I consider myself steadfastly agnostic, but I have always been interested in religions--their histories and their stories. I've recently finished reading Reza Aslan's God: A Human History. I'm currently reading Karen Armstrong's A History of God, and I'm planning to read Bart Ehrman's The Triumph of Cristianity next.
Are any of you interest in the histories and stories of various religions? If not, do you find religious history boring, too weird, or just a waste of time?
I'm fascinated by the similar patterns and deity types in apparently all origin mythology, particularly how they evolve and morph into present religions. I love the fables, the history and the power symbols used to fillc our common need to know and control our fates. So grateful to have science and humanism to help fill that, possibly inbred or DNA-carried, fear that makes us coil and coalesce into groups. Now we need science, humanity and good sense to coalesce rationally for the good of the species -- all species and the planet.
I have always been fascinated by religious history. That’s actually probably how I moved from belief. Once you study real history you quickly see the fabled for what they are. That doesn’t stop the history from being fascinating though.
(BTW Ehrman is a personal FAVORITE!)
Ooh! Me! I'm reading Easwaran's Bhagavad Gita currently. I have some recent comments about how much I appreciate religions--without buying into them. I enjoyed Armstrong's A Short History of Myth and Buddha--although I felt her characterizations of some key Buddhist concepts were off the mark.
Can't stand Reza, such an apologist. But Bart should be worth a read.
Is there a reason you’re reading books by these particular authors? Bart Ehrman is ok, but the other two I find to be quite unreliable and tend overlook quite a bit about the negative side of religion and religious history. They try to glamorize their subject matter in a sense and both push their own brand of personal pseudo-religion.
I used to be interested in the history and stories of religion. Now i'm more interested in things by Neil deGrasse Tyson (astrophysicist), and other scientists. The change in interest is primarily due to a change in intellectual 'appetite', in addition to non-belief.