That’s a hard question to answer without defining the terms better.
I grew up among a lot of self-identified religious people. Using as my test for the left-side “believe in God” the willingness to arrange at least some superficial aspects of one’s life around those beliefs (e.g., where one lives, sends children to school, eats, etc.), and using as my test for the right-side “believe in God” the willingness to die rather than violate what they understood to be God’s law, I’d say I’m .95 confident that fewer than five percent of the folks with LH beliefs had RH beliefs, and .75 confident that fewer than 1one percent did.
Judaism has certain specific instances where it is accepted that it would be better for one to die than commit a sin.
Also, martyrdom would not be such a large aspect in Christianity (or, at least, in early Christianity) if dying for God wasn’t considered a good thing.
That’s a hard question to answer without defining the terms better.
I grew up among a lot of self-identified religious people. Using as my test for the left-side “believe in God” the willingness to arrange at least some superficial aspects of one’s life around those beliefs (e.g., where one lives, sends children to school, eats, etc.), and using as my test for the right-side “believe in God” the willingness to die rather than violate what they understood to be God’s law, I’d say I’m .95 confident that fewer than five percent of the folks with LH beliefs had RH beliefs, and .75 confident that fewer than 1one percent did.
Yes, but dying is against God’s law… so they’ve cleverly got around that problem.
Not true for every religion.
Judaism has certain specific instances where it is accepted that it would be better for one to die than commit a sin.
Also, martyrdom would not be such a large aspect in Christianity (or, at least, in early Christianity) if dying for God wasn’t considered a good thing.
Yes, precisely this.