If someone passed a law and told me it "appied forever", I might be a tad skeptical.
I passed a fart once and it seemed to last forever.
If someone passed a law and told me it "appied forever", I might be a tad skeptical.
I passed a fart once and it seemed to last forever.
Em, that was a guy named Newton, not some guy named Karma. It's Newton's Law of Motion. lolThey are all one and the same because they are just rewording of the law of Karma: for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. No god necessary.
That still doesn't explain why the thing wasn't written more clearly to begin with. My point is that the "Golden Rule explains everything the Bible tries to (and fails at often) in one simple easy-to-understand line. I was being generous in saying it could be boiled down to a 2 page pamphlet.Perhaps one important reason is that in past times it was read by a few and taught to many (who did no reading). Today there are more readers and they do challenge what traditional teachings proposed. Tearing down false teachings does create some disarray, so what, you end up with a more accurate picture on what God intended us to understand.
The fact that most of the old gods aren't spoken of past mythological studies. This leads to the theory that they never existed in the first place, let alone were all-knowing, all-seeing, all-powerful, and controlled all that was in their mandate (such as Thor, God of Thunder, EG).Evidence such as???
Or a pile of them that contradict others.With the advent of an e-bible it doesn't take any special talent to find verses that relate to each other.
Thanks, but as an atheist, the only interest I have in what the Bible claims is usually just passing curiosity. It's been said that statistics can prove anything you want them to prove, which is entirely an old-wives tale if the statistics are accurate and properly researched. But the Bible seems to be able to give reasons against this or that while offering reasons for the same this or that. I cannot see why anyone would take it seriously on a rational basis.A search for the word grace brings up a certain number of verses. Read those and you have a basic understanding of that word means. L Read the passages that those verses come from and you should have improved your understanding even more (especially when more than one passage has the words 'God forbid' included). That method can certainly be used for most topics the Bible covers. The feast for the eagles and beasts of the field is a described event in Revelation. That makes it a future event. There are a few places in the OT that deals with prophecies that deal with the day of the Lord that cover that very event also. Put all those together and you have as much info as God had put into writing.
I'm more a dedicated reader that believes all that was written. It could be argued if that is so
Yeah, there are books with predictions in abundance. *shrugs*Really....you may have missed some of the finer points in the 'how not to be deceived' section. The issue of salvation could certainly be made into a two pager.
What is it and is there a plan already in place to make sure it comes about as planned. Yes there is, not everybody is interested in the finer details. This verse excludes the Bible ever being reduced in size (and therefore complexity).
Isa:42:9:
Behold,
the former things are come to pass,
and new things do I declare:
before they spring forth I tell you of them.
lol And The Grimm's could have said at the front of their books, "Believe in fairies, gnomes, and talking animals", too.Treat your neighbors kindly and the commandments they cover are not the whole 10. Christ's 1st Law is about belief in God so the neighbor rule is more properly the 2nd golden rule.
:lol:It's obvious that Christians aren't under the same "conditions" as reasoning people.Christians are not under the exact same 'conditions'. For instance a verse says if you desire a woman who is not your wife in thought alone you are considered to have committed a sin. OT was under physical acts and harsh punishment, NT is under thoughts also can find you guilty of sin. That isn't widely preached so I doubt many would be repenting such acts (within Christianity itself)
So the claims indicate, anyway. But, apparently Hades, Er, and these ones: Gods of the Afterlife among others can, also. lolKarma would only seem to cover a person while he is drawing breath. God , on the other hand can and will follow a person after death.
Well, last I heard there was. Does the Bible not say the reward for sin is death? That sounds to me like a reaction.There is no 'opposite reaction' for sin,
At least according to your interpretations.we have our social laws that punish sinners once they sin, there is no blanket protection from sinners that prevents the sins from happening. The only course this world is on the gap between the haves and the have not's is expanding. Karma has nothing to do with willful manipulation, be it by organized religion (corporation status) or any other form of 'supposed authority'.
The Churches preach grace will cover all sins, that isn't true. Once grace is known a person cannot have grace cover a sin when they sin because they are convinced grace will cover it. Reading it for yourself would certainly clear up the price of the ticket, it's free and it is a one-way ticket.
NP
That still doesn't explain why the thing wasn't written more clearly to begin with. My point is that the "Golden Rule explains everything the Bible tries to (and fails at often) in one simple easy-to-understand line. I was being generous in saying it could be boiled down to a 2 page pamphlet.
It's obvious that Christians aren't under the same "conditions" as reasoning people.
People are built to be hypocrites. We change our tunes depending on each and every circumstance that comes along. Like me, for example: I am dead set against capital punishment. But that does not keep me from thinking that people like Pickton and Olson should die and people like Sodamned Insane are dead. lol.Yep- the Golden Rule handles pretty well everything, it's just plain old common sense. You can abide by that without necessarily being religious. I know think the average person needs to go to the Bible to figure out what's right and wrong, if it's detrimental to others it's probably wrong, if it's beneficial it's probably right. A lot of people seem to think that sitting in a church for an hour on a Sunday makes them better people. Biggest hypocrites I met in life went to Church every Sunday and by 2 o'clock the guy was drunk and bad mouthing everyone in the community. The drunk part I don't object to, it just didn't improve him..........:lol::lol:
??? I don't think she said the entire Old Testament. I am pretty sure she said Leviticus. And the 10 commandments aren't in that book, as far as I know. They are in Exodus and Deut.Karrie
Are you saying then that the ten commandments does not apply since it is in the old testament?
Since Jesus saves us all then why use the old testement, we're saved
:lol:It's obvious that Christians aren't under the same "conditions" as reasoning people.
Is there anything else?Because the New Testament says the laws given in the Old Testament apply forever, so presumably we should keep a record of them:
Matthew 5: 18
Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled.
There are a dozen more passages that suggest the law is forever. And of course it also says the contrary in at least 10 places, such as:
Romans 7: 4 - 6
Ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ...But now we are delivered from the law, that being dead wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter.
Take your pick, believe anything you like, you can probably find support for it somewhere in the Bible. It doesn't really make sense to use the Bible as an authority, it's too easy to cherry pick, it's often wrong and inconsistent, and it's mostly fiction anyway. Personally, I think citing scripture as a justification for a position is the last refuge of people who can't think of anything else.
It was around before the Bible. "Never impose on others what you would not choose for yourself." - Confucius (551 BC – 479 BC)Where do you think that the concept of the Golden Rule originated?
Sorry. I think you misunderstood me. I don't seek clarity from the Bible. The Bible isn't that important to me. I get by with the "Golden Rule"Further, the clarity that you seek probable resides in the culture and interpretations that existed when the oral traditions and consequent writings were initiated.
I'd say it's likely you are wrong.Trying to apply your personal tests to a document that was written all those years ago is likely the root of this issue.
I noticed you left out my little smilie. That was an indication that I was joking. That's not very observant of you.That's really closed-minded...
I guess you also missed the little smilie I placed right at the front of that comment I made.Oh yeah, here we go. I've heard this before. Its only the atheist who has a grip on reason, and next you'll tell me logic. Then you'll say you're the keeper of intelligence. Then you'll say we're not human.
Where is your tolerance??? I tolerate your beliefs. I listen and question civilly and respectfully, even though I don't believe them. So why then do atheists have such a problem with tolerating(not believing, or even holding as valid)the claim that Christianity makes that anything that contradicts its knowledge is absolutely false?
You don't have to believe it, but you *MUST* tolerate it by your own logic. And that means not calling the Christian unreasonable, irrational, illogical, unintelligent, or "under conditions", etc. Otherwise your a hypocrite and therefore a fraud.
It's not the same. For at least this atheist, judging others by whatever they guide their lives by, especially if it does no-one else any harm, is a "sin".If I subscribe to the biblical claim that homosexual behavior is sinful, then I cannot rationally subscribe to the notion that its not sinful.
I can tolerate it, but I can't hold it as valid. Just as atheists can't hold "homosexual behavior is sinful" as valid.
It was someone of faith who developed that? I think you said quoting scripture was the last resort of whomever couldn't think of anything else. I was under the assumption you were speaking of a person of faith to begin with. :-?Lots. Check out this: Skeptic's Annotated Bible / Quran / Book of Mormon
It was around before the Bible. "Never impose on others what you would not choose for yourself." - Confucius (551 BC – 479 BC)
Sorry. I think you misunderstood me. I don't seek clarity from the Bible. The Bible isn't that important to me. I get by with the "Golden Rule"
I'd say it's likely you are wrong.
I noticed you left out my little smilie. That was an indication that I was joking. That's not very observant of you.
It's not the same. For at least this atheist, judging others by whatever they guide their lives by, especially if it does no-one else any harm, is a "sin".
It's not the same. For at least this atheist, judging others by whatever they guide their lives by, especially if it does no-one else any harm, is a "sin".
Em, that was a guy named Newton, not some guy named Karma. It's Newton's Law of Motion. lol