Stryker wrote:It seems everyone on here has the smug view that they know it all. WE DON'T.
Quite the contrary, my point is that we don't know it all, but overzealous Christians think they do.
Stryker wrote:There is oodles of evidence that there IS a God. Mountains of it. A universe of it.
Really? Give me factual evidence that proves the existence of God. There is a universe. There are mountains. That does not mean there is a God.
Stryker wrote:Dcrazy, if you're gonna complain about circular logic, how about this:
There is matter. How did it get there? It's always been there. But how did it get to always be there? It's always been there.
Eh? Am I the only one that sees that both of these points of view are using somewhat circular logic?
You're misunderstanding the matter argument. First of all, scientists do not claim to know everything about matter, especially not going to far to claim that it's always been there. Hell, nobody's sure if the universe has been around forever. We don't know if time is linear or if it is possible to jump around. We
don't know these things, and that's why scientific observations are called
theories, unlike in religion where unsubstantiated claims can, and often are, called
truths.
Stryker wrote:I do not let a "book" dictate my every belief. My every belief is founded on God's Word. If you believe it's "just another book", I'm sorry for you. It is not just a book; it's the most-sold, most-published, most-produced, most-translated "book" in the world.
It's more than a "book". It's a "book", more than half of which is comprised of 5,000-year-old stories that were told by word of mouth until language was invented, and the other half of which was written at least 40 years and up to 200 years after the events described therein took place. It is a "book" written by men to guide and convert. The Gospels themselves were written by four men with different audiences and different takes on the meaning of Jesus's existence. It's a powerful book, it's a meaningful spiritual guide, but you cannot blatantly assert that it is "God's Word". You have to prove that God exists first. See step 1.
Stryker wrote:About everyone's smug little "different, not bad" theology: People who kill others are different. Does that make them bad?
Also, everyone on this earth is "different". Thus, by simple logic, we all have something in common: we are different. Therefore, we are similar in that respect.
Definitely not arguing with you here. Different is not always to be condoned. There is a reason that over the course of human history we have developed the concept of a society, where people are held to certain standards to enjoy the benefits of mutual respect and care.
Stryker wrote:I believe every word of the Bible. There are a few parts, such as many of Jesus' parables, that are figurative because HE TOLD THEM AS FIGURATIVE STORIES. The rest is quite clearly literal. The story of "Jonah and the whale" is quite clearly misnamed. The Bible never said Jonah was swallowed by a whale; it said he was swallowed by a "giant fish". There's a difference.
Do you believe every word of Job? Because, you know, like Jonah's story, it was
made up.
Stryker wrote:Lot's wife turned into a pillar of salt? Why the heck not? You're dealing with an infinite God that created the universe. He can probably make salt statues.
You have to prove God exists before you can use his existence as justification that the "pillar of salt" was the work of God. Inductive versus deductive reasoning. If it were a firsthand account (i.e. YOU yourself saw Lot's wife changed into a pillar of salt) then you could use it as evidence of an outside force (God, some universal salt-making force, whatever... take your pick). However, since you are working with a millenia-year-old document that went through generational transitions, you have no basis in fact for the events described.
Stryker wrote:Kazillion things in the Bible that you would think was bunk? Bad grammar, (;)) bad theology. The Bible is the Word of God; it has no reason or need to lie.
I sound like a broken record. You need to prove that God exists before you can use the argument that the Bible is the word of God. Therefore you cannot use the Bible as proof that God exists!
Stryker wrote:I'm with Thorne on this one. But I think both sides need to step back and smell the hypocrasy--it's emanating from some of you like the smell of dead fish. Neither is pleasant.
Which is the purpose of analytical reasoning. See above post.
Stryker wrote:I don't claim to know it all. I do the best I can with my own logic. But sheepdog, if you believe in one part of the Bible, how can you not believe in another? The whole purpose of the Bible is to tell a story--the story of Jesus' death, resurrection, and the future glory to come. If you do not believe in one part of this story, the entire story seems to become very unstable. If one part of the Bible is wrong, who's to say that one of the gospels isn't wrong? Genesis? Romans? Once you start thinking that "well, this part can't be right" you put yourself on a slope that eventually leads to the conclusion that none of it can be right.
The only reason you are so afraid of that "slope" is that you blindly believe that it's the wrong path to travel. You can't be afraid to question your own beliefs. If Einstein were afraid of questioning his environment, he never would have said that time, not velocity, changed for a moving observer. Likewise, you cannot wholly accept something as true unless you willingly release yourself from its comfort.
Stryker wrote:Homophobia? Get over it guys. I don't think any of us are afraid of gays because of their sexuality--if anything, gays are to be feared because of the militant radicalism that rewrites out school textbooks, attempts to erase our national heritage, and threatens to destroy the whole concept of democracy. Gays need to get over their heterophobia, if anything. They have freedom to do whatever they like--just don't thrust yourself in front of us and tell us that you need special privilidges and rights because you perform unnatural acts with another homo.
Despite the derogatory tone, I agree. In general, people need to stop labeling the mainstream as "wrong" and the deviant as "right".