Sentences with phrase «leaving christianity»

Larycia is better off leaving Wheaton and maybe even leaving Christianity.
How coincidental, I just posted on «My Pathetic Deconversion» as a tribute to people like yourself who studied so much deeper, were committed for so much longer and had so much more to lose by leaving their Christianity.
I do wonder... how did you end up leaving Christianity, what exactly brought you to that point of conclusion?
I agree with the reasons Anne Rice has for leaving Christianity and church.
What part of «Ann leaving Christianity» don't you understand?
When you say to Fisher Price, lay off your Americans and make it in China or we won't carry it, you're pretty much leaving your Christianity out of your business etiquette, unless your Caeser is Chinese.
He said: «We ask God to help them, to give them strength, to keep their faith in their heart and we pray that this difficult situation will not affect their faith to be thinking about leaving Christianity just because it's difficult...»
You can find more of Jason's thoughts about leaving Christianity and living as an atheist in a primarily Christian family and community at TokenAtheist.
But the thing that intrigued both of us was not that so many villagers were leaving Christianity, but that so many still hung on to their Christian identities despite the obvious liabilities.
And once they realise that leaving church does not mean leaving Christianity.
But for me, leaving Christianity is what allowed me to better follow Jesus.
After leaving Christianity, I had to address issues constantly.
Beyond all this, it seems to me that MANY people are leaving Christianity because they aren't grounded (read: educated) in the origins and defense of their faith.
«Without the space that David has created for me to explore I would never have survived leaving Christianity and finding my own path.
fresnojoe, and you would be a great example of why people are leaving christianity.
Just after leaving Christianity, I thought I was a black sheep until I grew real comfortable not being religious and the feeling of being misunderstood disappeared because I didn't care what religionists thought.
I must sadly continue to consider leaving Christianity altogether.
Sorry to dissappoint I am certainly not on my way to leaving Christianity.
(3) After leaving Christianity, I embraced it again with a passion.
How very sad that CNN continues in its relentless far left Christianity bashing on Easter.
It's because I kept asking questions that I left Christianity and, many years later, came back to a much more human version of it.
BTW, as I left Christianity, Thomas Merton was one of my favorite authors.
That's also why I left Christianity and have never looked back.
No wonder they leave Christianity.
Lets leave Christianity out of it for a second.
Facts are: some have left Christianity for atheism, some have left atheism for Christianity.
That core belief of Christianity is among the reasons I eventually left Christianity behind.
So I left Christianity.
Robert, I think if you keep asking yourself those «hard questions» and honestly consider the plausible answers, you'll eventually leave Christianity behind.
I left Christianity, in part because I could not stand the person I became, the hatred that filled my life.
If you left Christianity because of some bad people, I am sorry to say this, but you never understood Christianity.
Among other things, they write about why they have left Christianity.
People can't leave christianity fast enough due to the nutters.
I am so incredibly tired, as a north american (leave christianity out of this), of having to watch my p's and q's amongst the radically inclined newcomers to our countries.
Did I choose to leave Christianity?
My faith took a severe beating, and I watched in frustration as friends with similar backgrounds left Christianity for good.
I left Christianity after 40 years because of the lies being perpetrated..
I left Christianity and adopted a more broad philosophical way of thinking that recognizes all people and all faiths.
After reading the comments, this is the overall impression I get: Why would I leave Christianity and the Church * with all its exclusivist dogmatism simply to run into the arms of another community that is just as exclusive and dogmatic?
* (I want to point out that by saying «Why would I leave Christianity and the Church...», it doesn't necessarily mean I have.)
Most people who get to stage 5 leave Christianity because there are not enough Christian 5s or 6s to create a local community; they are ostracized as heretics; they do nt like hypocrasy.
If Christian civilization is no more, if Christian orthodoxy is disintegrating and if Christian Modernism has failed to rescue it, where does this leave Christianity?
I left Christianity for 12 to 13 years... I was unable to change my pacing for many years.
While there is often an inordinate focus on those who leave Christianity and predict its demise, what do the actual numbers say?
I was speaking to a group of pastors a few weeks ago about the new book, and the first question was, «I get the need for «a new kind,» but I don't see why we don't just leave Christianity behind.
But then the Episcopal Church has left Christianity many years ago.
I did not leave Christianity due to the way others treated me.
Honest question # 2 — If many Christians will applaud a fellow Christian who stands up against or speaks out against what they view as the harmful actions and / or bad policies of their government or the company they work for...... why will they not also applaud their former fellow Christian who leaves Christianity and speaks out against what they view as the harmful actions and / or bad policies of the God they once worshiped?
... why will they not also applaud their former fellow Christian who leaves Christianity and speaks out against what they view as the harmful actions and / or bad policies of the God they once worshiped?
As a person who had left Christianity and returned I had posed myself the very same question, and to answer it I feel it is important to address I think a common charge among nonbelievers, namely, what can one obtain from a church they can not obtain elsewhere.
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