The Nehor wrote:The only game allowed in Outer Darkness is CandyLand. It's meant to encourage people to leave.
I'm sure there are a lot of playstation games allowed in Outer Darkness.
thestyleguy wrote:The Nehor wrote:The only game allowed in Outer Darkness is CandyLand. It's meant to encourage people to leave.
I'm sure there are a lot of playstation games allowed in Outer Darkness.
Are faith-powered miracles only ever happening in circumstances where it could not be proven that they had happened at all?
Trinity wrote:JAK wrote:Trinity wrote:charity wrote:
God doesn't do for us what we can do for ourselves. If we need a mountain moved we get the big LeTourneaus out and move it. God doesn't do the couch potato's job for him.
You are exactly right. God helps those who help themselves.
It is a very small stone's throw to deduce that it is man who is doing it all. God just conveniently gets some credit if things work out well.
So which part is God doing? Short answer. Nothing. Man is God.
Not correct in conclusion (if serious).
Man is a species which has evolved over hundreds of thousands of years. He is as much a product of evolution as any species. However, no evidence supports a conclusion “Man is God.”
And no evidence has been established for any of the many, many God claims.
The geography of the earth is constantly changing. But the change is over far longer periods of time that a human life-time. Since the earth is 4.7 billion years old, it has undergone continuous change over time. Until the present, man has had little to do with it.
Now with more than 6 billion people living on earth, the behavior of man is altering the earth – particularly its climate.
(If you’re joking, just disregard this.)
JAK
You don't see god as evolutionary? I do. And I am serious. He has a tendency to change with the cultures and customs of the people proclaiming to speak on his behalf. The Mormon God, the one who most reveals himself and his will to the people, is the most evolutionary one of all. God is a mirror reflection of the people.
by the way, I've moved mountains this week. Lots of them. They're five feet high mountains of snow on my front lawn.
bcspace wrote:Well, if you lack faith, why would God show such to you? Are you sure you'd want such a miracle directed at you so you could see and believe?
Well, if you lack faith, why would God show such to you? Are you sure you'd want such a miracle directed at you so you could see and believe?Well, yes, I'd expect god, if he exists, to show me. I'd expect nothing less.
Again, you and charity both. What's the fascination with faith? What's so great about it? I still don't get it (despite charity's numerous failed attempts to explain it to me).
bcspace wrote:Well, the religion I accept has miracles following those who believe or being the recipient of them believers or not for purposes other than to prove He exists. Perhaps you should end your fascination with it.
In one sense, I could care less about your faith.
Sethbag wrote:God used to allow mountains to be moved from time to time by intensely faithful individuals, back when we couldn't prove it had happened.