Ian,
I sympathize with the frustration that can be caused from working with religious logic, indeed, their belief is as it stands in spite of any logic to you, myself, or anyone who may not agree with the logic of their articles, creeds, and their collective understanding of those.
In that spite, indeed, rests their faith regardless of our admiration of its rationality in comparison to any text; they remain set as they are, and capable of impact consequently.
As to myself; don't worry about me. I don't consider myself to be waisting time.
Most of my studies are in Ancient Middle East anthropology, and not specifically Christian theology itself (for instance, I'm not quite as versed in Christian apologetics of the Medieval period in great detail, and especially not very well in the Renaissance period).
I study for the enjoyment of fascination and inquiry, but I don't really study Christianity.
I did, for a number of years, spend a considerable amount of time studying Christianity due to being raised in it and finding no real satisfaction in the belief I was raised in really ever.
I wanted to be certain that there was not some variation within reasonably thorough search which would offer meditative respite without ethical or logical conflict. I found none capable of enduring such test, so after trying several variations I changed religions entirely to satisfy the curiosity that I had missed some other form which would work.
After Hinduism, Buddhism, and neo-druidism, I found nothing remarkable in satisfaction; only lots of overly complicated personifications of ontological existence with constructs of propositions for how to leverage best one's relationship to the personified ontology.
However, even having gone through this for a large part of my early life, I do not consider that it was ever a waist of my life.
It was an incredible array of experiences and education culturally.
Further, being so diversely immersed eventually offered me a perspective of critiquing religion as a behavioral function and to begin to examine the neuroscience of the human and reflect upon the systemic functions of the varied ritualized actions (what I have labeled, "proanisotropic" - that is, 'that which is immaterially for the provocation of an ontological experience').
Without going greatly into length further; my end result could be said to be like Bruce Lee's end result of formed and rigid martial arts surveying.
Where he walked away from those and decided that a sampling of that whichever works best for the efficiency of the individual body is the best martial art (meaning; no such thing as a singular form), I likewise find the same is applicable to ontological pursuits.
To my view, religions and their various beliefs are like tendons; leverage for movement.
The difference, as I see it, is that such movement is emotionally and psychologically centered around an ontological dance.
I consider, as a result, religions to be ontological art forms, and I find no real drawback to studying art.
These days, however, I do spend more time studying the ancient anthropology instead of the general function of ontological reverence in human behavior.
Either way, I am assured to not be wasting my time.
If I did not spend it on such topics as these, I would spend it on something someone else would consider a waste of time (like, the entropic relationship of the universe and pressure tension models, plasma bombs and their odd relationship to light sabers, cinematography, the foundation of Western music in Grecian scientific proofs, and several other like valued concepts).
OK, good. Well I’m pleased to hear that you are not getting drawn into years studying religious issues.
Of course we could all disagree for ever about what sort of academic studies would be a sorry waste of people’s decades of efforts. But that does not make every pursuit equally worthy. It’s probably true to say, for example, that it’s a sad waste of peoples time devoting years of study to crystal healing or homeopathy, when they could be genuinely learning what mankind has truly and painstaking discovered by real research in physics, maths or chemistry for example .... that is if they actually wanted to understand the world around us.
Obviously, one genuine reason why anyone might study the origins and history of major religions such as Christianity or Islam, is simply because those religions continue to have great influence over the lives of billions of people. So anyone, inc. atheists, might very well wish to know more about why people continue to believe such things.
As far as “religious logic” is concerned - it rarely seems to be “logical” at all in the sense of ever genuinely attempting to understand what is likely to be true in it’s own ancient origins. It seems instead to be more concerned with maintaining superstitious belief in gods and devils … and that really is not very educational or logical at all. 2:cents, and YMMV of course.
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