NephyrS wrote:
I don't know what distinction you think you're making here. "Dogma" is just a word for doctrine that has acquired negative connotations and stigma for some reason.
More specifically, dogma is a word for religious doctrine. You can't use dogma synonymously with doctrine outside of the connotation of religion.
A religion is made up of two parts- the beliefs of the individuals and their personal commitment/relationship with the deity they worship, and the centralized doctrine of the religion, which along with the belief itself often stipulates certain ways to act, things to do/not do, and a certain amount of necessary ceremony to include in the religion.
To separate the belief from the dogma is to be able to continue your personal belief/relationship (in this case) with God, without needing a centralized doctrine and ceremony to back it up.
In other words, you keep the belief but leave the church/religion.[/quote]
Except that this disitinction does not really exist. The beliefs themself are part of the doctrine as well, and are what dictate the form of the various aspects of worship are. If you're leaving the church but retaining the belief, what you're doing is schisming, and creating a new denomination of one (yourself), or switching to another stablished denomination.
It's all fine and dandy, but you're only leaving the religion if you're moving to an entirely separate belief system. If you're leaving the church, that's fine, people leave them all the time. However, very few churches have dogma or doctrine that exist for no reason. Practically all of them are based on some interpretation of Scripture or other, just as the differences between different types of Moslems are based on different interpretations of Mohammed's will for who was to succeed him. If you want to make up your own doctrine, go right ahead, but there's a certain arrogance to deciding to leave because church doctrine doesn't fit your political views. If you really do believe in God, it takes a fair amount of hubris to think He agrees with any earthly political position.