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heavycola wrote:But belief is not the same thing as knowledge. Do I believe in god? no. Can i prove he doesn't exist? no. Can you prove he does? no. So save your attitude, it makes you look like a twat.
strike wolf wrote:with as many priests as there are that are being found guilty of that now of days, I would not have brought that up.
strike wolf wrote:with as many priests as there are that are being found guilty of that now of days, I would not have brought that up.
Truman wrote:heavycola wrote:But belief is not the same thing as knowledge. Do I believe in god? no. Can i prove he doesn't exist? no. Can you prove he does? no. So save your attitude, it makes you look like a twat.
I'm not trying to prove God exists. I'm trying to show how atheistic thinking is pure nonsense, along with the belief in the sacred cow of evolution.
Here's something to boil your blood for awhile. 8)
Did you ever consider that atheists are not rational? I'll clarify. The word, "atheist" comes from two Greek roots: "Theos" meaning "god" and the prefix "a-" meaning "not." In English, it is translated to "atheist," meaning, "a rejector of 'god.'"
A "theist" is a believer of a "god." This is a belief in something. However, if a person rejects something that they cannot prove in the first place, how is it rational to believe so? For it to even come close to being a rational belief, one must be omnipresent: everywhere at the same time. Otherwise, you've got a flawed belief. It's like saying there aren't little green men living in outer space: there is only the option of believing that they don't exist. It is impossible to actually know that they don't, so rejecting this idea would be irrational.
If you could travel into outer space and search every star of every galaxy, every asteroid of all of space and come back to say, "I didn't find any, therefore, they don't exist," you would still be irrational in your rejection. Why? Because when you were searching that star over there, he zipped over to another one when you weren't looking. To prove that little green men didn't exist, you would have to be in every place at the same time. Otherwise, your rejection of their existence would be irrational.
Therefore, atheism is an irrational belief, because atheists reject something that can't be proven to not exist in the first place.
Jolly Roger wrote:God is blue.
Jolly Roger wrote:It sounds to me like you're saying (62 pages in) that logic does not dictate there is a God.
Jolly Roger wrote:According to your argument Truman, it would be irrational to believe that God is not blue since it cannot be proven that God is not blue. By the same token, it is also irrational to believe that God is not purple or green or argyle or whatever. Also, since it cannot be proven that God is not a complete fabrication, any believe to the contrary is completely irrational.
Perhaps I mis-read?
jay_a2j wrote:vtmarik wrote: Now to be Jesus' disciple you have to sell all of your possessions, give that money to the poor, hate everything but God, and so you will enter heaven. (Luke 14:26-33).
EVERYTHING belongs to God. The above is a description of "following Him". We must be willing to give up all things to follow Him. Not that I am to sell my car or burn in hell but if God tells me too, that I would do it. (My possesions mean nothing)
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
gavin_sidhu wrote:I could be bothered to read that post Jolly Roger, it was good. U werent attacking Christianity, just Christians.
heavycola wrote:A "priest" is from the Catholic religion, which is entirely different from Christianity.
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Jolly Roger wrote:
I too was perplexed by this. As I understand it, Catholics claim that Peter was the first pope, the rock upon which JC builds his church. Peter was also told that what he bound on earth would be bound in heaven. I think that Catholics believe that Peter passed on these powers to his successor, the second pope, who in turned passed the power on to the third who passed it to the fourth and so on. Since, according to Catholics, all popes throughout history had the power to "bind things in Heaven", everything done or sanctioned by popes were, in fact, correct. This is the basis for the infallibility of the pope doctrine of the Catholic church and explains why the church is so reluctant to apologize for any of its practices, no matter how heinous or immoral they might seem. Not surprisingly, Catholics view their faith as the one true form of Christianity and, unless it can be shown that subsequent popes did not inherit Peter's special abilities, they are correct. In other words, if the connection between Peter and modern-day pope can be shown to exist, anyone who believes in the Bible but does not convert to Catholicism is a bit of an infidel.
happysadfun wrote:We do not own anything. We are stewards. Now for war. God does not condemn being angry. God does not condemn defending your country. Find me a passage that says "Thou shalt not work to end terrorism and other practices which are blowing up buildings and killing innocent people." Try to find me a verse that says "Thou shalt not exercise force to help the greater good." And Canada is a MAJOR part of the War on Terror.
happysadfun wrote:Jolly Roger wrote:
I too was perplexed by this. As I understand it, Catholics claim that Peter was the first pope, the rock upon which JC builds his church. Peter was also told that what he bound on earth would be bound in heaven. I think that Catholics believe that Peter passed on these powers to his successor, the second pope, who in turned passed the power on to the third who passed it to the fourth and so on. Since, according to Catholics, all popes throughout history had the power to "bind things in Heaven", everything done or sanctioned by popes were, in fact, correct. This is the basis for the infallibility of the pope doctrine of the Catholic church and explains why the church is so reluctant to apologize for any of its practices, no matter how heinous or immoral they might seem. Not surprisingly, Catholics view their faith as the one true form of Christianity and, unless it can be shown that subsequent popes did not inherit Peter's special abilities, they are correct. In other words, if the connection between Peter and modern-day pope can be shown to exist, anyone who believes in the Bible but does not convert to Catholicism is a bit of an infidel.
Catholics, although right in many doctrines, have weird practices never mentioned in the bible, and also believe that you must get to heaven via good works. They believe that Mary was sinless. They believe in Purgatory, which is nowhere in the bible. Not all groups believe these things. But many do. And the ones who do are basically a Catholic-like cult.
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