pmchugh wrote:Player there is a fundamental difference between laying parameters on whether God exists and on whether Christianity is correct.
True. I have not confused the two.
pmchugh wrote:Although I would still argue that God is not a likely possibility, Christianity is far less likely.
I would agree that there is less chance of Christianity being true than that there simply is a God of any kind. That IS logic. Since Christianity subscribes to a narrower vision of God than ALL possible Gods.. sure, then of course there are more chances that any God at all is true. ( just like there is more chance of either a, b or c being true than just a or just b or just c). HOWEVER, that does not mean Christianity is not true. I believe it is, based on logic, evidence and belief together.
pmchugh wrote:Has the Church claimed things to be true that have been proven wrong? Have they claimed things to be absolute morals which we now find repulsive? Can the Church use religion to control the masses?
To answer that requires looking at which Christian church you mean. Churches are congregations of humans. Christianity holds that humans are fully fallible, in fact some Christians say we are tended toward evil (though that is NOT a universal belief by any means). If you will equate God, the Bible and people's interpretations of that.. well, do the same for ANY belief and you will find similar problems.
pmchugh wrote:The great irony of Christianity is it claims to have access to absolute truths, yet it has to constantly adapt to stay in touch with reality.
Any Christian who says they have the whole truth themselves is decieving themselves.
Christ has said he had all knowledge.. and that we have only a small portion of it. You confuse humanity and human failings with the greater possibilities.
The adaptations you claim to see are just humanity gaining greater knowledge.. be it growth in science or religion or both.