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Old 09-09-2002, 01:01 PM   #21
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Quote:
Originally posted by Vesica:
<strong>In response to the original post:

Yes, that makes me a little ill too but I refuse to sit around questioning the ways people have found to comfort themselves and make thier world seem comprehensible again.

I know not all of us need any such stories to feel okay but hey....My attitude runs towards 'If it helps you face the day...'.</strong>
I try to be patient when I get one of these. I try to think, "They forgot I'm an atheist", because this type of stuff gets forwarded to their entire address book. I can understand that they were inspired or comforted by something I find insipid or disgusting. I end up sending back a polite message asking not to be included on the next mass mailing, and it usually works.

Boy howdy, it is a relief to come here with flamethrower in hand and let loose on this sort of glurge. It keeps me from flaming my friends.
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Old 09-10-2002, 07:00 PM   #22
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Ravi Zacharias
September 11, 2001: Was God Present or Absent?
2002 - Winter

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Excerpted from a chapter of the new book Light in the Shadow of Jihad: The Struggle for Truth by Ravi Zacharias (Multnomah Publishers, 2002). Used by permission.

Every thinking person has at some time raised the question, “Where is God in the midst of suffering?” That question without doubt echoed in millions of minds on September 11, and continues to do so. If illustration were argument, an event such as this would give fodder to both sides of the issue—to those who want to establish the complete absence of God and to those who testify that He exists and is involved in the circumstances of our lives. To a watching world, the finest testimonials to the faith of the nation were the crowded churches the following Sunday and the extraordinary national memorial service. President Bush himself planned the service and led the nation to seek the comfort of God in that time of crisis.

Stepping back from the scene, two starkly different stories from September 11 represent the struggle of the search for God. One story was told by the men of Ladder 6, a company of the New York City Fire Department. Seven firemen were helping a sixty-nine-year-old woman by the name of Josephine down from the seventy-third floor of one of the World Trade Center towers. These brave men, already laboring under 110 pounds of equipment on their backs, led Josephine step by step down the staircase. At times, she was ready to give up, but they helped, encouraged, inspired, and assured her she would make it. “They were like angels to me,” she said. She would stop to catch her breath and they would stop with her. She started to shiver with fear and one gave her his jacket. One floor at a time they got her down until, finally, she could walk no more and just sat down on one of the steps of the fourth floor.

They waited with her, coaxing her to stand up and resume walking because they were almost to the ground floor. But she could not move, and they refused to leave her. Suddenly, they heard and felt the floors beneath them give way under the tremendous weight of the collapsing building, and they were hurtled down with terrific force and enveloped in a suffocating cloud of pitch-black smoke. One of them even prayed, “God, if this is it, please let it be quick.”

But as the noise lessened and the smoke began to clear, they found that they had settled over the rubble of the caved-in floors below them. Miraculously, Josephine had refused to go any further at the one point that remained intact as the building fell. All seven firemen plus Josephine were eventually brought into the daylight of safety.

“Had we continued descending when we were pleading with her to keep moving,” they said, “we would have been killed by the crush of the floors above us.” One of them added, “Josephine was like an angel sent from God to stop us so that we could be safe.”

How can we react to a story such as this but to concede that those who were rescued in this way saw the hand of God leading, guiding, and stopping their steps?
Yet, not every story ended like Josephine’s. The hearts of thousands of others who lost loved ones may well throb with a different emotion. I think of one young woman who, through weeks of struggle, torn by indecision at the marriage proposal of a young man, finally made her choice during the night. In the pre-dawn hours of the 11th she phoned his office at the World Trade Center from her home in California. Her message awaited him when he arrived at work, with words of love and the welcome news that she would marry him. But at midmorning when she retrieved her own messages, her world was unforgettably changed. The voice she heard was not the voice of a man exultant at the news of her acceptance. Instead, she listened to the terror in his voice as he told her that he loved her with all his heart, but his building had been struck by an airplane and was beginning to crumble before his eyes. No angels dragged him to safety.

Was God near or far? Any time a catastrophic event happens, numerous human-interest stories give God glory, while others give Him blame.

The Problem Is Greater Than We Think
Theologians have an interesting description for this predicament. They call it “the hiddenness of God,” or “divine hiding.” Why does God not make His presence more obvious? Many arguments are offered for why God “hides” in a world that seeks to see Him.
The answer is ultimately found in the divine purposes of God. It is not that God has absconded or is absent; it is that there is a divine purpose behind His visibility or invisibility. If one can rightly read the clues, the mystery is opened up in profound ways. Just as evil can be understood only in the light of the ultimate purpose, so also must God’s presence or seeming absence be judged on the basis of His purpose.

Certainly, antagonists do not hold their fire on this issue. Yale philosopher Norwood Russell Hanson criticizes God’s absence in this way:
Suppose that on next Tuesday morning, just after breakfast, all of us in this one world are knocked to our knees by a percussive and ear shattering thunderclap. Snow swirls; leaves drop from trees; The earth heaves and buckles; Buildings topple and towers tumble; The sky is ablaze with an eerie, silvery light. Just then, as all the people of this world look up, the heavens open—The clouds pull apart—Revealing an unbelievably immense and radiant Zeus-like figure, towering above us like a hundred Everests. He frowns darkly as lightning plays across the features of His Michelangeloid face. He then points down at me and exclaims, for every man, woman and child to hear, “I have had quite enough of your too-clever logic-chopping and word-watching in matters of Theology. Be assured, N. R. Hanson that I do most certainly exist. 1
Just to assure us that he was not kidding, Hanson adds, “Please do not dismiss this example as a playful, irreverent Disney-oid contrivance. The conceptual point here is that if such a remarkable event were to transpire, I for one should certainly be convinced that God does exist.”

I can’t blame Hanson for representing his case in such melodramatic terms. I too would love for God to make some indisputable appearance; a rending of the skies with a sound and light accompaniment. But I am not at all sure that believability is as simple as that. So, I have a question for this professor: “Suppose this actually happened, exactly the way you asked for it. Would you be satisfied with that epiphany if, moments later while backing out of your driveway, you accidentally ran over your five-year-old son? What would you want from God then? Would you be content with the vision of God that you had experienced a few minutes before, or would you demand an explanation for this tragedy, as well?”

Sporadic supernatural demonstrations by God would not satisfy our insistence that He be constantly accountable to us for His actions. The demand that we place before Him—that just one incontrovertible miracle would dispel all doubt in every other case of “divine hiding”—may well be another intellectual smoke screen we hide behind.

That expectation that we put upon God tells us more about ourselves than it does about God. It is ironic, is it not, that Hanson asks for some kind of thunderous event with God in the skies, and yet he is probably among those who dismiss as a chance event the Big Bang of the beginnings of the world? No thoughts of God’s involvement there are entertained.

Numerous times in the Scriptures, signs were asked from God, and they were given. But in spite of that, trust in God was not automatic. Probably no disciple received more displays of God’s power than the apostle Peter. He was one of only three who witnessed the Transfiguration of Jesus. Jesus had taken His disciples to the top of a mountain where they saw a sight not given to any other human eye. They saw Jesus’ body begin to glow with a whiteness that was almost blinding. Suddenly Moses and Elijah appeared and began to talk with Jesus. Peter asked Jesus if he could build shelters there for the three luminaries, but a voice thundered from the heavens saying, “This is my Son. Listen to Him” (see Luke 9:35). This experience had everything—Sight! Sound! Words! Power! Peter was so overcome that he did not want to go down from the mountain. But Jesus told them it was time to return to the humdrum world of their day-to-day existence.

Jesus was not playing games with his disciples; giving them a glimpse of the eternal and then taking it away from them. Rather, He was showing them the greater reality from which He came and to which will He take us, without denying the present reality through which He works in us. Both are important. We cannot escape the struggle of day-to-day thinking and doing and being by some sort of spellbinding incident that suddenly invades our circumstances. Life is to be lived at a level where the norm becomes meaningful in the light of eternal values, rather than interpreting eternal values according to what is normal for us. That is key to understanding our yearning for the future and our struggle with the present.

But there is more. Jesus was trying to help His disciples to understand the frailty He saw in them—their chronic bent to be enchanted every moment. Peter saw the proof of Jesus’ divinity in His transfiguration. He did not doubt after that who Jesus was. Yet, when Jesus was arrested, Peter floundered and even denied that he ever knew Jesus. He was in momentary awe of the miraculous but could not trust God for the future. This failing was also common in Israel’s exodus from Egypt. The people would witness a miracle and follow God with national repentance. But as soon as God seemed to hide for some time, the grumbling and skepticism began. Peter was in momentary awe of the miraculous but could not trust God for the future.

The examples of Israel and of Peter are repeated endlessly in our own experiences. We have a limitless ability to trust God only when it suits our purpose. Rather than allowing God to be God and serving Him for who He is, we actually try to play God and He becomes our subject, expected to do our bidding at our every whim. I do not know of any greater fickleness in the human heart than this. We lie to ourselves after a miraculous event, believing it will have staying power. But the moment another steep hill appears before us, we wonder whether the miracle we witnessed some time back actually happened or was only a delusion. Reality is threatened by this fickleness, and if we do not understand and accept this, we live in an illusionary world of chronic skepticism. Our demand for more information is, in a real sense, a fight against our finitude.

The Solution Must Go Deeper Than We Seek
A subtle delusion keeps us from the real battle. The truth behind our clamor for explanation is that we assume ourselves to be only intellectual entities and thus, if only our intellect can be satisfied, we will be content. This mangling of our personalities lies at the root of our disconnectedness from the way God has framed reality.

One of the most powerful encounters in the Bible is between Jesus and a learned man named Nicodemus. Nicodemus recognized the supernatural character of Jesus and said to Him, “Teacher, no one could do the miracles you are doing unless God is with him” (see John 3:2). That tacit endorsement could have easily elicited a commendation from Jesus. Instead, Jesus challenged Nicodemus that if he wanted to be part of God’s kingdom, he needed to have a new birth. This was not the direction Nicodemus had planned on going, but Jesus knew exactly what He was about. He was telling Nicodemus that it is not the miracle over matter that ultimately has staying power; it is the miracle over the way we think about reality that has eternal ramifications. We are not all intellect, and therefore some need beyond the intellect needs to be met.

But there is a second point I wish to make. We look for God to be something concrete, something we can see or handle or fully explain. This is a fallacy born out of our addiction to the external, and human history has repeatedly challenged that disposition. There are many evidences of God’s miracle-working presence. Incredible stories abound for which there is often no natural interpretation that satisfactorily explains them.

The supernatural is possible. It happens, but it does not lead to the greatest miracle in a life. For you see, anyone can take a miraculous story and explain it a dozen different ways. At best it just proves that there is a power beyond our own. So where does that leave us? What God seeks in every individual is not just companionship based on His intervention, but communion with Him based on His indwelling. That is what makes the difference when a building is collapsing. It is not whether a hand grabs your hand and rescues you from the carnage; it is that no matter what happens, His strength empowers you to rise beyond the devastation.

If mankind were only mind or intellect, evidence from the physical world would be all that mattered. But there is a depth to our being; a spiritual essence that goes deeper than our intellect. That essence hungers for intimacy. If you will pardon the crassness of the analogy, “making love,” as popular jargon describes sexual consummation without deep commitment, is no more love than the embrace of a pickpocket signifies affection. The spiritual, not the physical, is the essence of our being, and for that quality of nearness, only communion with the living God satisfies. We are spiritual beings and God responds to us in spirit. If mankind were only mind or intellect, evidence from the physical world would be all that mattered. But there is a depth to our being; a spiritual essence that goes deeper than our intellect. That essence hungers for intimacy.

The reason this kind of communion is needed is well articulated by the scientist and mystic, Blaise Pascal. He argued that if there were no obscurity to God, humanity would not feel its corruption, and if there were no light to bring Him near, humanity could not hope for a cure. That thought, coming from the father of the modern-day computer, is even more significant. He knew that though empirical truth is good, it is not good enough. He longed for the mystery and the intimacy of God, something mere intellect could not deliver.

What is the difference between companionship and communion? In companionship with God we come to Him, recognizing our limit of strength. In communion with God we stay with Him, recognizing our depth of spirit. In companionship with God we long to see and understand. In communion with God we long to feel and belong. Those who seek companionship without communion seek power without commitment; the display without dedication, and proof without love.

This truth eludes our pragmatic bent and reconstructs many of the realities God intended for us to live with. English spiritual writer Anthony Bloom underscored this ailment of ours well:
We complain that God does not make Himself present to us for the few minutes we reserve for Him, but what about the 23½ hours during which God may be knocking at our door and we answer, “I am busy. I am sorry.” Or when we do not answer at all because we do not even hear the knock at the door of our heart, of our mind, of our conscience, of our life. So there is a situation in which we have no right to complain of the absence of God, because we are a great deal more absent than He ever is. 2
“We complain that God does not make Himself present to us for the few minutes we reserve for Him, but what about the 23½ hours during which God may be knocking at our door and we answer, ‘I am busy. I am sorry.’”

But this is where we break free from the entanglements and distractions to find the hand of God. Communion with God takes place in our solitariness before it takes effect in community. Henri Nouwen captured this profound truth: “In solitude we can unmask the illusion of our possessiveness and discern in the center of our own self that we are not what we can conquer, but what is given to us. Through that solitude He leads us to communion.” 3 In other words, it is not our victories that make us who we are; it is His divine presence that carries us through both victory and defeat, and defines us.

Is this possibly what C. S. Lewis had in mind in The Voyage of The Dawn Treader? Lucy has been desperately seeking the presence of Aslan when suddenly He appears before her. “Oh Aslan,” she says, “It was kind of you to come.”
“I have been here all the time,” said He, “but you have just made me visible.”
“Aslan,” said Lucy, almost a little reproachfully. “Don’t make fun of me. As if anything I could do would make you visible!”
“It did,” said Aslan. “Do you think I wouldn’t obey my own rules?”
What are His rules? “You will seek me and find me when you seek for me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13).

I would not at all be surprised to learn someday, when the words and thoughts of those who died in the devastation of September 11 are revealed in God’s presence, that many, many of them knew a profound sense of His presence, even when they knew life in its earthly sojourn was coming to an end.

There Are Appointments from Which We Cannot Run
There is at least one profound lesson that I draw from the life and death stories of September 11. There is an appointed time for each of us when life will meet its end. God has entrusted us with common sense and wisdom that we must express in our day-to-day activities. We are not to throw life away. We are not licensed to court danger. But sometimes we can think that we are safe when we are not. Real safety is only to be found in His presence. Wherever we go, whatever we do, we are safe in that communion with Him. Safety is not found in seeking an escape from His appointments.

One-time chaplain to the United States Senate, Peter Marshall, told a story, called “Rendezvous in Samara,” of a man who worked as the servant of a wealthy merchant. He had gone into town to shop for the day when suddenly he felt someone brush heavily against his shoulder. Somewhat offended, he turned toward the person who had jostled him, and found himself staring into a pair of eyes that spoke death to him. Panicking, he dropped everything and ran home. His master saw him running breathlessly toward the house, and met him on the front steps.
“What on earth is the matter?” asked the master.
“Oh, sir! Someone in the marketplace rudely brushed me, and when I turned to face him, he looked like the Angel of Death to me. He too had a look of shock on his face. It was almost as if he wanted to grab me but then backed away. I am afraid, sir. I don’t want to go back to the market.”
“Saddle one of our horses and ride all day till you reach the distant village of Samara,” the master said. “Stay there till you get word from me that it is safe for you to return.”
The servant rode off, and the master made his way to the market to find the person who had so frightened his servant. As he wound his way through the crowded streets, he suddenly came face to face with this strange looking individual.
“Who are you?” the merchant said. “Are you the one who just scared my servant?”
“Yes, indeed.”
“Why did you frighten him?”
“Well, I was truly surprised to see him here. I am the Angel of Death, and I chose to spend the day here before heading to my stop for tonight. You see, it was not so much that I surprised him, as that he surprised me. I did not expect to see him here because I have an appointment with him in Samara tonight.”

That is the reality we all live with. Death is the moment we all seek to flee, yet it is a moment that the Bible says has been set for each of us before it ever comes to be. King David said it this way,

For you created my inmost being;
you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
All the days ordained for me
were written in your book
before one of them came to be.” (Psalm 139:13,16)

We must learn to live every day to the fullest, in healthy recognition that one day it will be the last. Was it not ironic that one of the passengers who died in the American Airlines crash in Queens, New York, in early November 2001 had escaped the inferno of the World Trade Center tragedy in September? Another passenger on that plane was a young sailor who had just returned from extended duty overseas on the USS Enterprise.

We can flee the marketplace, only to find that the quiet village of Samara is where our rendezvous was to be.

There Is a Friendship in Which We Cannot Lose
The Bible tells of the time when Lazarus, one of Jesus’ friends, took ill. His family sent word for Jesus to come and heal him, but by the time Jesus came, Lazarus was dead. His sisters greeted Jesus with the sharp words, “If you had been here, our brother would not have died” (see John 11:21). Jesus went to the tomb and wept. But as He dried His tears, He performed the remarkable miracle of raising Lazarus from the dead.

But if Jesus knew He was going to do this, why did He weep before the tomb? I suggest that He wept because He knew that someday, even with this momentary reprieve, Lazarus would come to his “Samara,” and the pain of death would once again be very real.

Jesus’ miracle was to remind them that “Samara” was not the end. He said to the family gathered, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies” (see John 11:25). His miracle is not to be there to keep us from dying. It is to take us through death into His eternal presence, which is the place of ultimate communion.

Some years ago, I was in Israel and visited the village of Bethany where Lazarus’ body once lay before Jesus raised him. A few months ago, I stood by the tomb of Lazarus in Larnaca, Cyprus, where he had become the bishop of the church. That tomb was excavated nearly one thousand years ago, and the simple inscription on the grave said, “Lazarus, Bishop of Larnaca—Four days dead, Friend of Jesus.”

The first tomb reminded me of the possibility of the miracle; the second, of the reality of death. The inscription spoke of the greatest miracle and reality of all—communion with the living God. That intimate friendship is the kind of communion that helps you face death knowing that your Friend is with you beyond the grave.

Even the Koran recognizes that Jesus had the power to raise the dead; a power that it does not attribute to Muhammad. That same power was in the World Trade Center on September 11. Bin Laden and his band of murderers may have had the power to kill, but Jesus Christ has the power to raise us up again. That is what communion with Him brings. His presence is within us, and terrorists can never take that away.
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Old 09-10-2002, 08:17 PM   #23
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Since we seem to be celebrating 9/11 with theological works, let me add a poem I wrote.

Because It's Unseen Doesn't Mean It's There

All my life I've heard about the power of faith,
And the healing effect of prayer.
But all the time a little voice to me saith:
Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there.

Theology is the only field where things
Don't have to be seen to be real.
Hell and Heaven, communion and angels' wings,
Seem to be rooted in what people "feel."

Hmmm. But we all have so many feelings every day
That I am surprised people can learn not to care
About the conflicts when they kneel to pray.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

Or perhaps the doubts and meanderings cease.
Perhaps their brain closes its eyes to take a rest.
Perhaps they enter church entirely at peace
With a calm heart in their breast.

If that is so, then I envy them!
My mind never rests, but must hunt; and tear
The hides from its prey to better see them.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

I have felt calm enough, and blessed,
When I looked up to see a sunset's poem.
But I never believed anyone was possessed,
Or that Heaven is humanity's home.

I believe that a home of incomparable worth
Is something we, with the animals, share;
I believe humanity's home is the earth.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

I don't believe in eternal life.
I believe we all pass death's portal.
And the only things amid the war and strife
That live- the only things that are immortal-

Are poems and songs and other forms of art,
Which, changing and changeless, make their lair
In the wilderness of humanity's heart.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

I believe that there are many people
Who, because I die, will never see my face.
I believe that, though beneath a steeple
They try, they will not bring my soul to grace.

I believe that there will be no surprises
If my eyes, or the shade of my hair,
No one remembers after a few thousand sunrises.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

I will die. But I will not die while I live,
Will not cower in fear or in blind trust,
Will not bleed myself, when I cannot give
Anything to keep any one from grave dust.

The gods, or God, or any other higher powers,
Can keep their temples and their prayers.
I was only poetry, and freedom, and flowers.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

I want only what no one else can give me:
The courage not to cower or to hide;
The strength and truth of utter poetry;
The decidedly human limitations and pride.

I even want mortality, freedom from fate.
Not for me even a heaven as faint as air.
When I die, any cage will be too late.
(Because it's unseen doesn't mean it's there).

-Perchance.

[ September 10, 2002: Message edited by: Perchance ]</p>
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Old 09-11-2002, 05:06 AM   #24
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I heard many people say things like "My aunt was going to go and work in the WTC that morning, but decided not to, and that means she's still alive! Jesus saved her!"

I am suddenly reminded of Dennis Leary's comments (at least, I think it was him) regarding dolphin-friendly tuna: "What about the tuna?" What about the people that did die? Some of them probably weren't Christians, either. Are they in hell?
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Old 09-11-2002, 05:08 AM   #25
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I had a teacher whose husband was supposed to go to the WTC for a business meeting that got cancelled, so he wasn't there when the planes struck. She was sure that God had saved his life.

What about the people who did go? Were they not as important as her husband?

-Perchance.
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Old 09-11-2002, 04:43 PM   #26
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Quote:
Originally posted by QueenofSwords:
<strong>
Why not just write up another one?

That, if anything, is more sickening than the original, and if anyone sends me one of those 9/11 spam emails, they'll get that in reply.</strong>
Send this instead,

If god was there and could have prevented it, and if he is moral, what about September 11th was wrong? Was it God's will that all those people died? Apparently, since he allegedly saved so many, those he didn't save must be because they didn't DESERVE to be saved. Since it was God's will, and we shouldn't disagree with HIS WILL, we shouldn't retailiate against those responsible. Maybe we should thank em.

How's that for logic?

If someone tells you "God had a plan for me/him/her", ask him what about those who died? Was there no plan for them? Is it a "I have no use for them, so they can die" sort of thing on God's part? Wanna try telling that to the victim's family?

Again, if the argument is that God was there, then the only logical conclusion is that

a) he's a sick evil fuck or

b) that he's moral and absolutely ritious and therefore, what happened must be acceptable to him, which makes the events moral and acceptable. Therefore, we shouldn't protest.

I'm no expert in logic, so maybe there's a flaw somewhere (aside from assumeing God's existence I mean). But I can' see any.
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Old 09-11-2002, 06:28 PM   #27
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Quote:
<strong>But a better question would be, How many times has God prevented tragedies such as 09/11 or greater from occurring to this Nation that we don't even know about and won't know about this side of Heaven?</strong>
Old joke:

First Man: "Look, I've invented this wonderful recipe for elephant repellant!"

Second Man: "But, there are no elephants in North America."

First Man: "Exactly! See how well it works!!"

Regards,

Bill Snedden
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Old 09-11-2002, 07:28 PM   #28
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Quote:
Originally posted by Shadowy Man:
<strong>Well, if God and Allah are the same god, as those who say that the words "Under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance goes for *all* religions would have you believe, then God must also have been there on September 11th in the cockpit of the airliners with the terrorists, ensuring that they hit their mark.</strong>
If there is a god, considering how successful they were, I'd definitely say god, or should I say Allah, was with them.

The next time a xtian tries to convince you of the power of prayer with some lame anecdotes, point out they may be on to something since the hijackers (if they heeded mohammed Atta's letter) prayed to god before their missions and those prayers were answered. Then ask them when they are converting to Islam.
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