Although CNG has ceased to exist (which I've documented here), just prior to that there were concerns about how somebody might preach their beliefs, since the tone of voice matters as well as what is being said. So as a precaution, Chuong Cho Soi introduces the Yuxi/Valeriepieris Test. Anybody who fails it has to pay a fine and/or spend time immersed in the Yuxi Circle, a part of Asia whose people make up more than half of the world's population. (Part of this comes from the fact the country with the most people living in it is China, currently at 1,411,788,000 people; the United States has only 331 million as of right now.)Chuong, UN1024s, etc. (C)
Chuong alone; parallels of Leo are t-owned by him and me
Leo himself, G-52s, C.I.D.F., etc. (C) me and me alone
Chuong alone; parallels of Leo are t-owned by him and meLeo himself, G-52s, C.I.D.F., etc. (C) me and me alone
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Zax: Baptists have a tradition of fully immersing one in water as part of their rite of age into Baptism.
Chuong: Now that makes sense.
Zax: They also believe that what the Bible says is true to its world, and to me, it can be problematic as some ages are abstract. So most Baptists today are extremely careful in preaching and interpreting the Bible. You know that Catholic priests interpret the Bible for their ministries. Baptists read the Bible together.
Chuong: Now I see why Catholicism is Earth's most popular religion; the priests expertly interprets the Bible carefully for their ministries.
Juno: Supposedly, yes. But even that, Catholicism has their challenges too.
Leo: We're in what we call the Third Great Awakening, but it hasn't come without its challenges. During the Second Great Awakening of the late 1800s, we had crazy philosophies appear to challenge the faith such as Unitarianism and Transcendentalism, not one of which I've understood.
Super C: I tried to research into that stuff; I could not wrap my head around it.