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03-29-2002, 05:16 PM | #41 |
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Per Amos: I see your point and agree that "to do good" for rewards in eternity removes the goodness of the act and transforms it into selfserving idealism. This is shown in the bible with Mt.10:40 and many more places. But don't call all 'Christians' bad because many will do good for the sake of goodness itself. You are nitpicking because there is far greater evil they serve which is calling themselves "Christians" first and then 'haul ass' to live up to it. __________________________________________________ _________ ** I would never call “all” Christians bad.** Neither would I call all non-Catholics who believe in Jesus bad. I think you agree that non-Catholics can be “good” people. But then you see no conflict that a “good” God could send a good non-Catholic person to hell, since only Catholics go to heaven. Do bad Catholics also go to heaven? You are motivated by good works, as opposed to good deeds. The evil of non-Catholic Christians is their belief system. You don’t apply my question for yourself – ie would you be a Catholic if you found you were serving a devil instead of a God. You point out how Protestants abuse it. It seems it is your beliefs – only – that will get you to heaven. You have already agreed that most Catholics and non-Catholics follow the religion of their parents. If God wished it, people would “see” which religion was true immediately. This was no doubt the meaning of Shelley’s words when he wrote: “If God has spoken, why is the universe not convinced. ___________________________________________ Per Amos: Find me a passage where God repented or created evil and we'll talk again. ______________________________________________ In Exodus 32:11, (Revised Standard Edition) “ But Moses besought the LORD his God, and said, “Oh Lord, why does thy wrath burn hot against thy people… [Moses then has to remind God that the Egyptians will claim he was an evil God for leading the hebrews out of Egypt only to slay them in the mountains; he also has to remind God of his covenant with Abraham]. Then you have the lines “And the Lord repented of the evil which he thought to do to his people.” _______________________________________________ Ackerley and Mark Twain knew very well what they were talking about. Here are some quotes from Twain: *When one reads Bibles, one is less surprised at what the Deity knows than at what He doesn't know. *If I were to construct a God I would furnish Him with some way and qualities and characteristics which the Present lacks. He would not stoop to ask for any man's compliments, praises, flatteries; and He would be far above exacting them. I would have Him as self-respecting as the better sort of man in these regards. He would not be a merchant, a trader. He would not buy these things. He would not sell, or offer to sell, temporary benefits of the joys of eternity for the product called worship. I would have Him as dignified as the better sort of man in this regard. He would value no love but the love born of kindnesses conferred; not that born of benevolences contracted for. Repentance in a man's heart for a wrong done would cancel and annul that sin; and no verbal prayers for forgiveness be required or desired or expected of that man. In His Bible there would be no Unforgiveable Sin. He would recognize in Himself the Author and Inventor of Sin and Author and Inventor of the Vehicle and Appliances for its commission; and would place the whole responsibility where it would of right belong: upon Himself, the only Sinner. He would not be a jealous God -- a trait so small that even men despise it in each other. He would not boast. He would keep private His admirations of Himself; He would regard self-praise as unbecoming the dignity of his position. He would not have the spirit of vengeance in His heart. Then it would not issue from His lips. There would not be any hell -- except the one we live in from the cradle to the grave. There would not be any heaven -- the kind described in the world's Bibles. He would spend some of His eternities in trying to forgive Himself for making man unhappy when he could have made him happy with the same effort and he would spend the rest of them in studying astronomy. *Against a diseased imagination demonstration goes for nothing <img src="graemlins/banghead.gif" border="0" alt="[Bang Head]" /> Sojourner [ March 29, 2002: Message edited by: Sojourner553 ]</p> |
03-29-2002, 05:39 PM | #42 | |
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03-29-2002, 06:46 PM | #43 | |
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03-29-2002, 08:16 PM | #44 |
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Sojourner,
I don't think we can go any further. It is arbitrary to me to cut out the bits one doesn't like and keep the rest. You think there is just cause. I think you are arguing with logic that doesn't reflect on the writers. You think you can validly argue as you do, claiming that possible interpolators would not use positive terms toward procurators. Strange things happen: look at the way the nasty Bacchides is described in 1 Macc 7:8, "a man of high standing in the empire and loyal to the king." I always have trouble with people who make assumptions about what ancient writers should or would say, when they have no way of ever knowing. Where do we go from here? |
03-29-2002, 08:32 PM | #45 |
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Sojourner:
----------- “If God has spoken, why is the universe not convinced. ----------- Amos: ----------- Salvation is a mystery and there is no way that you can rationally figure out which religion is best for you. In fact, as soon as you look and think you are wrong already because your conscious mind is the enemy and must itself be crucified. Hence the mystery of salvation. ----------- This is the usual massive obfuscation tactic. Amos, I understand that you cannot defend the idea and I understand why you hide behind the "mystery of salvation", but why can't you understand it? Crucifixion is tying someone to a stick or two and leaving them up until the weight of their bodies cause them to suffocate. This means that you are using the term "crucified" in a non-standard manner. This reminds me of many obfuscating points of view, including the $cientologists. ------------- Calling a person like Mark Twain an idiot (yes, there was an "if", but it doesn't change anything), because you don't agree with his printed viewpoint as you have done, only reflects badly upon you. |
03-30-2002, 06:59 AM | #46 |
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Per Amos: Salvation is a mystery and there is no way that you can rationally figure out which religion is best for you. In fact, as soon as you look and think you are wrong already because your conscious mind is the enemy and must itself be crucified. Hence the mystery of salvation. ________________________________________________ If the Catholic Church did not have such an abominable history of human rights abuses and regressing science by almost a thousand years during the Dark Ages -- maybe your statement would not sound so ridiculous. (And this doesn't count the latest controversy on priest abuse of children, lawsuites, church authority complicity) It was with the emergence of Protestantism that the Enlightenment -- and therefore sciences and democracy/human rights took off to the advanced level we see today in modern society. You seem not to care that your beliefs are steeped in the deepest superstition. (Such as when you say "There is no way that you can rationally figure out which religion is best for you".) As John Locke said: "if strength of persuasion be the light which must guide us; I ask how shall any one distinguish between the delusions of Satan, and the inspirations of the Holy Ghost?" I tried to argue once with a woman that space aliens did not build the Egyptican pyramids. At least she was honest and admitted she really just wanted to "believe" this was true; that it would be "nice" if it were true. Using this approach of believing what one desires--without using rational inquiry to CHECK their beliefs-- one can invent whatever they want: the Muslims who flew there airplanes into the WTC really ARE are going to heaven... from their warped persepective and that of many pious Muslims. Just another example of the divine mystery! I think Mark Twain had it right! Sojourner [ March 30, 2002: Message edited by: Sojourner553 ]</p> |
03-30-2002, 07:03 AM | #47 | |
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We'll just agree to disagree on this one! Sojourner [ March 30, 2002: Message edited by: Sojourner553 ]</p> |
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03-30-2002, 08:28 AM | #48 | |
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Maybe Mark Twain was wrong after all. |
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03-30-2002, 08:35 AM | #49 | |
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03-31-2002, 04:19 PM | #50 |
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"I tried to argue once with a woman that space aliens did not build the Egyptican pyramids."
Aliens designed the pyramids, humans built them. We all know how much aliens hate manual labor. <a href="http://www.piney.com/Atrahasis.html" target="_blank">http://www.piney.com/Atrahasis.html</a> |
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