Results 31 to 40 of 230
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12-22-2010, 01:41 PM #31
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12-22-2010, 01:43 PM #32
I've mentioned it before, politics and religion are two areas best left alone if one wants to avoid the possibility of causing offence.I'm probably as guilty as the next man in this respect.
This kind of forum has a very wide and largely anonymous readership. Perhaps some subjects are better left for discussion amongst those who know each other well and are making eye contact.'Living the dream, one nightmare at a time'
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12-22-2010, 02:44 PM #33
I think it's stupid to assert that a "God" who is powerful enough to establish all the laws of nature and be responsible for any of this could be assumed to not be powerful enough to "snap his fingers" (so to speak) and create it all within a week (with a built in day of rest, no less).
I think it is stupid to assume that he (or she) couldn't do so in a way that makes it appear as if the world and universe are billions of years old.
More importantly, I think it's stupid to insult others when none of us really have any way of knowing.
PS. My repeated use of stupid was my sarcastic way of saying that people who think they "know" anything definitively about the origins of our universe should be more respectful of others who don't agree
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lz6 (01-02-2011), Tony Miller (12-22-2010), Utopian (12-22-2010)
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12-22-2010, 03:45 PM #34
Even believers will not alwys agree on how accurate the Bible is. Two common terms many denominations use to describe the authroity of the Bible is "inerrant" and "infallable". Most denominations will declare both, despite what their members actually believe. "Inerrant" when speaking of the Bible means just that, without error...everything, every word, every event, every concept. "Infallable" when speaking of the Bible usually means correct in terms of the spiritual message contained, not all the details of history and physical events.
To me, infallable speaks to what LX has described in Genesis...an overview of the events but not a blow by blow description.
TonyThe Heirloom Razor Strop Company / The Well Shaved Gentleman
https://heirloomrazorstrop.com/
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12-22-2010, 03:56 PM #35
Well said.
That is why i never would insult someone for what he believes. Be it Christian, Muslim, Hindu, or even native on his home jungle.
It all goes different different when someone starts to act by his/her religious beliefs, specially when it affects the lives of other people too. I have no religion so i can't say that any such act might in some cases, like in this OP, violate my beliefs but rather my moral codes. Seeing something teached as an absolute truth when it is rather just a belief is something i wouldn't want to call good thing to do.
I have no issues with Creationists. I do not really care what they believe. There are several other examples in history and present when people who behave by what they think their God really says cause harm -more or less- to others and can be seen as morally wrong.
To me religions is how to deal with the one you think -if any- created this all. How to live your life in harmony with what you believe. Knowing it is the best for you. Once someone says it is best for the rest of us as well, then i little disagree.'That is what i do. I drink and i know things'
-Tyrion Lannister.
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12-22-2010, 04:02 PM #36
I couldn't disagree more. Does any religious text mention that a divine being manipulated the physical makeup of the world and universe so as to fool humans into believe it was older than it really is?
This is right out of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series. We should just replace text books with Douglas Adams and call it law. Where's Slartibartfast when you need him?!
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12-22-2010, 04:20 PM #37
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12-22-2010, 04:33 PM #38
What we know as the scriptures were orally handed down before finally being transcribed within the limits of the scientific knowledge of the time. That the earth was flat and was the center of the universe, with the sun revolving around it was, if I understand correctly, the common consensus. So those who transmitted the information did so within the limitations of their knowledge at the time.
I think that rejecting the message because of this is "throwing the baby out with the bath water." As Tony said above, the spiritual message of the text is what we who believe accept. Paul the apostle said,"For the invisible things of Him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made."
I can get with that when I go outside and look beyond the concrete to the natural world. Some people choose to believe that this world is a coincidence of swamp gas and micro organisms converging but I am not one of them. YMMV.Be careful how you treat people on your way up, you may meet them again on your way back down.
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12-22-2010, 04:38 PM #39
I agreed with your third point.
We don't know exactly how everything started, but we can prove certain theories wrong. The world wasn't created 10k years ago as far as I'm concerned and the deus ex machina explanation is as silly to me as saying that the world was created the day I was born. Anything that appears to have happened before 1976 is only that way because it's what the divine being wanted us to believe.
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12-22-2010, 05:05 PM #40
Fair enough. Silly to you? Certainly. However, it still all boils down to what you believe. Both sides of this believes something, and I find it as silly to think something came from nothing and systems as complex as we witness were the result of some grand coincidence as I do to think a creator did it...
But at least we aren't being disrespectful to each other.