chansen said:
When engineers or engineering goes wrong, there are investigations, often lawsuits, and sometimes inquiries. We strive to get at the heart of the matter, and the practice of engineering can change, and has changed as a result.
That doesn't happen with faith.
Actually chansen it does. Constantly. You simply do not know what it looks like.
Why do you think there are so many different denominations? All are a reaction to something and each new denomination has changed their stand on some issue which a previous denomination championed. Few of the changes were seismic, most would be considered minor to the casual observer.
Change still happens and believe it or not practices within denominations have changed without the need for schism and a new denomination.
chansen said:
There is a never ending stream
No hyperbole here. What is the flow rate on that never ending stream?
chansen said:
of these examples of fatal decisions made on faith, and when they wind up being fatal, people just throw up their hands and say that it was their right as faithful people.
These examples you claim. Are they the norm or are they aberations to the norm? Does that make a difference? If I look at every bridge that falls and find the same or similar circumstances in each failure how does that explain the overwhelming number of bridges that aren't falling?
chansen said:
And while I can agree that it's their right to be stupid and reject treatment for themselves, someone should be looking up and saying, "What the hell is wrong with Christianity that it can lead people in this direction, and how do we fix it?"
Again, you want to treat bridges standing as if they are bridges that failed. It isn't Christianity as a whole that is leading people in this direction (which direction are we talking about or does it help to be deliberately vague?)
chansen said:
And it's not just people rejecting treatment for themselves. There are the current examples of two first nations girls with leukemia who are being treated by a "traditional therapies".
Is this the norm? I agree with you that it is screwed up. I don't think it is as commonplace as you paint it and to be frank I find that dishonest of you.
Do we go all henny penny when a bridge fails? No, we generally don't. We seem to understand that each bridge is a unique event. If we see that the same construction firm has been building the bridges that fail we would look into it. If we line up all of the instances of folk rejecting treatment for X or Y circumstance we can probably identify the problem. Not everyone is going to be impacted by that problem.
Blood transfusion for example, is that something Christianity as a whole accepts or rejects? Or, do we just assume it is a problem in Christianity because the Jehovah's witnesses reject it? Setting aside for the moment the issue of whether or not Jehovah's witnesses qualify as Christian.
I also find it completely misleading for you to quote cases which Christianity and Christian faith are not driving factors. Indigenous medicine vs European medicine is.
chansen said:
The parent of one of the girls is a pastor.
Who just happens to be aboriginal so you're right. This is completely a Christian thing.
But lets look into the Christian connection and see what we can see.
Ken Sault is listed as the pastor of the New Credit Fellowship Centre. The New Credit Fellowship Centre is affiliated with Reality Outreach Ministries. All I know about Reality Outreach Ministries is that it tours two dramas called "Heaven's Gates and Hell's Flames" and "Last Chance". I don't think I have seen either.
From what I have seen from Reality Outreach Ministries own videos of both programs I would probably gag.
I'd love to take a look at their doctrinal statements but apparently they don't have any they wish to make public. That, in and of itself is unusual. The Reality Outreach Ministries page shows where the New Credit Fellowship Centre is located but fails to identify who the pastor is or when the congregation meets for worship. Great outreach. Not typical of most Christian Churches in the area at all.
chansen said:
when decisions like this are made, time and again, on the back of Christian scripture or other faith systems
More hyperbole. Sure a vision of Jesus figure in 50% of the two instances you point at (which makes it 100% faith based for both) with a sample size that huge the margin for error must be plus or minus 0%
chansen said:
We change our version of "scripture" all the time. We improve upon it.
For the most part it isn't what is written in scripture which is causing a problem. Not even in the Makayla Sault case. It is how individuals choose to interpret scripture and that doesn't apply (near as I can tell) to the Makayla Sault case, they appear to be trusting in a vision and traditional medicine.
Returning to our Jehovah Witness example about refusing blood transfusions. They base that upon a text which forbids the eating of blood. How they can look at a transfusion as being the same as digestion is quite beyond me. I imagine that there are many more Christians who are similarly puzzled and we have pointed out that transfusion and digestion are actually very different. The Watchtower refuses to listen so, you're right, that is all of Christianity making the same stupidly false equation.
chansen said:
Christians just say they were reading the code book wrong, and throw up their hands.
Some Christians may. All Christians won't.
For example when this particular Christian was told by several doctors in NL(four to be exact) that it was impossible for his son to be experiencing an early onset of a Bi-polar disorder I went straight to scripture, blindly opened my Bible and placed my finger squarely on Isaiah 19: 5 to read, "The waters of the Nile will be dried up, and the river will be parched and dry;" which I'm sure you will agree how we Christians make every single decision in life. Just this morning I agonized about whole grain cheerios or grape-nuts and was very happy to receive counsel from Matthew 26: 37, "He took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee and began to be grieved and agitated."
I get that you are comforted by the belief that we Christians are dunces.
For the record I moved my family to get better help from my son. I prayed furiously that we would find it but I didn't throw up my hands and quit.
You'll say that my prayers were of absolutely no effect. But you cannot measure what I was going through at the time and you don't know how close I was to giving up on everything.
And newsflash. I'm a very average Christian so I reject your fabrications about all Christians ignoring proven medicines to put their children at risk so that they can bring about some miraculous intervention from God.
I admit that there are Christians out there who will do just that.
I don't think it is anywhere near as common as you would like us to believe.