<p>Edited .</p>
<p>edit :) </p>
<p>:P</p>
<p>Everyone thinks that way. Okay, I edited.</p>
<p>perhaps i'll see you some time! i play basketball, and i think we played your team? perhaps not. hmm.</p>
<p>do you do any sports?</p>
<p>I play golf. I don't know if we played each other for basketball, but I do know that we did play your team for volleyball sometime last year (or the year before).</p>
<p>I play on the pistons team I'm the guy thats 8 feet tall and has 16 size shoe. :)</p>
<p>Okay, I guess I'll bring this back on track: I'm agnostic.</p>
<p>I think I may be an in-the-closet agnostic.</p>
<p>I said this earlier but I just want to say it again why I don't know maybe b/c I'm bored right now. I'm catholic.</p>
<p>member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (mormon)</p>
<p>Catholic :)</p>
<p>-West Side Hindu-</p>
<p>Not an organized religion for me, just a spritual belief system I was raised with based on eastern religious beliefs (reincarnation, universal soul, people are essentially good).</p>
<p>apostolic here</p>
<p>I'm a Buddhist.</p>
<p>i'm a non-practicing catholic... sort of. i go to a catholic school. i'm pretty much agnostic</p>
<p>Christian (specifically, Angelican).</p>
<p>I guess I'd call myself a Hindu, but I don't think the term necessarily means what people think it does. In ancient India religion was never a type of tribal identity that people adhered to. Hinduism is just the collection of all the varied and diverse beliefs of the Indian subcontinent. There are common threads that link them all together and unify them, but it was never about being a member of a particular religion, it was just about each individual embarking on their own path to find the truth.</p>
<p>
[quote]
i'm a non-practicing catholic... sort of. i go to a catholic school. i'm pretty much agnostic
[/quote]
I think Christianity, especially Catholicism, is pretty much agnostic by nature. From the books I've read, particularly Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling it sounds like the main purpose behind the religion is to submit yourself fully to your faith. Kierkegaard's main point is that "faith" is supposed to be something you struggle to develop. Submitting yourself wholely and completely to God isn't easy. And I don't mean just blindly saying and doing whatever an authority says. I mean actually intelligent and reasoned people who ask questions and constantly doubt before they can finally make that leap. It's hard to so.</p>
<p>Roman Catholic</p>
<p>non-practicing Christian Buddhist (odd combination, yes)</p>