The basic fault lines today are not between people with different beliefs but between people who hold these beliefs with an element of uncertainty and people who hold these beliefs with a pretense of certitude.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
A lot of people don't give much thought to what they believe, and it's easy for them to hold what often are two conflicting ideas in their head at the same time.
People who honestly mean to be true really contradict themselves much more rarely than those who try to be 'consistent'.
I may have many faults, but being wrong ain't one of them.
Doubt is part of all religion. All the religious thinkers were doubters.
We all have faults.
People have a lot of different beliefs, and at the end of the day, we all have deeply held beliefs that probably don't make sense to anyone else.
Everybody's part of the greater whole and skepticism and virtue are a part of that.
The border between the natural and the supernatural, religion and philosophy, may not always be clear. But there are lines, and we should know and accept which side of it we are on.
Everything tends to make us believe that there exists a certain point of the mind at which life and death, the real and the imagined, past and future, the communicable and the incommunicable, high and low, cease to be perceived as contradictions.
Discernment is God's call to intercession, never to faultfinding.