Why does God hate babies who have not sinned?

Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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This act is not for protection from being spiritually mislead, I wouldn't recomment changing the words if you ever thing of using it in time of physical peril.

Lu:18:13:
And the publican,
standing afar off,
would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven,
but smote upon his breast,
saying,
God be merciful to me a sinner.

MGHMOYS


That's why we are fed it starting with the milk and moving onto the meaty parts. The milk is just Ge:1-3 and Re:20-22, any more and you are out of your league.

1Co:3:2:
I have fed you with milk,
and not with meat:
for hitherto ye were not able to bear it,
neither yet now are ye able.
Yu be funny.
 

MHz

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I tried my damndest to give him the hint that he could glean and impart more wisdom by reading "Mother Goose"! Young kids just don't listen.-:)


Proverb:1:7:
The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge:
but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

Proverb:1:22:
How long,
ye simple ones,
will ye love simplicity?
and the scorners delight in their scorning,
and fools hate knowledge?

Yu be funny.
Really you guys make it way too easy. lol be content that I picked only the gentle ones to post.
 

Cliffy

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Really you guys make it way too easy. lol be content that I picked only the gentle ones to post.
Really, you can quote passages of ancient text until the cows come home, but it ain't gonna get ya into heaven any faster than any of the rest of us. I have 40 years of studying the bible and its history. If I wasn't interested and dedicated, I would not have wasted my time. Because of what I know about it, I can't take any of your rambling seriously, but you are sometimes amusing in your arrogance. Judge not lest ye shall be judged Htz. It is bad for your soul.
 

MHz

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If neither I nor the Bible ramble on then it must be within you. That's not a judgment, it's just the way it is at the moment and the only change that will take place is you finding out God doesn't ramble either. I've already been gathered, don't blame me for you not being able to say the same thing. (at the moment)
 

Cliffy

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If neither I nor the Bible ramble on then it must be within you. That's not a judgment, it's just the way it is at the moment and the only change that will take place is you finding out God doesn't ramble either. I've already been gathered, don't blame me for you not being able to say the same thing. (at the moment)
Her is only one small piece of evidence:
Were Jews ever really slaves in Egypt, or is Passover a myth?


Here's a question for you: what do actor Charlton Heston, DreamWorks animation studios and Former Prime Minister Menachem Begin all have in common? Well, they've all, at one time or another, perpetuated the myth that the Jews built the pyramids. And it is a myth, make no mistake. Even if we take the earliest possible date for Jewish slavery that the Bible suggests, the Jews were enslaved in Egypt a good three hundred years after the 1750 B.C. completion date of the pyramids. That is, of course, if they were ever slaves in Egypt at all.
The rest of this article - Were Jews ever really slaves in Egypt, or is Passover a myth? - Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper
 

MHz

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A slave back then was somebody who owed a debt, in the case of the 12 Tribes (rather than it being Jews) they did manual labor in exchange for room and board. Are you familiar with the company towns in Britain and America and Canada during the industrial revolution, they were worse off than the 'slaves' in Egypt.
 

JLM

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A slave back then was somebody who owed a debt, in the case of the 12 Tribes (rather than it being Jews) they did manual labor in exchange for room and board. Are you familiar with the company towns in Britain and America and Canada during the industrial revolution, they were worse off than the 'slaves' in Egypt.

That's an enlightening piece of news. Perhaps while God was compiling his screed he could have published a dictionary and made things a whole lot simpler!
 

MHz

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He did, it was built in, it's called context. Give me a couple or real examples in what you find confusing or inaccurate or whatever term you want to use.
 

Cliffy

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A slave back then was somebody who owed a debt, in the case of the 12 Tribes (rather than it being Jews) they did manual labor in exchange for room and board. Are you familiar with the company towns in Britain and America and Canada during the industrial revolution, they were worse off than the 'slaves' in Egypt.
You didn't read the article, did you? There is no evidence that the Jews were ever even in Egypt.
 

1an

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The Romans crucified thousands of people in the same place where Jesus was crucified yet apart from one skeleton in a coffin no other skeletons can be found, even though they should all be concentrated in one place.

Answer, scavenging animals and desert rats.

You didn't read the article, did you? There is no evidence that the Jews were ever even in Egypt.
Hebrew means people from across the river. That is what their neighbours called them.

That's an enlightening piece of news. Perhaps while God was compiling his screed he could have published a dictionary and made things a whole lot simpler!
Israelite slaves were homeless people who would otherwise have died of starvation and cold, they were taken into someone's home and given shelter, food and cloths in return for work. Today we are given money for our work. After seven years they were free to leave but many chose to stay and there were laws to protect them. If their family died then their son was to take them into his home even if they were elderly and look after them.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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It's hard to say exactly what a Jew is! Race or religion?
Jewish religion and political beliefs were seperate and different from the Israelites.

"Jews" didn't come into being until post Solomon.

There were 12 tribes. The Jews belonged to the tribe of Judah.

The Israelites were the twelve tribes.
And Judah started a war which split Israel into Judea and Isreal and went off on their own religiously and politically.
 

1an

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Jewish religion and political beliefs were seperate and different from the Israelites.

"Jews" didn't come into being until post Solomon.

And Judah started a war which split Israel into Judea and Isreal and went off on their own religiously and politically.
Hi Petros, do you think the Palestinians ever belonged to Israel or are they descended from the Philistines (the boat people)? What do you think? Or are you like me and not sure?
 

Cliffy

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Let me rephrase that: There is no evidence that the Israelites were ever even in Egypt.

Also: Are the Rastafarians of Jamaica a lost tribe of Israel as they claim?
 

1an

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Let me rephrase that: There is no evidence that the Israelites were ever even in Egypt.

Also: Are the Rastafarians of Jamaica a lost tribe of Israel as they claim?
The earliest non-Biblical account of the Exodus is in the writings of the Greek author Hecataeus of Abdera: the Egyptians blame a plague on foreigners and expel them from the country, whereupon Moses, their leader, takes them to Canaan, where he founds the city of Jerusalem.

Hecataeus wrote in the late 4th century BCE, but the passage is quite possibly an insertion made in the mid-1st century BCE. The most famous is by the Egyptian historian Manetho (3rd century BCE), known from two quotations by the 1st century CE Jewish historian Josephus. In the first, Manetho describes the Hyksos, their lowly origins in Asia, their dominion over and expulsion from Egypt, and their subsequent foundation of the city of Jerusalem and its temple.

Josephus (not Manetho) identifies the Hyksos with the Jews. In the second story Manetho tells how 80,000 lepers and other "impure people," led by a priest named Osarseph, join forces with the former Hyksos, now living in Jerusalem, to take over Egypt. They wreak havoc until eventually the pharaoh and his son chase them out to the borders of Syria, where Osarseph gives the lepers a law-code and changes his name to Moses. Manetho differs from the other writers in describing his renegades as Egyptians rather than Jews, and in using a name other than Moses for their leader, although the identification of Osarseph with Moses may be a later addition.

The Exodus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
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The mythical twelve tribes of Israel are the twelve signs of the zodiac. Initiation into the mystery schools is still practiced. This is beyond dispute even the amateur familiar with the subject can partially see the teachings beings worked at the highest level of observable culture in our western world. The reason for secrecy and strict selection criteria for initiates from the first was the absolute need to prevent distribution of powerful philosophy among those willing and able to misuse it. Good and evil are twins and without both in force there is no chance of balance and harmony. Guess which side prevails today and guess how long this has been the case.

The earliest non-Biblical account of the Exodus is in the writings of the Greek author Hecataeus of Abdera: the Egyptians blame a plague on foreigners and expel them from the country, whereupon Moses, their leader, takes them to Canaan, where he founds the city of Jerusalem.

Hecataeus wrote in the late 4th century BCE, but the passage is quite possibly an insertion made in the mid-1st century BCE. The most famous is by the Egyptian historian Manetho (3rd century BCE), known from two quotations by the 1st century CE Jewish historian Josephus. In the first, Manetho describes the Hyksos, their lowly origins in Asia, their dominion over and expulsion from Egypt, and their subsequent foundation of the city of Jerusalem and its temple.

Josephus (not Manetho) identifies the Hyksos with the Jews. In the second story Manetho tells how 80,000 lepers and other "impure people," led by a priest named Osarseph, join forces with the former Hyksos, now living in Jerusalem, to take over Egypt. They wreak havoc until eventually the pharaoh and his son chase them out to the borders of Syria, where Osarseph gives the lepers a law-code and changes his name to Moses. Manetho differs from the other writers in describing his renegades as Egyptians rather than Jews, and in using a name other than Moses for their leader, although the identification of Osarseph with Moses may be a later addition.

The Exodus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Please have mercy no Wickedpedia here in this thread please it's burning my eyes and the stench of brimstone must make me swoon, please no more