Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
06-21-2002, 09:09 PM | #31 | |
Contributor
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Saint Paul, MN
Posts: 24,524
|
Quote:
There was a beautiful scene in some movie (Prophecy II or something, I don't remember but it had Christopher Walken in it), where this woman is being chased by a fallen angel that wants to kill her, and they have a brief conversation: (her) "When was the last time you heard from God?" (him) "It's been a while." (her) "He hasn't stopped talking. You've stopped listening." (him) "What's he saying?" (her) "Jump." So... she jumps, while the angel is holding her, and they fall, and the bad guy angel is impaled on a large sharp thing. I'm not sure how to explain the implicit relevance; obviously, a staged setting in a movie doesn't exactly describe the real world, and yet, at another level... sometimes surprisingly unlikely advice can be very good advice. If we take the initial example of theists coming here... imagine that I conclude that God "directed" me here. How is this bad advice? It *sounds* like it should be bad, but I've met some awfully cool people, and I've had fun. is that bad? |
|
06-22-2002, 03:19 PM | #32 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: I`ve left and gone away
Posts: 699
|
seebs:
Quote:
Quote:
What I meant was that It`s not a bad thing for you as much it`s a bad thing for the rest of us who have to deal with yet one more person hanging around here trying to rationalize and defend your particular take on Christianity. It makes no difference if you`re a nice guy who talks to us politely or an asshole who screams that we are all going to Hell. The problem is not with the promotional tactics but with the flawed product itself. Nobody here is buying the claims of Christianity no matter how pretty you dress it up and hearing about it from yet another believers particular perspective is tedious to say the least. I happen to like you and you`re not as "in your face" about it as some others who come through here,but you still wear the coat of the enemy. |
||
06-22-2002, 04:35 PM | #33 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2001
Location: hell if I know
Posts: 2,306
|
Quote:
|
|
06-22-2002, 08:53 PM | #34 | |||
Contributor
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Saint Paul, MN
Posts: 24,524
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
06-22-2002, 11:35 PM | #35 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: I`ve left and gone away
Posts: 699
|
Quote:
Marketing really has nothing to do with why *I* don`t buy it unless you are referring to 1st century marketing and product development techniques. Quote:
The reasonably polite and more tolerant Christians are of course less dangerous than the fundies,but it`s still terribly frustrating to listen to either one talk about believing. [ June 23, 2002: Message edited by: Anunnaki ]</p> |
||
06-23-2002, 02:11 AM | #36 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: hereabouts
Posts: 734
|
Quote:
|
|
06-23-2002, 04:01 AM | #37 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Texas
Posts: 707
|
I think Andrea Yates got bad advice from her god. From her point of view she did the very best thing she could for her children. She "knew" from her religion that when a child died before the age of reason they would go straight to heaven. She did the only thing she knew to do to give her children eternal bliss. And she sacrificed any chance of happiness on this earth and a place in eternal torment to give this boon to her children. Her omnipotent and omniscient god did nothing to stop her. In fact, her actions were a product of her view of god. Where was the "good" of religion for her? The only people I see who claim to find "good" in religion are those who willfully ignore the sordid, vile, corrupt parts of xianity. The selfsame god who they claim does good in this world also claimed to be responsible for the evil! Maybe when the marshmallow/ salad bar type xians start looking at xianity for the myth it is the people on other end of the spectrum, the Andrea Yates of the world, will stop having support for their belief system. Or you can just say she was crazy. Yea, crazy like the religion she believed in.
|
06-23-2002, 04:48 AM | #38 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: In a nondescript, black helicopter.
Posts: 6,637
|
Typical for apologetics. Oh yeah, I was told the same thing. "God always answers prayers, it may just not be an answer you like". Or "Sometimes the answer is yes, no or maybe later." Or "He answered you, but you aren't listening." All excuses why the "power of prayer" doesn't work. Why even those that have more faith than a mustard seed can't so much as move a sack of sod, much less a mountain.
Never underestimate the power of people to fool themselves. Especially when they are fooling themselfs to believe they are RIGHT. |
06-23-2002, 04:59 AM | #39 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: .
Posts: 1,653
|
Quote:
|
|
06-23-2002, 07:34 AM | #40 | |
Contributor
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Saint Paul, MN
Posts: 24,524
|
Quote:
I would guess that all of the Christians I know see the option of not believing as an inalienable right, and would consider it rude to preach at anyone who hadn't asked for preaching. Insofar as I preach around here, I'm doing it on the grounds that anyone posting a complaint about God is implicitly asking what, if any, defense exists... and I still worry about it some times, because, while I enjoy these debates, I don't like to be pushy. Frankly, in a lot of ways, I'm more threatened by fundies than some of you are. They may think you're heathens; they call *me* a "false teacher" and a sign of the apocolypse. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|