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Old 08-08-2005, 06:43 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by Prairie Star
If God gets the credit when one excels, why does He not also get His name attached to the failures in that believer's life? :huh:
Simple. He does, but God moves in mysterious ways and when things go pear shaped it must be for a greater good which our finite minds can't comprehend.

I thought everyone knew that

Orbit
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Old 08-08-2005, 07:04 AM   #12
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Originally Posted by jonesg
Thats because only a screwed up athlete would think to blame God for their own failure, so don't expect to hear it too often, it should be a demonstration to you that people with a concept of God tend to be more evenly balanced.
For one athlete to succeed, another athlete must lose. If not by god's doing, then by whose?
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Old 08-08-2005, 07:15 PM   #13
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Default The nature of God

Quote:
Originally Posted by Prairie Star
If God gets the credit when one excels, why does He not also get His name attached to the failures in that believer's life?
Quote:
Originally Posted by OrbitV2
Simple. He does, but God moves in mysterious ways and when things go pear shaped it must be for a greater good which our finite minds can't comprehend.

I thought everyone knew that.
If God moves in mysterious ways, let him say so himself. All that we have is Isaiah's word for it.

Why do Christians pray for healing instead of trusting God to work things out in his mysterious ways? So the Bubonic Plague and the recent Tsunami in Asia were for the greater good, eh? Why would you pray for a safe journey when God might have a serious traffic accident in mind for you in order to teach you something, or maybe he just wants to kill you?

What tangible evidence is there that God is working in people's lives today? Why do you assume that God is good? All that we have is the Bible writer's word for it, and there is no evidence at all that any of them ever met God. If God were to show up and answer some questions, then we would have something to talk about, but human proxies claiming that they are speaking for God is a preposterous notion. If your best friend told you that he was speaking for God, would you believe him?
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Old 08-08-2005, 07:39 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OrbitV2
Simple. He does, but God moves in mysterious ways and when things go pear shaped it must be for a greater good which our finite minds can't comprehend.

I thought everyone knew that

Orbit
Yeah, jeez, don't you people read Candide, if you have, you know everything works out for the greater good.
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Old 08-09-2005, 06:58 AM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Prairie Star
How is this the obvious jonesq?



If God gets the credit when one excels, why does He not also get His name attached to the failures in that believer's life? :huh:

I don't get it...please state the obvious plumb line I somehow am not seein'.

Love,
PS
I'll repeat.... because most people aren't seriously screwed up.

Don't let the implications keep you from the facts.
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Old 08-09-2005, 07:01 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Prairie Star
God is said in the Bible to be the rewarder of those who diligently seek Him...

And yet, if ever I have known honest and wholly made searches of God, devoted to the pursuit, diligent to look in the vastness of the universe, in all the corners of their own hearts, no stone left unturned...it is the seeking skeptic, the atheist...


Love,
PS
The atheist might be a seeker but diligence implies honest seeking and theres little of that in atheistic defiance.

"in all the corners of our hearts"

Try the knees. The knees.
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Old 08-09-2005, 07:20 AM   #17
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Originally Posted by jfryejr
For one athlete to succeed, another athlete must lose. If not by god's doing, then by whose?
Nice-very poetic.
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Old 08-09-2005, 08:17 AM   #18
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Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Christians claim that God is perfect, but Isaiah 55:8 says "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord." You cannot possibly claim the perfection of someone whose thoughts and ways you are unaware of.
The thoughts and ways of atheists are not my thoughts and ways. Yet it is false that I am 'unaware of' the thoughts and ways of atheists.
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Comfort is the desired goal of Christians completely irregardless of who provides it. They would welcome a comfortable eternal life from any being, perfect or imperfect.
Irregardless? You mean regardless or irrespective, right? Anyway, I am a Christian and I aim to hold rationally justified belief irrespective of what 'comfort' (or any other psychological carrot for that matter) a belief may or may not provide. So the statement above is untrue.
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Matthew 14:14 says "And Jesus went forth, and saw a great multitude, and was moved with compassion toward them, and he healed their sick." We need compassion today just as much as people did back then, so where is Jesus or the Holy Spirit?
I agree. We need compassion today no less than yesterday. In fact, I believe one ought to be compassionate. That is, I hold that the human being as a moral agent has an objectively real moral duty to act compasionately, especially if the agent is a member of the body of Christ (i.e., the worldwide church of God). On the other hand, if we are mistaken and there is no God then I see no reason to think moral statements like 'one ought to have compassion for others' have any ontological implications at all much less that they imply real moral duty. Which is to say that without God, I find insufficient cause to believe moral statements even may be true or binding.
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The Bible claims that there is tangible evidence of God’s power thousands of years ago, but what tangible evidence is there of his power and involvement in the lives of humans today?
I think God intends that, for better or worse, the church is to be His 'tangible' presence for the time being. There is, of course, plenty of evidence to suggest the church is extant and active in the world.
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An unusual healing can happen to anyone, not just to Christians. In the world today, there is every indication that tangible good things and bad things are distributed according to the laws of physics, not by divine intervention, calling into question claims that miracles occurred thousands of years ago.
Absent specifics, or even as much as an unambiguous truth-claim, one is hard pressed to know how the seemingly miraculous and the distribution thereof is in fact completely explained by an appeal to the 'laws of physics'. I must say I doubt this critical angle will prove at all fruitful but I'm always in the mood for a surprise or three.
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Old 08-09-2005, 08:29 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jonesg
The atheist might be a seeker but diligence implies honest seeking and theres little of that in atheistic defiance.
So you're saying atheists don't "honestly seek"?

BTW, I'm an atheist, and "defiance" has nothing, nillo, zilch, zero, nada to do with my being an atheist.

Honest seeking is exactly what led me to the position of atheism (lacking belief in God).

Quote:
"in all the corners of our hearts"
...one finds blood.

Quote:
Try the knees. The knees.
You seem to have some sort of anatomical fixation.

BTW, I tried the "knee" thing for 40 years or so. I got nothing, nillo, zilch, zero, nada.
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Old 08-09-2005, 08:49 AM   #20
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Originally Posted by jonesg
"Thats because only a screwed up athlete would think to blame God for their own failure, so don't expect to hear it too often, it should be a demonstration to you that people with a concept of God tend to be more evenly balanced." (bold by MoM).

Original question still stands.

Pls inform me (if you care to) whether following statement would be logically consistant with your view:

Only a screwed up athlete would think to credit God for their own success.
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