory and
hope.
I got Richard Dawkins» BBC documentaries on DVD from a colleague, as «proof»
of how the atheists and
humanists are attacking christianity and how some are
hoping to eliminate it.
Many
humanists, as well as Erasmus, began to speak with an uncertain voice, wishing to support Luther and oppose the Pope but
hoping to stop short
of violence and indeed
of the rapid change that Luther spoke for.
Humanists UK, which briefed MPs in support
of the Bill ahead
of its second reading in the House
of Commons today, welcomes this announcement and
hopes that the Bill will result in a increase in organ donation rates reducing the suffering
of those awaiting a transplant.
Kathy Riddick, who is also the coordinator
of Wales
Humanists, commented, «I'm glad the Vale
of Glamorgan has withdrawn its decision to exclude me from the SACRE, and I
hope it signals a more inclusive approach.
Ostensibly the middle film in Aki Kaurismäki's still in the works Le Havre harbor trilogy (following 2011's Le Havre), The Other Side
of Hope is another eccentric
humanist tale from the forever happy - sad Finnish auteur.
«The greatest
hope for the Earth lies in religionists and scientists uniting to awaken the world to its near fatal predicament and then leading mankind out
of the bewildering maze
of international crises into the future Utopia
of humanist hope.»