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Old 07-18-2007, 01:00 PM   #21
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Is this something that you wrote yourself? Are you Amin Emilio Aun Joven? If not, could you tell us where you cut and pasted it from?
I wrote this myself.
Well, that puts you a notch or two above a lot of the cut and paste merchants who come here to tell us why we believe as we do.

So what leads you to think that there is a god, then?

David B
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Old 07-18-2007, 01:02 PM   #22
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Is this something that you wrote yourself? Are you Amin Emilio Aun Joven? If not, could you tell us where you cut and pasted it from?

Here is another of his theological musings, on the Ten Sins of the Devil. Warning: Comfortable chair and recreational chemicals may be required.
I pulled that essay down because it was a piece of shit. I admit I'm not the best writer out there, but I try to think outside of the box to find answers to life's mysteries. You'll notice that essay isn't on my website.
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Old 07-18-2007, 01:10 PM   #23
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Its something I would like to discuss with everyone.

Personally, like the last two paragraphs state, I think the Holy Spirit was protecting us from the horrible truth by lying about Satan's interference in the Bible.

Any thoughts?
Personally, I do not find any information about the Christian Gods to be credible. And your OP has not been able to make any significant points to contradict their incredibilty.

Switching from atheism to theism does not determine the existence of a God, just like switching from Osiris to Apollo. When I read your post, I get the impression that your are a theist because you now believe that the Devil is extremely powerful.
Ahh... no.
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Old 07-18-2007, 01:17 PM   #24
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I wrote this myself.
Well, that puts you a notch or two above a lot of the cut and paste merchants who come here to tell us why we believe as we do.

So what leads you to think that there is a god, then?

David B
Because I understand him.
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Old 07-18-2007, 01:33 PM   #25
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Well, that puts you a notch or two above a lot of the cut and paste merchants who come here to tell us why we believe as we do.

So what leads you to think that there is a god, then?

David B
Because I understand him.
I think this is one of the reasons I dislike most christians (not christianity which has a billion different meanings). Vague answers. Or non-answers. I find it insulting to my intelligence as well as evasive.
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Old 07-18-2007, 01:34 PM   #26
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Well, that puts you a notch or two above a lot of the cut and paste merchants who come here to tell us why we believe as we do.

So what leads you to think that there is a god, then?

David B
Because I understand him.
:rolling: :rolling: :rolling:

So how did god come into existence, then?

By what mechanism did he (sic) create life the universe and everything?

Why did he (again sic) have to sacrifice himself to himself in order to save his own creation from his own wrath? Or is this not what happened?

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Old 07-18-2007, 01:47 PM   #27
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Okay, since Amin actually came back to discuss this, I will take a few minutes to dissect the first couple of paragraphs. I don't have time to do the whole thing but the first few sections are indicative of how the whole could be demolished.
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Now having been an atheist and a Christian, I have a unique perspective on what atheists have thought their entire lives....
It has already been pointed out that it is not a unique perspective. Also, a unique perspective is not necessarily interesting or useful. I realize that you don't say this, it is merely my general observation.
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Many people who have never before been introduced to Jesus Christ,
Anyone who has read this far has been introduced to him. Who are these many people you speak of?
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Christianity,
People who have not been introduced to Christianity? On planet Earth? You are creating a fictitious group of people to make your point. This can be done in rhetoric but it is not really working here.
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or ... This has thus alienated some people from accepting any type of God.
Your fictitious group of people is becoming less and less believable. You honestly think that people reject god because of the proselytizers?
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The problem of why atheists dislike the Christian religion,
Poisoning the well. You are indicating that our dislike is a problem. It is not a problem. It is your acceptance or religion that causes all the problems.
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or for that matter, any monotheistic religion
The fact that it is monotheistic is completely irrelevant.
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that speaks of Jesus,
This forum speaks of Jesus. I speak of Jesus. I have known some drywallers who were named Jesus. This is not a problem. Hint: It's that religion thing.
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is that they sometimes have problems with not just the people, but the laws of such religions.
The laws? Right, it's the laws that causes us to reject religion. It wouldn't at all be the fact that religion makes no sense whatsoever. You set up a feeble strawman and then, when you move to knock it down, you miss and break the china cabinet, instead.
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However, there are misconceptions of what constitutes real Christian doctrine and applied Christian doctrine (or possibly, false Christian doctrine, but more on that later).
One more logical fallacy, here we have the No True Scotsman fallacy. You really should check up on logical fallacies. Try google.
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Belief in a rule is not the same as applying it first hand to real life situations, there are ALWAYS extenuating circumstances.
Isn't that practical. So, the rule apply when you decide it does and only then. So one could do without the rule and achieve the same result except without the attitude.
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I know one thing that I want all of you to know before you continue reading.
That's fine since I know many things that I want you to know before you continue writing. Start by studying logical fallacies, basic science, reason, early christian history, and many other fields.
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God is not an idiot,
How do you know? What is your evidence for this claim?
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and neither does he want you to be when you interpret and apply his laws.
That's nice. How come that most of his followers are not just idiotic but also interpret his laws in as many ways as there are followers? He seems a bit impotent. Maybe he is just an idiot?
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I'm also going to suggest a controversial idea to any Christians who may be reading this: is it possible that God can lie, and that not everything in the bible is meant to be interpreted literally?
Again, quite a few Christians have moved beyond the childish notion of literal interpretation.
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If you don't want to entertain this idea then you'd as best not read the rest of my reply,
No worries on that score.
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because I will be quoting material from the Gnostic Gospels, books that were not placed in the Bible because they were too controversial at the time of its creation.
At what time was the 'Bible' created? How do you define the 'Bible?' It is a serious question. Are we talking Greek? Are we talking Canon? Surely, you know the history of the formation of the canon.

And on and on.

Julian
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Old 07-18-2007, 02:19 PM   #28
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Default I Have A Thread On Matthew 5:43-47

And in that thread I come to the (provisional) conclusion that Jesus (or whoever wrote the Sermon On The Mount) is the author of an extremely important piece of humanist ethics:

"Love your enemies."

As a piece of humanist ethics, I find it incredibly important. It suggests a faith in the social bonding between humans that should inform all humanist ethics.

However, it's not a piece of humanist ethics, except de facto. De jure, it is an affirmation of the existence of an immortal and redeemable soul and a God, understood to be the Magic King in the sky who bends the moral arc of the Universe towards justice. These are lovely ideas, but there's just not any reason to believe that they're true, any more than there is a reason to believe any literary conceit, no matter how beautiful.

Textually, the connection of "love your enemies" to some assertion that Jesus was an unbelieving Jew is thin at best. Rabbis argued controversial things all the time.

It's a bit like Paul trying to extend the Abrahamic covenant on the strength of a few lines of Habukuk.

I don't think Atheists hate Christianity at all, but I think that we are tremendously frustrated and outraged that for a few graceful lines of humanism we would be forced to accept chapter after chapter of nonsense.
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Old 07-18-2007, 02:44 PM   #29
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.....Christ contradicted some of the doctrines spoken of in the old testament if you bother to read the gospels:

"You have heard that it was said, 'You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.' (Leviticus 19:18) But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you. That you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? and if you greet your brethren only what do you do more than others? Do not even the tax collectors do so?

-Matthew 5:43-47

Or this one:

"You have heard it that it was said, 'An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.' (Exodus 21:24) But I tell you not to resist an evil person. But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also."

Obviously Jesus DIDN'T agree with everything in the old Testament and he's the Son of God! Why is there such a difference in what was spoken to Moses and what Jesus was probably taught during his upbringing by God? Because these two followers and the eras in which they lived in carried with them different types of people. Throughout history mankind has evolved not only in technology but in intellect and emotional reasoning. God has had to give simple rules that people could follow that people of each era would respect and obey. The people that lived in the time of Moses were much more primitive and stubborn to laws than the people who lived in the time of Christ, and much, much more primitive than the people of today. God had to give doctrines so that they would be obeyed,....
In some threads, we have discussed the famous injunction about the love of enemies, and now I will not discuss it again. What I wish to discuss is the fact that your see a clear contradiction between certain Biblical moral teachings, but, instead of delving into the nature of this contradiction, you justify the contradiction by the idea that the moral norms accomodate the types of people to whom they were given -- that it is morally right for primitive and rude people to live by "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," but the same rule is wrong for people who are intellectually and emotionally evolved, who are capable of and, therefore, ought to not only forgo retribution, but also positively love {submit to} their enemies -- asking for more of what they dish out.

And now I say this unto you that, aside from the mesochism of "the love of enemies" and aside from the fact the people Jesus was preaching to were not one ounce different than the people Moses was preaching to (aside from some superficial learning), that he who "loves" his enemies is not more morally perfect than he operates by retribution -- which you take for granted to be the case.

In Gentile or objectivistic morality, the goodness or the wrongness of an act is measured by what is done unto others [how they are treated -- generously, justly (respectful of their lives, rights, and properties), honestly, etc.]. In Semitic or subjectivistic morality, what determines morally good behavior is good intentions toward or lack of HATE of others. A man's LOVE of another which involves approving of or being an accomplice of a wrongdoer unto (or an oppressor of) him is the greatest love possible, since the lover is the very victim of the criminal.

So, if we stay within the real of Semitic morality, Jesus preached a higher morality than the old one, without being in contradiction to it. Indeed, as some theologians have put it, the morality of the old order is correct, but Jesus taught "heroic morality", which not every man can follow, but represents perfect morality. (Thus, what I pointed out in my writings, is that there is a contradiction between this morality and the morality practiced by God or by Jesus at the last judgment... for they do not even forgive wrongdoers, nevemind "loving" them.) So, if you stay within Semitic morality, there is really no contradiction between the two types of morality. If you step in the realm of objectivity, the Christic moral ideal is wrong, and the retribution norm is conceptually inadequate (not possibly universal in value, etc.) What Is objectively Right (Just) is the subject of historical Roman jurisprudence [books, rather than one normative sentence], which is not concerned with good intentions or becoming virtuous by submission to wrongdoers. And, in Roman behavior, forgiving an enemy has always been held as a noble deed or heroic virtue.
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Old 07-18-2007, 04:43 PM   #30
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I would propose that it be understood that most atheists do not judge Christianity and Christians based on the OT or the NT

Actually, Julian, I sort of disagree with you. I do judge theists on their willingness to believe the unbelievable as well as their actions....which in most cases do not live up to the banalities incorporated in their so-called "Holy" books.

To put it bluntly, if I meet a five year old who believes in the tooth fairy I will think it cute.

If I meet a 25 year old who believes in the tooth fairy I will look to have him/her institutionalized for their own good.
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