• soviettaters
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    10 months ago

    I did. I was born into a Christian family and naturally became a truly-believing Christian while I was quite young. After that I gradually walked away from the religion until I returned under my own will. My faith is entirely my own and my parents have never forced me to believe anything.

    • Queen HawlSera
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      7 months ago

      Honestly I wish I could find a reason to believe, I want so desperately to believe there is a spiritual element to life and after life

      • DroneRights [it/its]
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        7 months ago

        Of course there is. But you won’t find it with post-roman Christianity. Christianity has become a religion that denies the magic found everywhere else in the world, and accepts only one kind, that of their one god.

        If you want to see the magic all through the world, you need to speak to the druids, the witches, the hellenists, and the indigenous whose religions survived colonisation. You need to explore the old ways of the world, before monotheism blocked the magic in the world from our sight.

          • DroneRights [it/its]
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            7 months ago

            It is, and scientists have proved it. The placebo effect. Thoughts made manifest into reality. We have conclusively demonstrated that thanks to the placebo effect, a druid casting an incantation over your injury will cause you to heal faster. Magic is real.

              • DroneRights [it/its]
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                7 months ago

                Sure it is. I bet you’re thinking that it can’t be magic because it’s explained by a scientific mechanism. But that’s silly. Science is a tool for understanding the world. If magic is part of the world, then magic must be explainable by science. If you choose to define magic as impossible to explain with science, then you’re choosing not to believe in magic. But if you choose to believe that magic runs on predictable laws (which most people throughout history have believed), then you can believe in magic.