Salvete! (Latin: Greetings, y'all!)
My name is Zach. I am a college Freshman in Middletown America (more-so a reference to the kind of town and the region than to its actual name, but it was at one time "nicknamed" such). I am majoring in English Education, and am undecided as for a minor, but might choose Latin -- its such a beautiful language. I was born, raised, and baptized Southern Baptist, but have experience in United Methodist and Pentacostal (many forms) denominations. I have studied to varying degrees Nordic and Greek mythology, the Baha'i faith, Buddhism, and various economic systems (Communism, Marxism, Utopian Socialism, Captialism, Objectivist Capitalism [please do not make me place the technical French term]). Despite this last listing, I still do not understand economics . . .
. Shortly after my 8th grade year, I renounced Christianity and proclaimed myself an atheist, although agnostic would have been a more accurate term. Science seemed to contradict what my pastors taught. Science had evidence, my pastors did not. I understand the relationship between science and religion thusly: Truth cannot contradict Truth, where there is contradiction, it is either a case of bad religion or bad science. This does not mean discarding what is uncomfortable or against one's opinions -- it means after carefully analyzing the objective evidence on both sides, which is true? In short, I felt that religion had failed as a medium for Truth. The ideas I held before this were exclusively my parents'. After this, I started to form my own perspectives. Oddly, it was the very same vehicles that pushed me away from Christianity in the first place that led me back: science and human reasoning. When I attended a Catholic Mass for the first time, I became fully aware of where the answers to my many questions and wanderings lie. After much researching, I became convinced. But it was the Holy Eucharist (Sacrament of the Altar, Blessed Sacrament, Communion) that spurned me to convert. I was confirmed into the Catholic Church in a parish specialized for college students during the Easter Vigil of '10.
My favorite translation of the Bible is the RSV-2CE (Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition). The RSV branch of translations is accepted by both Protestants and Catholics and is based entirely and directly off the Greek and Hebrew texts. It is considered by many biblical scholars to be one of, if not the, the most accurate translations of the Holy Scriptures in the English language. The Catholic editions (1st edition is no longer in print, I think) include the Deuterocanon (sp?), commonly, but incorrectly, called the "Apocrypha" by many non-Catholics. The second edition simply replaces the thee's and thou's with you's. It is considered as part of the same vein as the KJV -- a literary and faithful translation, but more suitable for modern readers due to the natural evolution of the English language.
My name is Zach. I am a college Freshman in Middletown America (more-so a reference to the kind of town and the region than to its actual name, but it was at one time "nicknamed" such). I am majoring in English Education, and am undecided as for a minor, but might choose Latin -- its such a beautiful language. I was born, raised, and baptized Southern Baptist, but have experience in United Methodist and Pentacostal (many forms) denominations. I have studied to varying degrees Nordic and Greek mythology, the Baha'i faith, Buddhism, and various economic systems (Communism, Marxism, Utopian Socialism, Captialism, Objectivist Capitalism [please do not make me place the technical French term]). Despite this last listing, I still do not understand economics . . .

My favorite translation of the Bible is the RSV-2CE (Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition). The RSV branch of translations is accepted by both Protestants and Catholics and is based entirely and directly off the Greek and Hebrew texts. It is considered by many biblical scholars to be one of, if not the, the most accurate translations of the Holy Scriptures in the English language. The Catholic editions (1st edition is no longer in print, I think) include the Deuterocanon (sp?), commonly, but incorrectly, called the "Apocrypha" by many non-Catholics. The second edition simply replaces the thee's and thou's with you's. It is considered as part of the same vein as the KJV -- a literary and faithful translation, but more suitable for modern readers due to the natural evolution of the English language.