prolly the best post in the threadRiff62 said:Pretty interesting thread here..I have nothing to add, just commenting..carry on..
Prof said:So eyeball calculation says that about 30% of humanity is Christian...and that means that something around 70% are non-Christian...so if as stated nicely above that God plans everyone's day and he has pre-determined what is going to happen...why aren't more Christians...or more to the point why are there so many religions...wouldn't it solve a lot of human misery if God just planned to have everyone believe the same thing?
Not shooting at anyone or anything just asking...
Prof said:How are the other 70% to know what Jesus said?
Moses, and Muhammad said basically the same thing...but Christians don't read those religious books...
How do you live with the concept that "God plans everyone's day" but you also attribute the non-Christian world to free will??? If you become a Christian does that mean that your days are then planned by God...but no one else has that done for them? Is that then not the loss of free will?
BurntRubber said:...well why couldnt God have just made that solar system and put it there to show of his mighty power, like it says in Isaiah.
Prof, you try to over analyze to much, to much science...not enough Faith![]()
Ram From Hell said:In my very humble opinion, if a deity really wanted to show me his mighty power, how about starting with something really easy like, say, ending famine, disease, crime, war and hatred? Perhaps he shouldn't have made us in his image, because the reflection is pretty darned ugly at times from my perspective. Apparently God has freedom of choice as well, which happens to include the abject, needless suffering of his beloved sons and daughters. For every uplifting story like Carlos', there seem to be a hundred that make me cringe. Perhaps the footsteps on the beach are alone because the rest have fallen by the wayside.
Over analyzing? Nah, just paying attention.
I am grateful for the positive aspects of life with religion, but I am hard-pressed to accept that every heinous act perpetrated on the human race is part of a plan managed by an omniscient, omnipotent being.
Want to pray for something? Don't pray for me. Pray that I'm wrong. Because if this is a world of a loving god, then heaven must be misery.
Come back tomorrow. Perhaps I'll be a tad less cynical.![]()
Ram From Hell said:In my very humble opinion, if a deity really wanted to show me his mighty power, how about starting with something really easy like, say, ending famine, disease, crime, war and hatred? Perhaps he shouldn't have made us in his image, because the reflection is pretty darned ugly at times from my perspective. Apparently God has freedom of choice as well, which happens to include the abject, needless suffering of his beloved sons and daughters. For every uplifting story like Carlos', there seem to be a hundred that make me cringe. Perhaps the footsteps on the beach are alone because the rest have fallen by the wayside.
Over analyzing? Nah, just paying attention.
I am grateful for the positive aspects of life with religion, but I am hard-pressed to accept that every heinous act perpetrated on the human race is part of a plan managed by an omniscient, omnipotent being.
Want to pray for something? Don't pray for me. Pray that I'm wrong. Because if this is a world of a loving god, then heaven must be misery.
Come back tomorrow. Perhaps I'll be a tad less cynical.![]()
supercar1of1 said:
Yep!![]()
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Ram From Hell said:In my very humble opinion, if a deity really wanted to show me his mighty power, how about starting with something really easy like, say, ending famine, disease, crime, war and hatred? Perhaps he shouldn't have made us in his image, because the reflection is pretty darned ugly at times from my perspective. Apparently God has freedom of choice as well, which happens to include the abject, needless suffering of his beloved sons and daughters. For every uplifting story like Carlos', there seem to be a hundred that make me cringe. Perhaps the footsteps on the beach are alone because the rest have fallen by the wayside.
Over analyzing? Nah, just paying attention.
I am grateful for the positive aspects of life with religion, but I am hard-pressed to accept that every heinous act perpetrated on the human race is part of a plan managed by an omniscient, omnipotent being.
Want to pray for something? Don't pray for me. Pray that I'm wrong. Because if this is a world of a loving god, then heaven must be misery.
Come back tomorrow. Perhaps I'll be a tad less cynical.![]()
Django said:Perhaps it would be prudent to refine your vision:
To whom much is given, much will be required.....
D
BurntRubber said:God's love is extended to all, i did not say that your days are "planned" by God if you are a christian or not...everyone's are! As far as how do others know, its our jobs a Christians to spread the word about Jesus...kind of like what I am doing now. God sayd "I know the plans I have for you, plans to prosper you" thats in jerehmiah. so there is no loss of free will, everything is under God's authority, that hubble telescope that sees how ever billions of miles...well why couldnt God have just made that solar system and put it there to show of his mighty power, like it says in Isaiah.
Prof, you try to over analyze to much, to much science...not enough Faith![]()
Prof said:I have huge amounts of faith, but it does not deter me from trying to find rational alignment between thought and reality. There is no such thing as too much analysis, it is the pursuit of truth that inspires mankind.
So if a Christian accepts Christ, they can possibly have eternal life and not perish. Does that say that non-Christians will not? Or is it just an affirmative statement about Christians. I presume that if one does not accept Christ, that it is their free will and that is acceptable and the issue of eternal life is still an open issue...or has that door shut?
Azmal said:"Do I know for sure there is no God, no I dont...but you dont know for sure there isnt. "
What's the point of even saying that? You can't prove to me the tooth fairy doesn't exist either but we don't put dentures under our pillows do we? We need to base our view of our universe on more than what simply -could- be true. There needs to be evidence that doesn't require us to convince ourselves something is true before we commit to believe in something and construct our lives around it.
"I am against religion because it teaches us to be satisfied with not understanding the world." - Richard Dawkins
"prove to me there is no God, prove to me Jesus never existed. prove to me there is no Heaven, or the the Bible isnt relevant in todays times."
Again, there is no proof. Tell you what, prove to me there is no Santa and I'll convert on the spot. If you understand my point you'll understand it doesn't do anything to say things like that. It's like you've walled yourself in with a barrier immune to reason selective to topics of God.
I've noticed that people can be as smart as the next or even quite more so but they will have a completely different logic function concerning God. I've heard said "An intelligent person will go to extreme lengths to justify an irrational belief"
What matters to me is if there is enough evidence to assume a belief is true. The universe as we knew it thousands of years ago needed a god to explain things. The way we understand our universe now doesn't require a god at all. While one can't prove anything, I feel there is more than enough of a case against believing a personal god, especially the god represented by any number of Christian faiths. To me it's all man made and unnecessary except those who need it as a crutch or need to be kept in line by it. I'd like to imagine a world without the need of crutches or penalty system. Can't happen in full but it doesn't mean we can't progress towards it.
I think the vast majority of believers simply want to believe for one reason or another. I argue from the point that 'want' doesn't matter a bit when talking about whether something is true or likely to be true or not.
Another thought:
What would it mean if neuroscience discovered a way to instantly make a religious person atheist? If they found a control center in the brain that seemed to produce that need to believe in something above themselves.
Or, what if you could shut down one side of your brain and asked the question "do you believe in God?" and one half said yes, and one half said no. Interestingly, some of these things have been observed.
Let me also point out that there is not one single thing in the bible that could not have been made up by man. There was nothing in there that was ahead of it's time where the wheelbarrow was the latest breaking technology.
Christopher Hitchens - "There still remain four irreducible objections to religious faith: that it wholly misrepresents the origin of man and the cosmos, that because of this original error, it combines the maximum of servility with the maximum of solipsism, that it is both the result and the cause of dangerous sexual repression, and that it is ultimately grounded on wish-thinking."