I think you've fastened on something important there, without quite nailing it down. I'd put it this way: a lot of atheists think the question is far more important than most monotheists do. The latter largely take it as an obvious fact of life that doesn't need discussion, so they're often ill-equipped to argue in support of the proposition that god exists. The former, myself included, like to argue the point so we've done a lot of research and analysis of it, because it seems crucial to everything that follows from anyone's position on it.Sometimes I think the atheists believe in god more than the monotheists.
My goodness, what a sparse reaction to this thread!
Where are all our dear church going Christians?
Where is their soldier like defence of their one true God?
Are ye cowards?
Are ye serching teapots and old books for the proof of the old goat?
Are the RED DEER Rednecks hiding under the bed fingering their rosaries in hope of creating witty responses?
heh heh.
I think you've fastened on something important there, without quite nailing it down. I'd put it this way: a lot of atheists think the question is far more important than most monotheists do. The latter largely take it as an obvious fact of life that doesn't need discussion, so they're often ill-equipped to argue in support of the proposition that god exists. The former, myself included, like to argue the point so we've done a lot of research and analysis of it, because it seems crucial to everything that follows from anyone's position on it.
And the real truth is that neither side is ever going to convince the other, because the argument is fundamentally not about reason and evidence. So why do I keep engaging in it? Because it's fun.
Alright!!!!!! Wait one damn minute!!!! (pun intended):angryfire:
My thread about religion being a disease got moved to the cat box (or whatever it's called) but this thread, which is much worse than mine, is left unmolested!!!!!!!! :angry3:
BTW, good rant mrgrumpy :lol:
Does God exist and where is the physical proof? Pick up a Bible, don't even open it, just hold it. Is it a physical object?I think you've fastened on something important there, without quite nailing it down. I'd put it this way: a lot of atheists think the question is far more important than most monotheists do. The latter largely take it as an obvious fact of life that doesn't need discussion, so they're often ill-equipped to argue in support of the proposition that god exists. The former, myself included, like to argue the point so we've done a lot of research and analysis of it, because it seems crucial to everything that follows from anyone's position on it.
And the real truth is that neither side is ever going to convince the other, because the argument is fundamentally not about reason and evidence. So why do I keep engaging in it? Because it's fun.
And clearly you think you do. You have no solid justification for thinking you're any closer than I am, all you've got is a bunch of arguments from the presumed authority of texts thousands of years old.It's only fun for you because you think you have it all figure out.You don't, not even close.
The real reason I've said things that others have said is because they're fairly obvious conclusions and interpretations to make from the texts, so it should hardly be a surprise that different people come up with the same ones repeatedly. Moreover, when I do encounter a particular conclusion or interpretation, I don't merely accept it or reject it, I study and think about it and decide whether it makes good sense to me or not in the context of other things I know or can find out about, and if it does I'll use it. You've just accused me of not thinking for myself. Not only is that wrong, as should be obvious if you've read much of anything else I've posted at CC, it's insulting and offensive.From our limited discussion on the actual texts you are just parroting what others have said before you. You probably would also have parrot type answers for any topic that comes up.
Those are the same texts that any form of doctrine is based on, even yours.And clearly you think you do. You have no solid justification for thinking you're any closer than I am, all you've got is a bunch of arguments from the presumed authority of texts thousands of years old.
There is a difference if two people come to the same conclusion from reading Scripture all on their own than if one has reached a conclusion and the other one reads it and comes to the conclusion that the person was right. How many people took the last route compared to the first?The real reason I've said things that others have said is because they're fairly obvious conclusions and interpretations to make from the texts, so it should hardly be a surprise that different people come up with the same ones repeatedly.
I don't know if this fits you view or not so it is just an example. Quite a few promote that an anti-christ comes on the scene in the final years, his appearance is promoted as the start of tribulation.Moreover, when I do encounter a particular conclusion or interpretation, I don't merely accept it or reject it, I study and think about it and decide whether it makes good sense to me or not in the context of other things I know or can find out about, and if it does I'll use it.
More or less that is just what I did. Why would it be obvious to me, I know you as well as reading what topics we have covered allows. I certainly have no desire to go and read all the posts of everybody I might strike up a conversation with. If you have some links where you have already covered the topics I brought up I would be more than happy to go and read them.You've just accused me of not thinking for myself. Not only is that wrong, as should be obvious if you've read much of anything else I've posted at CC, it's insulting and offensive.
You're aren't alone in that opinion, but isn't proof somewhat different than opinion? Our original role was to be care-takes of a garden, His garden so it might be seen as selfish as we weren't created as guests with no duties. What ailment has plagued mankind as long as religion has been talked about?Religion is man made. If it was not then bog created us for purely selfish reasons. It is not a mental illness. It is a coping tool.
What is inside the two covers has nothing to do with 'proof', unless you want to go and try and find the remains of some long ago event. It is a book about a sequence of events that cover the past present and future. The odd twist is that the events that are in the past were written about before they took place, admittedly in a form not easily understood by those who read them before they actually transpired.The problem with these discussions is that our dear Christian friends keep resorting to quoting Scripture to "prove" their points.
I say scripture is entirely man's creative writing and proves nothing. The entire bible, holy books, Koran, are are an artificial creation; the creative imagination of goat herders and mystics.
They are self-serving, self-fulfiiling stories that only cite themselves as legitimate and anything outside their jurisdiction is deemed heresy.
Can our dear Christain friends make any supportable arguments without using invented stories?
Logic and reason perhaps?
I was really of two minds about dignifying that smear by responding to it. I presume you're referring to the list of questions you presented in a previous post. I didn't answer them for two reasons. First, you can extract that data from Revelation just as readily as I can, and you've obviously done so. Second, the answers don't mean anything because the book is not about our own times or our future. The first sentence of Revelation says its about things that must shortly come to pass, and the third verse says the time is at hand. It could hardly be clearer than that: John expected the events he describes to happen very soon. It's about the political situation that existed at the time it was written, which is most likely the Emperor Domitian's widespread persecutions. You have to read more than Scripture to understand Scripture, you need history and philosophy as well, and some understanding of human psychology. See AJ's "Identify the Beast" thread in the Christian Discussion forum.From what I do know about you the feeling insulted and offended is a tactic being used to avoid covering any of those listed topics.
I was really of two minds about dignifying that smear by responding to it. I presume you're referring to the list of questions you presented in a previous post. I didn't answer them for two reasons. First, you can extract that data from Revelation just as readily as I can, and you've obviously done so. Second, the answers don't mean anything because the book is not about our own times or our future. The first sentence of Revelation says its about things that must shortly come to pass, and the third verse says the time is at hand. It could hardly be clearer than that: John expected the events he describes to happen very soon. It's about the political situation that existed at the time it was written, which is most likely the Emperor Domitian's widespread persecutions. You have to read more than Scripture to understand Scripture, you need history and philosophy as well, and some understanding of human psychology. See AJ's "Identify the Beast" thread in the Christian Discussion forum.
How do you figure that? Chapter 20 begins with Satan being bound for 1000 years, then loosed again for the final battle, which of course he loses, then the last two chapters describe a second and perfect creation replacing the old one immediately following that. Revelation was written around the year 95 according to all the sources I've seen, and described events that were to happen almost immediately, so Satan being loosed again should have happened some time in the 11th century, and the second creation should have happened by now. Revelation's final chapter talks about all these things that will shortly be done, 22:7: "Behold, I come quickly..." and the promises are still unfulfilled after almost 2000 years. The time line's run out on all of it.The time-line should have well expired for everything except the last two chapters (being as they are eternal).
Nice opinion but it is still wrong, what you see as a 'flaw in God' is a flaw in your understanding of what you have read.My point is, and has been from the beginning, that the Bible is not reliable as history or science or prophecy, it is not inerrant and in fact nowhere claims to be, though there is a passage somewhere, in Timothy I think it is, that says it's worth studying (which is certainly true), and to take it literally is to completely misunderstand both it and the reality around you.
"I've just started writing a book that set out to disprove god "
It is unessasary to disprove that which has not been proven.
You can't prove or disprove immateriality. :lol: