Weekly Photo Challenge: Arranged

These shopping carts stood neatly arranged in rows in a sea of deformed molten iron after a major fire.

Why Christianity is wrong for me

Photo: Wikipedia Commons

I was born into a Christian family and raised by the values Christianity teaches. I went to church every Sunday, on Christmas Eve, Easter Sunday and in a separate group of children. I was baptized in the church, I was confirmed in the church and otherwise visited the church quite frequently during childhood and adolescence. And I know my bible. But the faith disappeared when I became an adult. I’m still a religious person, but not within a particular religious direction.

Why, you ask? When I became an adult I began to read about Christianity and its history. And what I read shocked me, to say the least. Norway, my home country, was a country that believed in norse gods before Christianity came in the 800`s. But the Christianization of Norway was not a peaceful affair, it was done by force. Norwegians who for centuries had believed in Thor, Odin, Loki and the other norse gods were forced to renounce their gods and devote life to Christianity. Many Norwegians revolted against the church, but they were quickly executed and called barbarians. Nothing should stand in the way of the Christianization of Norway.

In the Middle Ages, in the years between 1400′s and 1700′s, several thousand women and children were convicted of being in league with the devil and witchcraft. But they were not sentenced to a prison sentence, they were burned alive at the stake. And the trial, in which priests were a judge, were often no more than a cranky neighbor who accused you of being witches or possessed by the devil.
Church ruled the country with an iron hand in the Middle Ages. Everybody had to abide by the laws of the church, those who did not risked being banished, sent to prison or executed. And belonging to the church was not optional, you were forced. All that would not be a member of the church were ostracized and called barbarians or in league with the devil.
I condemn the church? No, not at all. I know the church has done much good, even in the Middle Ages. I know many of the values you learn in church are good values. And I live by many of them yet. But I can not support a religion that has so much cruelty behind it. This may sound very stupid for you and it’s okay. You have your opinions and I have mine.