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Old 03-02-2008, 12:02 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by Half-Life
He said, "Of course we know that god exists.................in the Bible. The question is, does god exist OUTSIDE of the Bible?"...

My eyes were opened when he said this and I immediately started thinking of what the Christian God is ACTUALLY portrayed as.

(NOTE: I put this in this forum because it deals with just reading the Bible to come up with this conclusion.)

I don't know if I am fully deconverted yet, but it seems to me that idea of worshipping such a clumsy god makes no sense anymore.

What do you guys think?
I do not wish to lead you back to Christian fundamentalism, but William Lane Craig and Gary Habermas have basically stated that the best evidence for them is the Holy Spirit, which implies that their position is that the Holy Spirit exists outside of the Bible. In one book, Habermas and co-author Mike Licona basically say that the certainty of the historical record serves only to confirm the evidence of the Holy Spirit. Unfortunately for Habermas and Licona, all theists claim that they experience the Holy Spirit.

If a God exists outside of the Bible, he would easily be able to convince more people to believe that he exists. That is what I have been trying to tell you ever since you came to the IIDB. That is not much different from "Of course we know that God exists in the Bible. The question is, does God exist OUTSIDE of the Bible?" since if a God exists outside of the Bible, he would easily be able to convince more people to believe that he exists.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:08 PM   #12
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Half-Life, I would like to give your post here the benefit of a doubt, as I myself was a Bible "believer" for many years, and can fully understand how hard it can be to relinquish some of our cherished ideas, and the "insights" that we were formerly convinced of.
In an earlier thread I attempted to explain about "truth", and its power.
Giving up on the Bible as being a factual account, does not require the wholesale rejecting of such things as are actually true, whether written down in the Bible, or being acted out among men.
What is true, will remain true, and what is good, will remain good, and honor is always to them who know and do the right thing.

No one here wants to be your enemy.

Just prior to reading this thread I posted the following in another place, and I believe that it is appropriate to repeat it here.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar
Don't believe that there was any "god" involved at all, just a bunch of wacko religious nuts running wild on a power grab, making up their bullshit-load of weird Boogeyman, Doom and Gloom, "Gawd is gonna git you, and yer gonna burn in hell!" religion to scare, dominate, terrorise, and create a government sanctioned cover story under which they could freely perform their plundering and murdering of their fellow man.

I never liked that damned old "doom and gloom" line even when I was a "believer", and I really think that it stinks to high heaven now that I've finally escaped its vile clutches.
What a crock, "hate your father and mother", "cut off your hand.. pluck out your eye" abandon your families, don't marry, but if you do have a wife, neglect her.
Damn, that I wasted decades of my life under that dark and forbidding man-made cloud of perfidious fabrications and blatant lies. No more.
Now I can really sing in the sunshine, and laugh every day, without having it any longer sound like a barely suppressed cackle of glee that somebody else is just gonna be burning in hell fire very, very soon, to vindicate my precious religious dogmas, to make me a look good.
Some "heritage", they can take it and stuff it.

Gee, I wish that I could tell you what I really think.
My sincere hope for you, is that you can successfully "Deconvert", even as I and many others here have.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:10 PM   #13
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Originally Posted by Half-Life View Post
I started thinking about this after one of my co-workers asked me a question. I will reveal this question at the end of the post.

Here is why I may be close to deconversion:

OK, picture this.

We have all seen what the view of Earth is like from a plane? Everyone looks like ants. Now, picture our solar system and universe as a wooden board stretching out widely. Now, imagine BEYOND the universe, (or board if you will), we see God in his realm of existence.

Now, in order for me to stay a Christian, this is what I must believe:

God chose one part of the world in about 900 B.C. to start Genesis.

He developed a closeness with Jewish people for some strange reason. He picks Israel as his "favorite nation" for unknown reasons instead of the whole world.

He writes down prophecies in books not labeled "prophecies of the messiah" but instead "hidden" in people's songs to God or ramblings.

God then wants to save everyone, so he comes to earth in early first century to just one place - Jerusalem and a little surrounding areas. He doesn't see a need to have too much of his childhood written about. His birth is there, then a few little childhood stories and that's it.

Then his existence vanishes on earth from ages 13-29 and then his life picks up again at age 30. What was the all important God doing for these missing 17 years? How could he have been so caring and important?

Then at age 30 he says some vague preaching for 3 years to only a select group of people in a select part of the world, gets crucified in only one part of the world, shows up to just a small group of people, then tells these people "Gotta get out of here see ya! Oh preach the Gospel by the way to all the earth."

He then vanishes, leaving hardly any historians writing about all his miraculous deeds, and there's wars in his name for the past 2,000 years and still no sign of him coming back.

Does this make ANY SENSE to ANYONE?

and yet I have been believing this my whole life!!

I see no reason why God couldn't have come to Earth as man in all the nations, be crucified, and then the story would be known throughout all nations, instead of him picking a random little spot to preach to 12 men and gain a little following and hoping they would spread it.

Ask yourself. if ANY of you guys were God, would this be the way you want to save humanity? 3 years of vague teachings with hardly anything about your life growing up? Why couldn't Jesus have been healing as a 5 year old? That would've made for so many more believers.

Now, wanna know the one question my friend asked me that made me think like this?

he said, "Of course we know that god exists.................in the Bible. The question is, does god exist OUTSIDE of the Bible?"

My eyes were opened when he said this and I immediately started thinking of what the Christian God is ACTUALLY portrayed as.

(NOTE: I put this in this forum because it deals with just reading the Bible to come up with this conclusion.)

I don't know if I am fully deconverted yet, but it seems to me that idea of worshipping such a clumsy god makes no sense anymore.

What do you guys think?
Same thing occured to me when I was a fire-breathing Christian! I'm an Indian. And I wondered one day why god would appear to the Jews and then say nothing to the Indians for another 1500 years! And I started thinking - why take so long in spreading the word to my ancestors! Damn, why can't my ancestors be in heaven. That got me started. Then I started trying to find scientific proof of the flood..... Well - you all know the story from there.

Here's some advice to you. Don't listen to anyone else. Just do some research for yourself. And try to find some evidence for the flood or a young earth. Take it from me - you need to come to the conclusion yourself.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:18 PM   #14
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but to me one of the most startling things I thought about WAS the fact that God "didn't exist" on Earth from ages 13-29!

Where does he go?!?! He vanishes! There's no evidence anywhere in the world written down of where he might have been.

So, how can any person say Jesus never sinned?

Heck, the disciples in his story are never portrayed as ever sinning either.

How can anyone claim that this God wanted to save us so bad, but did NOTHING of record from ages 13-29?

What was he doing? Sitting on a rock waiting to "vague preach" for 3 years when he became 30?

Where's his age 5-10 years as well?

We have NOTHING!

Do you guys think this can be used as one of the main evidences AGAINST the God of the bible?

I CAN NOT believe I am thinking like this.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:28 PM   #15
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Consider this:

There is no information at all about Jesus life in the Bible. We have accounts of his birth, one little anecdote about preaching as a boy, his ministry after the Sermon on the Mount when he was about 30, and his death shortly after that. Clearly, the gospel writers were not biographers and they likely didn’t have a first hand account of Jesus. The gospels were likely compiled based on oral sources and were written down between 40 & 100 years after the crucifixion of Jesus.

These weren’t the only gospels - there were 50 or so gospels written after his death, and only 4 of them made it into the Bible. The Apocryphal gospels don’t shed any light on Jesus life, either. It took 500 years for the church to come to an agreement on who Jesus was.

http://minddance.wordpress.com/2007/...he-lost-years/

Wow! It is almost becoming easier and easier to doubt that a "perfect God" would let his plan go so crazy.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:29 PM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Half-Life
But to me one of the most startling things I thought about WAS the fact that God "didn't exist" on Earth from ages 13-29!

Where does he go?!?! He vanishes! There's no evidence anywhere in the world written down of where he might have been.

So, how can any person say Jesus never sinned?

Heck, the disciples in his story are never portrayed as ever sinning either.

How can anyone claim that this God wanted to save us so bad, but did NOTHING of record from ages 13-29?

What was he doing? Sitting on a rock waiting to "vague preach" for 3 years when he became 30?

Where's his age 5-10 years as well?

We have NOTHING!

Do you guys think this can be used as one of the main evidences AGAINST the God of the bible?

I CAN NOT believe I am thinking like this.
I am surprised that you know so much about Bible prophecy, but so little about fundamentalist Christianity. I was a fundamentalist Christian for over 30years. You ought to know that fundamentalist Christians believe that might makes right, reference Romans chapter 9, and that God is perfect, for example, reference Deuteronomy 32:4, 2 Samuel 22:31, and Psalms 18:30. Everything that a perfect God does would by definition be right. Of course, there is not any credible evidence that God is perfect, and that any possible God must by necessity be perfect.
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:34 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Half-Life View Post
but to me one of the most startling things I thought about WAS the fact that God "didn't exist" on Earth from ages 13-29!

So, how can any person say Jesus never sinned?

How can anyone claim that this God wanted to save us so bad, but did NOTHING of record from ages 13-29?


Do you guys think this can be used as one of the main evidences AGAINST the God of the bible?

I CAN NOT believe I am thinking like this.
A BIG HOLE in the "holey" story, hey?
Very easy for the books to keep his "hands clean" when he didn't have to live and "have a life" like the rest of us, no?

Can this be used as one of the main evidences AGAINST the God of the bible?
If it works for you, Half-Life, then, go for it!
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Old 03-02-2008, 12:52 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Half-Life View Post

however, something is still holding me back from denyign it fully.

What is this?

If you seriously think about it, if I have just stated all these rational reasons for disbelieving, why am I having such a hard time fully denying it?

Religion seems to be a funny thing now, and I do not know why.
Half-Life -

You seem to be at a very significant cross-roads right now that involves essentially having to redefine your entire worldview.

That's a tough thing. If you're like most folks, you've got a lot invested mentally, emotionally, perhaps physically and financially in your religious foundations, and that investment is hard to walk away from.

It might be useful to give some thought to what defines your sense of self-worth. If you have kids in your life, ask yourself whether they look up to you because of who you are or what you do or don't believe. If you volunteer your time, ask yourself if you're doing it because you're trying to impress God or because it's the right thing to do.

I think if you're honest with yourself, you'll find that there is less of Half-Life that's defined by your religion than you might initially think.

There are many ex-Christians (among others) that post here. There are many deconversion stories that have been posted (just use the search function). The community here is a valuable resource, both in terms of support and information. Don't hesitate to avail yourself of that resource. At the very least, you'll learn things you didn't previously know, and knowledge is never a bad thing.

Good luck.

regards,

NinJay
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Old 03-02-2008, 01:18 PM   #19
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Hi Half-Life, it is an interesting question: what exactly is that which still seems to have a hold on a person that finds himself where you find yourself?

About 6 months ago (i can't believe it's been this long), I stepped outside of my normal framework of ideas where all things I believed were inter-related in some way, and looked at it from the outside, and noticed the same thing you did in that moment. I identify pretty strongly with your comment that it makes God seem clumsy, the construct of ideas seems like a human rendition of what the supernatural should be like, but falls short if questions are pressed hard enough.

Even though I suddenly found myself intellectually disagreeing with most of the stuff I previously believed, I was very hesitant to acknowledge that I had begun to deconvert, a denial of sorts, even though I had already adopted an intellectual position against Christianity.

Some days it feels I don't want to let go of what I had, but I think it's understandable because as humans we rely on habits that we develop over long years, and believing in something turns into a mental habit - to go down the same routes of reasoning. I'm truly no expert in anything behavior-related, but it's my uneducated take that once your understanding over certain things changes, and you're still emotionally bound to what you believe, you'll want to go back to what you had (if you had it for many years) even if it doesn't make sense that you should go back.

Clear as mud?

As far as priests in the age of Constantine goes, here's my take: I'd think they sincerely believed, a whole lot of them. I also know from my own experience that interpretation of things that happen has no hard or fast rules, as long as it haphazardly connects with certain points of what is believed.

Constantine showing up and let the end justify the means could possibly have been seen as the right arm of God taking care in defeating his enemies and establishing a place for his people (OT promises for God's people still used in every church that longs to gain areas of influence), backed by the highest earthly protection imaginable at the time. I don't doubt people crave power, but if you believe, you do it for what you believe in. Things that turn out to be more convenient for you are then "blessings."

There might be priests that are in it for the power, but I think a lot of people want to have the power to influence everyone else, because they got it right, as far as how one is supposed to live.

ETA: A couple of posters recommended taking your time in thinking this through, and I second that recommendation. I personally don't have that much patience with the process, but I am reminded again and again, as I think through these things, that a lot of knowledge and good questions that had been intentionally avoided by the community of believers I was a part of, are an excellent use of time taken generously to explore these issues. If processed with care, the benefits will last for years. It's needless to say that it's a complex and difficult process for a lot of people, but that doesn't mean that starting to think outside the box isn't actually very, very enjoyable. It's freeing when you don't have to try to square every inch of reality through a filter that doesn't fit on all of life.

I wish you the best!

juergen
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Old 03-02-2008, 01:22 PM   #20
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Very nice points to the poster above me.

I have just been doing some more thinking and realized something.

Religious people say we have a soul and this is what makes "us" us and not some other person.

however, when it comes to the subject of mentally handicapped people, no religious person says, "Well God made him with a defective soul." They always cite science and say, "Well his brain is not right."

So in one case it's the brain but in perfectly normal people, it's a soul? :huh:
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