No The Bible plainly states that the fruitage of the spirit are......
Galatians chapter 5 v 22
On the other hand, the
fruitage of the spirit is love, joy,
peace, long-suffering, kindness,
goodness, faith, 23 mildness,
self-control. Against such
things there is no law.
It is hard to tell whether religion really is the reason. We might say that it is the excuse. Without religion, people would probably use other excuses for violence against people that are different - and indeed, they do.
Greed, superiority complexes, power struggles, and a lust for blood are the causes for violence. Some just use religion as an excuse to justify the actions.
No definitely not.
An atheist isn't a religion its just a group name for people with no religion. Atheists have the freedom to believe what they like about violence.
Violence has no color and criminals have no religion.
The answer you are looking for is Catholic and Protestant. However it would be wrong to categorise the violence in Northern Ireland as being down to religion. There are many factors, of which religion is just one. The two sides roughly divide by religion, but there are other things that divide them that have nothing to do with religion, and many of those that were involved in violence were obviously paying no heed to what their religion would have them do. Neither Catholicism or Protestantism support violence.
Peace
they rock hard
What is S? For what? no religion calls for violence whatsoever.
what is S? For what? no religion calls for violence whatsoever.
The quakers religion was rooted in Christianity and believed in non-violence, and everyone helping everyone.
Disharmony in religion can be caused by differences in beliefs, interpretations of religious texts, traditions, or practices. It can also arise from disagreements over leadership, authority, or the role of religion in society. In some cases, historical, cultural, or political factors can contribute to tensions between religious groups.
yes, as much as any other religion does
Jack David Eller has written: 'Violence and Culture' 'Cruel creeds, virtuous violence' -- subject(s): Anthropology of religion, Violence, Religious aspects