MovieChat Forums > Alan Tudyk Discussion > Is he a Christian?

Is he a Christian?


I was just wondering, as I know he went to a Christian college... Does anyone have any info on any of his "religious beliefs" as it were?


"All the problems make me wanna go like a bad girl straight to video"

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Not a clue. He is American, born and raised in Texas, so if he is religious at all, i'd expect him to be a Christian.


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Let me show you the deep raw passion of unbridled sexual frenzy. But Lucy... im British

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religious doesn't necessarily mean Christian. Just being American and from Texas does not guarantee he is Christian. I know quite a few Buddists there, and then there is Uniterian Universalists, who are a congregational mix of all religions focusing on sprituality and learning about all religions.

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The better question is surely... does it matter?

Even if he is a christian you have to then ask if hes the "right type of christian"... is he Catholic, Protestant, Evangelical, Mormon, etc. etc. etc.

Religion is and always should be a personal thing.

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Thank you Knight! That was totally my question as well!

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Knight Yellow said, "Religion is and always should be a personal thing."

You just made a religious statement by stipulating something about the nature and practice of religion - and you failed to keep your religious viewpoint private. Interesting.

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He did not state any religious anything, so your argument is invalid. He simply stated that it should not matter.

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"He did not state any religious anything, so your argument is invalid. He simply stated that it should not matter."

No offense, jodikasapidis, but I urge you to reconsider. To say "religion should be private" is to make a religious statement. This is because the statement is meant to describe something about the very nature of religion. Some religions by design are private, but some are not. In fact some by their very nature are mission-minded faiths (such as Christianity and Islam), instructing their adherents to spread the faith.

On what grounds can anyone authoritatively state that those religions should remain private rather than public? What is the moral authority for making such a claim?

Again, to make a claim about the nature of religion--that it is, or ought to be, "private"--is in fact to make a religious claim, because it is a description of, or prescription for, the very nature of religion.

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God, you are such an insufferable jack@ss. Please, kill yourself.

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