The Erotic Apologist wrote:Nipper, is lying for the Lord a sin?
You obviously don't know what constitutes a lie.
The Erotic Apologist wrote:Nipper, is lying for the Lord a sin?
LittleNipper wrote:Let me see you tell that to a psychiatrist and tell me where that gets you. Only a real being can accomplish real things. Imaginary beings are a figment of one's imagination and are incapable of anything. If your "imaginary" friend performs tasks for you then he is not imaginary. My dad would say that you are full of soup (which was a polite 1950's way of implying that you are so full of something but it isn't the truth). If you are trying to get some clarification, then by all means by forthright and ask for some; however, to say that you have an "imaginary friend," only demonstrates how low you are willing to stoop to confuse an issue and belittle the beliefs of others. You pray to your "imaginary" friend for wisdom and I'll read God's instruction book and pray for wisdom. Let's see who gets what.
LittleNipper wrote:The Erotic Apologist wrote:Nipper, is lying for the Lord a sin?
You obviously don't know what constitutes a lie.
LittleNipper wrote:Then you cannot worship a Creator who judges sin. You likely find that sending the likes of "Hitler" to hell repulsive, or do YOU simply pick and choose candidates to feel sorry for? God knows your intentions, and I imagine that that thought haunts and scares you. But the reality is that either one will spend an eternity with God or an eternity without God. How long someone lives on this planet has very little to offer when one measures such against ------------- eternity. And if someone chooses to live without God throughout this life, that one is simply digging for himself a deeper and deeper pit for himself in hell...
Can you create life out of inert materials? If not why would you imagine that "nature" has that ability given enough time? And how much time is enough and why? Is not a belief system involved in the conceived notion that life simply had to happened? I can test God. I can place my trust that He will guide me. You have that ability too. It is called by some testing God. But I do believe that if one really wants God to prove himself, all one needs to do is ask God for proof and it will come. There is the odd possibility that you were guided by God to a Mormon Discussion site to interact with a Christian who holds to the inerrancy of the Bible. That to me seems rather unlikely, but here I am. As long as you are fair and honestly seeking after God, God will work on your unbelief and grow your faith. But if you are not interested and only joking around, God will be the last thing you will find...Gunnar wrote:LittleNipper wrote:Then you cannot worship a Creator who judges sin. You likely find that sending the likes of "Hitler" to hell repulsive, or do YOU simply pick and choose candidates to feel sorry for? God knows your intentions, and I imagine that that thought haunts and scares you. But the reality is that either one will spend an eternity with God or an eternity without God. How long someone lives on this planet has very little to offer when one measures such against ------------- eternity. And if someone chooses to live without God throughout this life, that one is simply digging for himself a deeper and deeper pit for himself in hell...
As EA already pointed out, that response is so typical of religious fundamentalists--especially, but not just Christian ones. When they are backed into a corner defending a position that they know is not and can not be supported by any kind of verifiable evidence and sound reason, they try to frighten honest skeptics into believing, despite the utter lack of supporting evidence, and even in the face of the most incontrovertible contrary evidence, by threatening them with hellfire and eternal damnation and torment merely for not believing. Argument by intimidation is the most unreasonable, inherently dishonest and morally bankrupt of all methods of persuasion. When you have no remaining recourse but to employ that tactic, you have already irretrievably lost the argument, whether you have the wit to realize it or not!
Who is the one whose convictions are really motivated by fear? I, who sincerely doubt the existence of the Christian concept of God (and any other God concept I have so far encountered) for lack of compelling evidence, or you, who dare not doubt your religious convictions for fear of the very hellfire and damnation you threaten others with?
God clearly told the Israelites that the inhabitants who lived in the Promised Land had done terrible things and because of this grievous sin, these people were doomed. They were being expelled from the land. These people were not neighbors, they were squatters. They did not deserve the land they came to occupy. A neighbor is someone that lives around you and not someone who moves into your home while your out of town.Gunnar wrote:LittleNipper, can you please try to answer this question for me that I asked before. Why should the Hivites' proximity to the Israelites have anything to do with whether the Israelites should be willing to accept a treaty of peace with them? Were the Israelites in the Old Testament forbidden to "love their neighbors as themselves" as preached by Christ in the New Testament?
LittleNipper wrote:God clearly told the Israelites that the inhabitants who lived in the Promised Land had done terrible things and because of this grievous sin, these people were doomed. They were being expelled from the land. These people were not neighbors, they were squatters. They did not deserve the land they came to occupy. A neighbor is someone that lives around you and not someone who moves into your home while your out of town.
Gunnar wrote:LittleNipper wrote:God clearly told the Israelites that the inhabitants who lived in the Promised Land had done terrible things and because of this grievous sin, these people were doomed. They were being expelled from the land. These people were not neighbors, they were squatters. They did not deserve the land they came to occupy. A neighbor is someone that lives around you and not someone who moves into your home while your out of town.
So, what could the previous inhabitants of the "Promised Land" possibly have done that was even worse than the atrocities committed by the Israelites themselves when they moved in? I see not the slightest justification for concluding that "God clearly told the Israelites. . ." anything whatsoever. It is almost infinitely more probable that the writers of the Old Testament made up the claim that God promised them that land and commanded the Israelites to do what they did to possess it, after the fact, in order to justify and salve their consciences for the atrocities that they or their ancestors had already committed. In this respect, they were not significantly different from any of their contemporary tribes and civilizations in their region of the world that rose and fell and conquered and ravaged each other for thousands of years.