Once those things, and some other things, are no longer done, then speaking
ill of the religious people will no longer be warranted.
Not exact matches
There is no where in any part
of Quran or Sunnah where it says
people or youth are to be chained... and kept in dungeons... Thisnis ignorance, arrogance and conspiracy done by
ill hearted
people in the name
of religion when it is by no mean a part
of religion... I have seen such cases only at remote poor areas when they have mentally sick youth or
people who could be dangerous for others and can not afford to hospitalize are being kept chained like that but not in
religious establishments, rather at places where fraud witch doctors who claim that those are possessed...!!!
maybe it's time for
people to rise up and crush the skulls
of the mentally
ill people who propagate these hysterical
religious ideologies?
So many
people have been further harmed by the judgment
of their
religious peers who consider them spiritual failures for being physically or mentally
ill.
A God who at first glance is comparable to the picture
of the Oriental ruler, who governs his
people with complete arbitrariness, bound by no rational law; but a God who is conceived as wholly different from an Oriental ruler, since all physical traits are lacking, all tyrannical desires alien; a God who desires justice and righteousness and punishes sin, a God who loves His
people as a father his first - born son, a God to whom the
religious man
ills as to his father, and in whose help he trusts in all situations
of life.
As for the dangers, I think religion in general, and Christianity in particular, is
ill served when leaders
of the
Religious Right proclaim what Christians as «
people of faith» are going to do if a President or major party disagrees with them, as if they have been empowered to speak for all Christians or all
people of faith.
This is the case not least because their views on the ethics
of assisted dying for the terminally
ill or equal rights for gay
people or state - funded
religious schools were unrepresentative and often lay far outside the mainstream.
The study also found that older
people were more likely than younger
people to believe it is OK to allow physicians to prescribe life - ending drugs to terminally
ill patients who request them, and that the most
religious or spiritual
people were the least supportive
of this idea.
In India, many mentally
ill people of all faiths visit
religious sites renowned for having curative powers.