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What attracts serial killers to church?
Or rapists, or whatever you call people that trap people in dungeons and rape and beat the shit out of them, etc.
We often find out later how they were avid churchgoers, from which people had assumed they were a good guy or something. But why? (Anyne can go to church and play the 'I go to church' game.) So effectively, this counts for nothing. Which calls into question--what is the value to anyone who is playing this 'church' game (for the same reason of 'qualifying' themselves as an upright citizen)? You're not proving anything to anybody. But what I'm wondering... Is this the reason that horrible monsterous humans are attracted to church--as a 'cover' which removes them from suspicion of their vile deeds? Or--and would this be worse?--are they actually geting something out of it besides that? Does it make them feel better? Does it make them feel less responsible for their actions? Does it make them feel that they can avoid some punishment--which some part of them knows that they deserve? Is it because sociopaths are interested in learning new ways of replacing tangible logic with invented realities, or learning new manipulation techniques, or learning new ways of getting people to place their trust in you for absolutely no discernible reason whatsoever? Disclaimer (please read before blasting): Of course, not everyobody who goes to church is a serial killer. And not every serial killer goes to church. But some of them do. That is the subject. |
I'll admit I have wondered the same.
The conclusion I reached (with no facts to back it up whatsoever) is that it is partly a game for them. They can sit and gloat amongst the truly pious, knowing that they have the same ability as the God that others genuinely believe in and worship. That they choose not to prey on the flock is yet another aspect of their power. |
Wow, sick shit. That all sounds feasible.
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I've been listening to Death Metal, a lot of which is openly Satanic (to varying degrees of seriousness). You'd think that rather than condemning this type of music, the Church would at least appreciate its honesty. You can't say it's a wolf in sheep's clothing, it admits to being a wolf.
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Plus, it's is a place to go for forgiveness and/or bargaining about not doing it again, etc.
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They will do it again. Because it's human nature that is driving their behavior--not arbitrary intervention by supernatural forces. Once you separate our actions from internal causation, you give us ALL excuse to do ANYTHING with no personal lability. |
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Must be a Freudian's lip, as we know female genitalia are strictly disallowed--oops, there I go again--meant to say disavowed.
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I suspect as well that there are avenues for power and authority. Being respected and looked to as a pillar of that community. Plus, they may well have grown up within the church.
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I've heard it said that going into a church doesn't make you a good person like going into a garage doesn't make you a car.
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Many bad people on this planet think they've already got their red day and are beyond redemption. The only chance of getting them to even try being good is to convince them they can start over at any time. Does this also allow your average mid-level jerk to feel like they can keep cutting people off in traffic and always be forgiven? Maybe, but I don't think the mid-level guys are going to cut MORE people off because of this. They're rationalizing after the fact, not justifying before they decide to do it. |
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I do this because I'm trying to counteract my known selection bias towards religion--infomred by my personal experiences, i.e. the religious people I have known have been stupid, childish, or former drug addicts who require an external force to control them, or manipulative sociopaths who seek a convenient forum for preying on the weak. However, when confronted by churchgoers who do not fit these categories, I am mystified. In this way: I wish to ask, is there a meta-system within the main system (designed for childish idiots, as described above)--do the intelligent members of the church do a lot of winking and nodding while the rest of the drooling zombies nod and agree with whatever the guy with the loudest megaphone is saying? I don't ask this from a place of complete naivete. I've spent many hours in church services and Bible studies, as a result of my playing in church bands. I've taken a lot of notes, and been fascinated with this for a long time. I've just never been able to start an intelligent conversation with any of the people at any of the churches I've been to. It's basically impossible to converse with someone who has pre-defined areas which are not okay to talk about, and pre-defined opinions which are not okay to even entertain. Maybe, Clodfobble, you can explain this to me? How can intelligent people stomach religion? |
I think it's the Power, there all on Spiritual Power Trips, and when they originally fall from grace, it's is because the Hand of God Smacked them down.. and when they try to get back up God just TKO's them, and once that happens you have to crawl back to church, and the Psychos Never Come Back.
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That would be great, man, if it was that easy.
If a big man in the sky solved all of our problems, I would be totally on board with that. (What choice would I have?) |
Do you not see the 50 stars on the America Flag?? ONE Nation Under what was that guys name again... GOD.
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Okay.
Donkey toaster Heimlich elevator. These are also a string of words. |
Perhaps serial killers are in part curious about how other people manage to go through life without feeling the need to kill and they find churches a safe place to study them.
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Donkey: The one who Jesus rode into town on... Toaster: A simple Machine Elevator: A complicated machine Heimlich: No room to manuver?? |
NO. JBKlyde. I picked those words randomly. They DO N O T mean anything. Probably 99.99% of everything you'll see every day does NOT have a secret, hidden meaning. C'mon, dawg, that's not a good habit.
What I meant to say is, "words are JUST WORDS." You probably can make a pattern out of anything. Should you? NO. |
Thanks for expressing that flint, I was trying to figure out whether and how to tell him.
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On subject, some people have a dark side that the constant pressure of organized religion keeps dormant. Unfortunately, many more are taught by organized religion that they are evil so they need to keep attending. It is a hard trap to escape when you're born to it.
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There are several Bible passages about how you shouldn't do anything that will weaken someone else, even if it's not something that's a problem for you. In practical terms, this would be like not drinking in front of an alcoholic, but in the original context it was talking about spiritual rituals. Is it critical that the meat be blessed? No, but if it's important to the guy next to you, then it's better for him that you respect the context, especially since it shouldn't matter one way or the other to you. I actually witnessed something like this in real time once: there was a pastor whom I respected and suspected was higher on the spiritual intelligence ladder than he let on. He was giving a sermon on not allowing yourself to be trapped by small symbols, and specifically used the example of a physical Bible. It was the word of God, yes, but it was also just paper and not The Word, because The Word was immutable and larger than one book, etc. As a demonstration he casually tossed his open Bible on the floor and allowed to it sit there, pages crumpled. Long story short, some people were of course offended, the elders met with him, and the next week his sermon was an apology on how he was wrong--not wrong in his original assertion, but still wrong to do something that would be offensive and weakening to the faith of others. (Weakening because the less-spiritually-intelligent churchgoer might say, "This pastor is not Godly! I will leave this church. In fact, I should stop believing in God all together because pastors are all hypocrites...") So yeah, he was basically admitting that from now on in the pulpit he would be treating a physical thing with respect, but he would be winking and nodding at those of us who had understood his point from the previous week. Quote:
1.) Corporate (as in, group meetings, not just belief in your own head) religion is a survival trait. Studies have shown it. Doesn't matter whether it's Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, Quaker--people who go to some kind of church live longer, are happier, recover from health issues more quickly. It doesn't really matter to me whether that's because of the support of a social network, or the health benefits of basic calm introspection, or some divine interventionary response to prayer, or because there are an infinite number of universes and our brains are actually capable of choosing which universe our consciousness ends up in through the power of intense positive thinking. Being and participating in this place is statistically going to be good for me and my family--especially my family, because who's to say if my children will turn out spiritually intelligent, or the kind of person who truly needs the moral structure of a church? We do our best to turn our children into little copies of ourselves, but it would suck if they got to adulthood and I hadn't given them something it turned out they desperately needed. The wrong church can be damaging, no doubt, and as with every parenting decision it's of course incumbent upon me to choose one that isn't. But the wrong school can be (has been) damaging to my kids; that doesn't mean they shouldn't go to school, it just means I have to find the right school. 2.) Church includes a charitable imperative that secular institutions, try as they might, have not yet been able to replicate. They try, don't get me wrong. Non-church-goers (I won't even say atheists, because I know atheists who go to church) certainly donate to charity all the time, and there is nothing to say they can't be just as generous. But in my personal experience, I've never met a non-church-goer who gives a literal 10% of all their income to charity. By comparison, the number of churchgoers I know who give the full tithe are too many to count. Now, granted, part of that goes to running the church itself, and one has to choose carefully to avoid wasteful, lavish, or scamming churches, just as one has to choose carefully among other charities. But even running the church itself is useful for those at the bottom of the ladder who need that structure, so what's the difference between giving to MADD, versus keeping a church afloat when one or two of their attendees are only staying sober 'by the power of their Savior?' One could argue that they don't necessarily agree with all the things the church is going to spend their money on, like anti-abortion policies or the like, but again that only comes down to choosing a church that fits your priorities. Our particular church mostly stays away from that kind of work, taking only separate donations for a local charity that provides baby stuff and maternity clothes to women who have already chosen to keep their unplanned babies. They instead focus on hands-on stuff; buying actual groceries for families who have lost their incomes, doing free repairs on the car of a single mom, going down to the site of the wildfires a couple summers ago and demolishing and clearing burnt structures for days at a time... I saw plenty of donation boxes around town at that time, "dump your old clothes in here for fire victims," which were nice and all, but let's be honest, they were minimal-effort kind of stuff. The people alongside me covered in soot were all from church organizations. And I myself would almost certainly not have been there, were it not for the information and organization disseminated by our church. I would have still felt bad for the victims, yes, maybe donated a few times at the grocery store when they asked if they could add $3 to my bill, but if I didn't go to church I would not have been out there laboring for two days. I wouldn't have even known where and when to show up, and I wouldn't have wanted to go all by myself. They got more goodness out of me, and more out of all their other members, than any secular institution ever has. 3.) My in-laws were missionaries, and at least nominal church attendance when they visit would be necessary to keep the peace anyway. So hey, free brownie points. |
Okay. I'll think about that.
Right off-hand, I'd think, "There has to be a better way!" but I can't think of what it is, immediately. Unless...it's uprooting your entire family and moving them 2,000 miles away to a place where you believe people share your best values--and not just on Sunday, actually all day, every day. For the reasons you've stated here, I think I've just moved my family to a place where we will be waking up in the morning at church, going to church all day, and laying down at night in a bed that is inside the church...which is our entire cultural ecosystem* I love the story about the Pastor throwing the Bible on the ground. What you should have done is made an aggressive attempt to identify every person who was smart enough to understand what he was saying and, then, START YOUR OWN CHURCH. I've always liked smaller churches. *and also, our church doesn't include ignorant, hateful beliefs |
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As for the people who 'play church' on Sunday, how many of them actually buy into the whole fairy tale? Is it possible that maybe half of them have serious doubts about the veracity of some of the more outlandish bits? But, like yourself, where else are they going to go? So we've got a--I can't think of more fitting word here, and I am using the literal meaning, so political correctness be damned--what we've got here is a retarded feedback loop. I propose that ALMOST NOBODY is actually satisfied with the current state of affairs. It's just got so much momentum, and excuse me for saying so, nobody has the balls to stand up and say anything about it. The Pastor throws the Bible on the ground, and then next week he apologizes. How many people in the room are gritting their teeth, but nobody does a damn thing about it. Fuck. That. |
Don`t know if this is the right Forum but it`s called Grooming and it was done to me from the age of 6. All very acceptable behaviours, to build up the pretence of normalcy. That`s why it`s so devastating and life altering for the perp to then betray that trust with someone who has yet to form their identity. It robbed me of all the securities any human being deserves and everyone I`ve met in my life since that time, has been met with suspicion. I call him the monster in the room. It`s all a façade and to date I have not let it go.
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Faith. |
I dunno sometimes words have double meanings.. I m building a stairway to heaven.. I really don't have time for all the nonsense that goes on inside the "four" walls of the confounded church.. gossip is stupid I don't even do it with my family.. If every one were like Vanilla Ice the world would be much better place... aka :quick to the point to the point NO FAKING; unfortunately fake people are drawn to church because it gives them a shield of illusion to the out side world and once that illusion is uncovered that's how God weeds them out.. the people who truly Love God keep going, the potential psychos never return.
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Faith is only a learned behavior...taught to you when you were young. You were born an atheist.
Faith, spirituality, religion...brainwashing. |
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My answer would be that "intelligent people" doesn't have a concrete meaning; conspiracy theories can be incredibly detailed, and exhibit high intelligence and ingenuity. But the conspiracy theorist has started with the conclusion and worked backwards to mesh all new information into that conclusion. |
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Now I'm done. |
I agree. Humans are estimation engines, and designed to draw convenient conclusions. It's the same thing that makes optical illusions possible--Evolution has no 'design' and it is famously incredibly poor at being backwards compatible. We are designed to crave religion, or something like it, and it takes incredible restraint, discipline, self-knowledge and self-control to overcome that trap. Unless you were lucky enough to be raised in an environment that was at least partially intellectual honest. Some people, I suppose, most people, maybe, never had a fighting chance.
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Tail post... The thread title reminded me of a joke:
What attracts all those child molesters to London? Answer: I don't know, it must be all those sexy kids |
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That's Nice
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An oldie, but a goodie :P) |
Late-breaking news on this topic.
I'm watching a Nova documentary, the Science of Evil, I'm right at the bit where a priest has been asked by Jeffery Dahmer to baptize him--this would cleanse him of all sins!--and he is struggling with this. He is meeting with Dahmer, and feeling a connection with him, connecting with his humanity. Haven't seen how this turns out, but I don't buy it. I don't think sociopaths have humanity in them. |
You seem to have trouble understanding, it doesn't make any difference whether you buy it or not. Neither Dahmer nor the priest know you exist, much less care what you think.
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there's a scripture in the bible it says something to the extint of this..
"many are called few are chosen" and another... "work out your own salvation with fear and trembeling" so I would magine that if dahmer had really done it the right way that his mind would be renewend and he would have made better choices... just becaue you follow all the steps to get "saved" dosen't mean your saved you have to wait for gods timeing and it's got to be heart felt... |
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Another one of life's mysteries solved. |
What attracts serial killers to church? Dead bodies hung from crosses and dripping blood statues? It's like Chuck E Cheese for killers!
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Hiding in plain sight as it were.
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