8 Quotes & Sayings By Carlton D Pearson

Carlton D. Pearson is a digital marketer, trainer, and consultant who has worked on the Internet for over 15 years. He has been a speaker at dozens of conferences across the United States and Canada, and he has been on the faculty of several advanced degree programs in Information Technology and Business Administration. He is the creator of the Pearson Courseware and Training Collection and has created and taught numerous courses in Web technologies and Web marketing, including: Web Design for Beginners, Web Marketing for Beginners, Web Site Planning for Beginners, Web Design for Small Businesses, Web Directories for Beginners, E-Commerce for Beginners, Building Websites with HTML 4 or 5 (HTML 6) for Beginners, Search Engine Optimization (SEO) for Beginners, Online Marketing for Beginners, E-Commerce Site Development, Search Engine Marketing (SEM), Email Marketing for Beginners and Internet Marketing: Strategies That Work in Real World Read more

1
Belief compelled through fear is not belief, it is blind and forced obedience. Carlton D. Pearson
2
Christians risk becoming utterly irrelevant in their own culture if they continue to seperate people into "We the Saved" and "They the Damned". Again, I ask, do we need Jesus to protect us from God? Is that what Christianity as we've known is about? Are we saved from God by God? Carlton D. Pearson
3
Whether you believe in God or are an atheist, you cannot deny that the empirical facts of science have nothing to do with whether or not freedom and good are real or worth destroying ourselves for. Meaning must come from the individual in touch with his or her own soul. To discover how to recover our sanity and freedom, we must know ourselves from within. Carlton D. Pearson
4
...the operative idea here is that there is a right and wrong theology -- a right God and a wrong God. But this is an invalid premise. All versions of God are the same thing: A HUMAN INTERPRETATION OF THE UNIVERSAL CONSCIOUSNESS. Carlton D. Pearson
5
Hell was never God's intention. It is man's invention. It is a human-manufactured religious icon, no less idolatrous than deifying a statue. Carlton D. Pearson
6
I do believe in hell as a state of being or consciousness, and I believe that people can dwell in hell and that many do, right now, today, on this earth before rather than after death. I will argue. . that hell is the most erroneous, oudated, misunderstood, and misguided dogma in all of Christianity, and the one that must be discarded if this spiritual tradition is to survive as anything more than a contemptable curiosity. Carlton D. Pearson
7
The God to whom I was introduced as a child was basically a Jewish one: male, fatherly, Anglo-European, bearded, angrily loving, judgmental, righteously indignant, mand frighteningly powerful, not to mention present everywhere and all-knowing. In trying to make sense of this God, man has continued to manufacture and manipulate images of this perceived deity. The images have changed over the centuries, based on the mood of the times. During kind times when harvests were abundant and peace reigned (admittedly rare in the ancient world), God was benevolent. When plpague and famine killed millions, God was portrayed as enraged and vengeful. To this day, this emotionally infantile God remains in power, a fear-based aberration produced by fevered imaginations, promoted by those who understand how such a deity can be used to gain and consolidate power over believers, and protected by flocks of billions who refuse to question their damning God for fear of their own damnation -- or out of an even greater immediate terror of social and cultural isolation. But I argue that it is PRECISELY this image of God -- an infantile, simplistic, ridiculous notion of the sublime power that underlies the world -- that is destroying civil religion, fueling the rage of the "angry atheist" movement, and pitting science against the spiritual at a time when we should be using every tool within reach to discover what it means to be human -- and divinely human at that. . Carlton D. Pearson