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I don't know, do you? cover

I don't know, do you?

Chapter 8: HOW CAN WE "TAKE" CHRIST?
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About This Book

A series of essays and addresses contest organized religion and creeds, arguing that fixed doctrines obstruct intellectual progress and moral development. The writer recounts encounters with churches, explains reasons for adopting agnosticism, and critiques particular doctrines such as hell, miracles, and special providence. Other pieces analyze religious language and ritual, reassess Christian-based moral claims, and reflect on prominent freethinking figures and literary commentators. The tone blends polemic with reflective argument, urging reliance on reason, individual conscience, and social improvement in place of unquestioned authority.

HOW CAN WE "TAKE" CHRIST?

All that is good in our civilization is the result of commerce, climate, soil, geographical position, industry, invention, discovery, art and science. The Church has been the enemy of progress, for the reason that it has endeavored to prevent man from thinking for himself. To prevent thought is to prevent all advancement except in the direction of faith.

Robert Ingersoll.