Significant Questions of Belief

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_Roger Morrison
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Post by _Roger Morrison »

Roger Morrison wrote:
Gazelam wrote:I wanted to revisit this thread, One: In hopes that others who have yet to contribute to it might add their opinions on the matters at hand. and Two: to bring up everyones disagreement with the story of the Flood.

Vegas (Who has yet to contribute here) stated that he didn't believe that a man named Noah even existed at all, while others seem to attribute the account to a Noah, but believe that he was wrong in his statement that the whole Earth was flooded.

I can understand how an athiest like Vegas (If that is in fact his stance) can disagree with the Flood story, but how can anyone with a testimony of the Bible and/or the Book of Mormon disagree with the account? How do you reconsile a belief in Christ with No belief in the story of Noah? And to add to the mix, how does a person reconsile a belief in Christ with no belief in the story of the Fall?


Hi Gaz, sounds AS IF these questions have my name on them ;-) I think i've covered these with you before?? However, why not again, eh?

Two schools of thought re Bible authenticity regarding its historicity:

1, Literalist, it's "God's" word. Inerrantly preserved by the Holy Spirit.... Many fundamentalists, evs. and LDS believe this to be the case. Do you?

2, Not to be taken literally. But as a story of creation imagined by our ancients. Handed down as 'true' but hardly beliveable, today. Mythology, legend and traditions were added to the compilations over time. Some of which are more believeable than other mystic imaginings that appeal to superstitions seeming valid in a vacuum of knowledge... More people of all sects and traditions, including LDS, subscribe to this understanding today, than in past times... As I do. Hence the contraversy...

"Testimony of the Bible"... Poor choice of words... I have a "Testimony" of the Bible. It just differs from yours. As I have "Testified" before: There was NO FALL! That is THE major contrivance in the parcel of Christianism delivered by the misinformed to the gullible, IMSCO!

That "Fact" OK, "supposition" has absolutely nothing to do with the reality of THE MAN Jesus & HIS MESSAGE!!

Gotta close off for now. It's after 10pm and i've been up since 4am... not at my best ;-0... Sleepy regards, Roger


Back again. (I changed a few words in the above for clarity.) Pasted below is from Spong's News Letter. I apologize for its length, but i think it illustrates some of the fundamental differences between the "Two Schools"...
I note first that no reputable church historian in the world today buys the traditional argument undergirding ecclesiastical claims that church leaders can speak with the authority of God. This argument states that Jesus chose the apostles to be the leaders of the Church and that they in turn chose their successors and that in this divine hierarchy truth was preserved in some pure and catholic form. That idea was imposed on history to serve the propaganda needs of ecclesiastical authorities who claim to represent "Christian Orthodoxy." Orthodoxy, however, does not mean that this point of view is true; it only means that this point of view won! The facts are that what we now call "orthodox Christianity" evolved out of many early competing factions and they were settled not by appeals to truth, but by those who had the political power to enable them to be the winners and thus to write the history of the movement. People seem to forget that once the Catholic Church had two "infallible" popes, one in Avignon and one in Rome, each claiming to speak with the unerring voice of God and each condemning the other. There is also documentable evidence that when new, indisputable truth emerged in history, challenging the old ecclesiastical formularies, even "infallible" church leaders found a remarkable ability to adapt the old certainties to the new realities. For example, originally the claim was made that Jesus alone of all human beings had escaped the infection of original sin, since the Holy Spirit was his father and his virgin mother had no part in his conception other than to be the receptacle to make human his divine life.. Then in the early years of the 18th century, science discovered that women had egg cell from which every life ever born received half of its genetic code. Women were thus equal, co-creators of every life. Since Mary was clearly a child of Adam like everyone else, she too would have been tainted by and would inevitably pass on Adam's "original sin" to her son regardless of the virgin birth claim. So the idea of Jesus being without taint of sin, so essential to the view of salvation in that era, was threatened with being made inoperative. "Not a problem," said the Vatican leaders and, before too many years had passed, a new dogma was proclaimed for the faithful to believe. Mary had been "immaculately conceived." Therefore, she was cleansed from Adam's sin even before she was born. It was a wonderful, but deeply revealing, accommodation forcing upon us the compelling realization that truth is never ultimate and that infallibility for any claim on the part of anyone to possess such truth in propositional form, is at best delusional and at worst, ridiculous. Yet Catholic fundamentalism still makes this claim. Few people, however, actually believe it.

The countering Protestant claim for the inerrancy of the Bible developed because the Reformation could hardly accept the papal infallibility against which they were so busy rebelling, so they elevated the scriptures to the status of the "revealed word of God." One wonders first which version of the Bible was the inerrant one since they differ widely. Second, people are generally unaware that the original texts of the gospels had no punctuation, no paragraphs, no capital letters and no space between words. All of those things were imposed on the gospels by interpreters hundreds of years after they were written. Were these grammarians also inerrant? It next needs to be stated that we have no complete manuscript of any single gospel that dates any earlier than the 6th century of the Christian era. We have only handwritten copies of handwritten copies of handwritten copies. Were all of the copiers inerrant? Finally we recall that Jesus spoke in Aramaic but the gospels were written in Greek. Thus before the first word attributed to Jesus was recorded, it had to be translated. Were the translators also inerrant? How many layers of inerrancy claims can rationality absorb before collapsing?

We can even go far beyond this point. For example, we now know that both Matthew and Luke had Mark in front of them when they composed the gospels that bear their names. Yet neither Matthew nor Luke copied Mark verbatim. Both omitted things from Mark with which they disagreed, added things that were not in the Marcan original and actually corrected Mark from time to time. Does one edit, correct, omit from or add to the "inerrant word of God?" Of course not, but you might well do those things to the words of Mark.

Finally, what happens to the inerrancy claims when you confront places where the Bible contradicts itself? In Mark and Matthew there are two versions of Jesus feeding the multitude with a limited number of loaves and fishes, while Luke says there is only one. Mark says the appearance of the risen Lord will occur in Galilee, but he never describes any such appearance. Matthew says the resurrected Jesus did appear in Galilee on top of a mountain. Luke says no Galilean appearance ever took place and that all appearances occurred in the environs of Jerusalem. Mark says the women in the garden on that first Easter did not see the Risen Lord. Matthew says they did. Luke says they did not. How can the inerrant "Word of God" be contradictory?

Still infallibility claims for church leaders and inerrancy claims for the sacred texts are the accepted presuppositions of fundamentalism in Christian history, yet neither claim is capable of being sustained rationally, but in every dispute in church history one or the other of these two hysterically absurd claims becomes the weapon of choice of the fundamentalists. They shout these claims with authority, defend them with anger and invest them with the virtue of antiquity. All of this, however, is little more than the pitiful claim of frightened people whose security has been disturbed by emerging truth. That is what lies behind today's fundamentalism, but to my surprise people still pay attention to these strange claims. They even give credibility to the propaganda of the fundamentalists that suggests that homosexuality is really the issue by listening as their condemnation of homosexuality is said to be based on the "clear teaching of the word of God." It is not! It is rooted in the fear and prejudice of the frightened and ill informed few who feel like the world is changing and they cannot adjust. Yet because they clothe their fear in religious language people continue to give it a credibility it does not deserve, since these claims come very close to being little more than the delusions of the mentally ill.


Take this as you will, Gaz. I hope it helps the understanding that "belief" does not always equate with "truth". It is often easier to believe a lie. Especially when at the time of presentation of the "lie" the truth of the matter was yet to be discovered--Earth centred Universe et al...

As for Noah and "the flood". The consideration is not that it is "unbelievable". It is absolutely "believable"! IT IS SIMPLY NOT HONESTLY CREDIBLE TODAY!

You have my book. Reread the section dealing with the logistics of the collection of the ark's creatures. Penguins from Antarctica, Polar Bears from the Arctic; every living creature from the Earths surface herded by Noah to one gang-plank... OK, maybe several but in one single crossing of the lines of longtitude and latitude in the millions of square miles of earth surface... All of these noncredible stories are Old Testament originated and bear little on the "Two New Commandments" presented by the man Jesus.

IF anything in the Bible is believable AND credible it is the presentation of humanitarian principles encompassed in the life and teachings of the walking, talking empathetic Jesus, who was crucified because he defied the religious establishment of his day. The final nail, so to speak, was his assertion that those professing to represent "God", did not know "God"!

IMSCO, the whole of our Judeo-Christian tradition has completely avoided that Jesus spoken "truth". IF one "believes" the Bible, what about THAT statement of Jesus? Seems *you don't know "God"* could well be made today when we witness churches that don't stand for peace, that enmass fortunes, tokenly clothe and feed, endorse Mammon, persecute nonbelievers, edict entrance to Heaven...

The choice is (y)ours, believe your church, or believe Jesus. OK, some where in between if it makes ya feel better... And, ya don't even have to attend church to live by those principles of love... Warm regards, Roger
_Yoda

Post by _Yoda »

Bond...James Bond wrote:
twinkie wrote:Can you say Laura Croft and booby in the same sentence?


Can you not say Laura Croft and not include mentioning boobies?

PS: Sorry liz for the derailment into the mountain range of a fictional character.


You're a man. You can't help it. Men have been obsessed with boobs since time began.

Speaking of your comment regarding "Raiders of the Lost Ark".....Are you looking forward to the new Indiana Jones movie? :)

How's that for total derailment? Now back to your regularly scheduled program.

-------------

On a more serious note relating to the topic.....I'm glad that Gaz brought this topic back up. As far as your question about the flood, Gaz, I think it was probably a localized flood rather than a global flood. Even with it being localized, I think that the scriptures would still hold up. The flood would have certainly seemed global to those writing the work. They would have no way of knowing what was going on in other corners of the earth.
_Gazelam
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Roger

Post by _Gazelam »

Ok, this got erased the first time I responded, so here goes again.


I don't doubt that the Bible is misunderstood as far as what it is and how it is to be understood and applied. How many christian churchs are there currently? I think I heard somewhere around 6,000? In my opinion the Bible is a testimony of how revelation is received. A history of God speaking to man. How the men reported these experiences was left to them. There are a large number of accounts spoken of by various prophets in making their arguements understood by their audience that we no longer have. Many listed in 1 & 2 Chronicles. Paul alos lists other letters of instruction that we no longer have. The point being that what scripture we have isn't as important as understanding and gaining the same spirit they were written in.

The opening revelation of this dispensation came from Joseph reading the words of John, telling him to "Knock". Following the instruction he received from both the witness of the spirit received from reading those words, and the written testimony itself, Joseph saw the Father and the Son standing side by side and received further instruction from them. That is what scripture is for. This is testified to by every person who prays and receives answers when following the instruction of Moroni and kneeling and praying to ask if the Book of Mormon is true.

With this in mind, what do you feel when you read the words of Christ in Matthew:
Matthew 24:37-39
37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38 For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,
39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.

Here we have the God of the Old Testament who worked with Noah and brought the Flood upon the wicked testifying of the act itself. Do you give as much respect to this testimony as you do his two great commandments?

Also the Book of Mormon does its Job of adding a second testimony to that of the Bible with regards to both the Flood and the Garden of Eden, even going so far as to state the purpose behind the Fall. The Flood is mentioned in Alma 10:22, and Ether 13:2, And the Eden account is found taught better than anywhere else in scripture in Second Nephi chapter two.

I have spoken repeatedly that Christ came because of the Fall of Adam and the need to redeem mankind from the Fall. My testimony is backed by the words of Paul in his letter to the Corinthians 15:20-22
20 But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept.
21 For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead.
22 For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.

If there were no Fall, there would be no need for a redeemer. What is he redeeming them from if not a lost and fallen state? it is not possible to believe in Christ and not believe in the Fall of Adam.

Bruce R. McConkie stated: "The fall of Adam brought temporal and spiritual death into the world, and the atonement of Christ ransomed men from these two deaths by bringing to pass the immortality and eternal life of man. This makes the fall as essential a part of the plan of salvation as the very atonement itself. " (Full talk here:http://speeches.BYU.edu/reader/reader.php?id=6800 )

You ,Roger, need to make the decision as to whether you will choose to live by the testimonies and words of the Prophets, or a self deluded man such as Spong (D&C 1:15-16) The Prophets all testify of both the Fall and the Flood, to deny either is to deny Gods messengers.

Gaz
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Roger Morrison
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Post by _Roger Morrison »

Good AM, Gaz. Thanks for your time. It seems as if you choose to ignore my statements re Noah & the flood? Why else would you even refer to them as an influence in our exchange? Please reread what i wrote about Noah/flood to understand the absurdity they represent--to me, and countless others.

That is what scripture is for. This is testified to by every person who prays and receives answers when following the instruction of Moroni and kneeling and praying to ask if the Book of Mormon is true.


"Scripture" is text recording the thoughts and actions of folks as they represent their 'religious' experiences, beliefs and philosophy. We read them to gain understanding of those folks, and their time. We believe at our peril or to our advantage... I've never met anyone who "...plucked out their offending eye, or cut off their offending hand..." Have YOU?? Either mutilated yourself, or met any/many that have??

"...testified to by every person who prays and receives answers..." True, BUT all do not receive the same answer--as you know.

Here we have the God of the Old Testament who worked with Noah and brought the Flood upon the wicked testifying of the act itself. Do you give as much respect to this testimony as you do his two great commandments?



There was no world-wide, globe-covering flood!! Besides that logistical impossibility, the idea that "God" introduced HIS 'final-solution' "upon the wicked" is abhorent in any understanding of morality and/or of a beneficient and benevolent "God".

Gaz, be patient with me... I GIVE NO RESPECT TO THAT OLD-TESTAMENT TALE, as i have indicated many times before. IMSCO, NOTHING Trump's "The Two New Commandments"! They fulfill the law! When they are applied in homes, associations and communities peace prevails and fears subside.

That those conditions do not prevail as they might is due in large part to the misunderstanding, hence the misrepresentation, of Jesusism by so-called Christianity in its 100s of past and present sects and persuasions.

If there were no Fall, there would be no need for a redeemer. What is he redeeming them from if not a lost and fallen state? it is not possible to believe in Christ and not believe in the Fall of Adam.

Bruce R. McConkie stated: "The fall of Adam brought temporal and spiritual death into the world, and the atonement of Christ ransomed men from these two deaths by bringing to pass the immortality and eternal life of man. This makes the fall as essential a part of the plan of salvation as the very atonement itself.


"...no need for a redeemer..." Absolutely correct! There was no fall! There's no need for a redeemer! When there is need for personal redemption we take the necessary steps and redeem ourselves with material and/or psyche/spiritual resources...

To hinge belief in Christ to belief in the "Fall of Adam" in an unfounded-in-fact illogical supposition of ignorance and arrogance.

The following is a statement of Albert Einstein, taken from, A Biographical Portrait, by A. Reiser. A 1929 interview by Geo. Viereck:

"To what extent are you influenced by Christianity?"
"As a child i received instruction both in the Bible and in the Talmud. I am a Jew, but I am enthralled by the luminous figure of the Nazarene."
"Have you read Emil Ludwig's book on Jesus?"
"Emil Ludwig's Jesus is shallow. Jesus is too colossal for the pen of phrasemongers, however artful..."
"You accept the historical existance of Jesus?"
"Unquestionably! No one can read the Gospels without feeling the actual presence of Jesus. His personality pulsates in every word. No myth is filled with such life." (Bold added as emphasis and agreement.)

It is the "personality" the humaness of Jesus that i find so inspiring and empowering. His teachings of human-relations, his profile of courage and empathy, his magnanimous unpretensious pragmatism is not illustrated to me by McKonkie, or any one else.

It is my understanding, and it has taken years in the making. I think Einstein, the atheistic scientist expressed it well.


You ,Roger, need to make the decision as to whether you will choose to live by the testimonies and words of the Prophets, or a self deluded man such as Spong (D&C 1:15-16) The Prophets all testify of both the Fall and the Flood, to deny either is to deny Gods messengers.


Thanks for your advice. As i hope you will see above, i choose to live by, as best i can, my undestanding of the teachings of Jesus, as best we have them recorded.

I really admire the Man who spoke to the woman at the well, against all tradition. As well the Man who walked with his friends through the corn fields on Saboath, munched a cob without washing his hands, against tradition. Also, the Man who suggested the perfect one throw the first stone at the adulteress. The Man who told the stories of the Widow's Mite, the Good Samaritan and the Wayward Son seemed to see things in people that others didn't.

I like the fact that Jesus didn't put-down common folks about anything. His criticisms were of those who were uncommonly powerful, rich, influential, and oppressive. Seems that turning of priorities long ago shifted guilt and shame to the wrong social segment. Not many, yet, ashamed of their wealth, power, and influence???

Seems some place in the "sciptures" there's the warning of 'pride'... Don't hear much about that anymore... Some place else there's that idea of the strong serving the weak, giving over their advantages to the disadvantaged...

Gaz, you indicated You did not understand how a person could seperate belief in Jesus from Adam's Fall. I hope i have demonstrated, to your satisfaction, that i have done that. I'm sure there are far more than you have imagined who have done the same thing. If not, the 'world' would not have advanced as it has. Now IF we could just get more Churches to get on the right track, as some are, we could really concentrate on the living!

Jesus said, "let the dead burry their dead! Follow me into life! Now! Where you are! Procrastinate not your day of joy, or service!" Warm regards, Roger
_Gazelam
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Roger

Post by _Gazelam »

I will try to re-read the part of your book regarding Noah. There is alot of information on every page of your book, and I may not have digested that part as I should have. Whats the old saying, you retain 10% of what your taught? : )

You passed on the question of Christs testimony regarding the flood. What is your opinion of both this testimony he gave and the fact that he was also the God of the Old Testament ? Is it really wrong to sacrifice the rebellious children in order to create a fertile ground for future generations? If you give no respect to the Old Testament, what about Christs testimony in the New, as well as those in the Book of Mormon and the Pearl of Great Price, Were all of these men lying?

It seems that you accept Christ as a preacher of good living, but deny his divinity. Is this true or am I mistaken? If you say there is no redemption, do you also say there was no Creation either?

Gaz
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Roger Morrison
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Re: Roger

Post by _Roger Morrison »

Gazelam wrote:I will try to re-read the part of your book regarding Noah. There is alot of information on every page of your book, and I may not have digested that part as I should have. Whats the old saying, you retain 10% of what your taught? : )

RM: And, "if the student hasn't learned, the teacher hasn't taught." :-)

You passed on the question of Christs testimony regarding the flood. What is your opinion of both this testimony he gave and the fact that he was also the God of the Old Testament ?

RM: We cannot lose sight of the fact Jesus "learned" Old Testament teachings, not necessarily because they are 'true' but because he was well "taught". (See above.) It is natural that he would refer to them in the context of their tradition ...
As for being "God of the Old Testament" that is a theological supposition to be believed or not. Totally irrelevant to the "Two New Commandments"...

Is it really wrong to sacrifice the rebellious children in order to create a fertile ground for future generations?

RM: YES! IMSCO, to think otherwise is diabolical and smacks of Hitlerism...the "final solution"... The "rebelious" bring on their own destruction; one cannot violate universal moral, or physical 'laws' and not be subject to the consequences; just the way it is!


If you give no respect to the Old Testament, what about Christs testimony in the New, as well as those in the Book of Mormon and the Pearl of Great Price,

RM: I DO have respect for the Old Testament. I simply do not take it literally, and/or infallible, as you seem to do. It is not necessary for writings to be 'nonfiction' for them to be appreciated, and in fact put forth some good suppositions, and insights. Shakespeare's stuff is a prime example... You can also add, "...the Book of Mormon and the Pearl of Great Price..." to that category of having "some good suppositions and insights."

IMSCO, there might be too much arguement re the "truth" of LDS BOOKS!!! More importance, than their historical validity, should be given to "how to live abundantly" free from fear, prejudice, greed and hate. If those instructions can be found... (I especially like Mosiah 4. Could discard the rest and have in escense the "Two New Commandments":-) The Book of Mormon does not portray humanity in a very positive light however. Seems they did more wrong than right or they wouldn't have destroyed themselves, as the story goes?


Were all of these men lying? RM:NO! They were writing/recording as they saw & understood their times. Who can ask for more?

It seems that you accept Christ as a preacher of good living, but deny his divinity. Is this true or am I mistaken? If you say there is no redemption, do you also say there was no Creation either?

RM: The question of "divinity" is a theological construct rooted in antiquity. How it is understood today is, generally speaking, through that primitive prism that bears little on reality. Jesus placed "The Two New Commandments" in front of humanity THAT IS "THE" PARAMOUNT FACT!

Gaz


I'm having difficulty equating "redemption" with "Creation" as you ask? Try this: Jesus taught us how to redeem ourselves! We're here doing what we do...must'a been 'created' some how??? Warm regards, Roger
_Gazelam
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Post by _Gazelam »

Roger:
As for being "God of the Old Testament" that is a theological supposition to be believed or not. Totally irrelevant to the "Two New Commandments"...


If this is merely a theological supposition, then what is your take on Exodus 3:13-14, and John 8:56-59?


[url]RM: YES! IMSCO, to think otherwise is diabolical and smacks of Hitlerism...the "final solution"... The "rebelious" bring on their own destruction; one cannot violate universal moral, or physical 'laws' and not be subject to the consequences; just the way it is![/url]

How do you hold to this while God himself acts otherwise on numerous occasions. For example: Numbers chapter 16, and his statement regarding wicked cities: Deuteronomy 13:12-18.

The Book of Mormon does not portray humanity in a very positive light however. Seems they did more wrong than right or they wouldn't have destroyed themselves, as the story goes?


And this will happen again and again. I think the United states as a whole is in that downward trend of the pride cycle even now.

RM: The question of "divinity" is a theological construct rooted in antiquity. How it is understood today is, generally speaking, through that primitive prism that bears little on reality. Jesus placed "The Two New Commandments" in front of humanity THAT IS "THE" PARAMOUNT FACT!


So the two new commandments are good, but the rest of what Christ said is subjective? There is no God in your opinion?
Last edited by Steeler [Crawler] on Sat Nov 24, 2007 2:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Roger Morrison
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Posts: 1831
Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2006 4:13 am

Post by _Roger Morrison »

Hi Gaz, not sure how best to answer your questions. Seems you keep asking the same, or similar, ones. I will use "bold"...


Gazelam wrote:Roger:
[url]As for being "God of the Old Testament" that is a theological supposition to be believed or not. Totally irrelevant to the "Two New Commandments"...[/url]

If this is merely a theological supposition, then what is your take on Exodus 3:13-14, and John 8:56-59?

RM: They too are part of the mythology. Not to be taken as factual. They bear not at all on the human-relations teachings of Jesus...

[url]RM: YES! IMSCO, to think otherwise is diabolical and smacks of Hitlerism...the "final solution"... The "rebelious" bring on their own destruction; one cannot violate universal moral, or physical 'laws' and not be subject to the consequences; just the way it is![/url]

How do you hold to this while God himself acts otherwise on numerous occasions. For example: Numbers chapter 16, and his statement regarding wicked cities: Deuteronomy 13:12-18.

RM: Numbers 16, is an excellent example of the vengeful, vicious, nasty "God" of the Old Testament... Not a "God" that i respect. Would you respect such a neighbor? Would you obey such a Father if he told you to, "kill those folks cuz they don't honour me"? Likewise the Deut. story is mythical portrail of a "God" that NEVER existed! Which seems of no-matter to those who choose to believe He did... So be it... As they say, "it's a free country!"

The Book of Mormon does not portray humanity in a very positive light however. Seems they did more wrong than right or they wouldn't have destroyed themselves, as the story goes?


And this will happen again and again. I think the United states as a whole is in that downward trend of the pride cycle even now.

RM: As for the US trend, i agree, generally speaking. However i have more faith in humanity, "God" and in the teachings of Jesus to conclude as you do. Seem ironic that you, a professed 'believer' seems to have no faith in "God", humanity--"God's" family--or that Jesus' teachings are workable!?!? Yet, you believe ancient horror stories of a monsterous "God"!! How come Bro??? Please don't give me a 'scriptutal' answer. Just your own thinking/explaination...
RM: The question of "divinity" is a theological construct rooted in antiquity. How it is understood today is, generally speaking, through that primitive prism that bears little on reality. Jesus placed "The Two New Commandments" in front of humanity THAT IS "THE" PARAMOUNT FACT!


So the two new commandments are good, but the rest of what Christ said is subjective? There is no God in your opinion?


RM: Is there a difference between "good" and "subjective"??? Please explain how you work that into "the two new commandments..."????

As to your statement: "There is no God..." IMSCO, their is a power, force, something that generates life--so to speak--or we would not be here, as we are. That can be called "God" if you wish. I cannot begin to even imagine "GOD". I'm just not smart enough! However what you seem to consider God, is in no way what, or how i could imagine "God" to be like.

So, you have yours; i have mine. I'm happy with that. How about you, are you happy? Warm regards, Roger
_Gazelam
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Post by _Gazelam »

We have alot of new members here, so I wanted to bump this thread so they can have a shot at answering the questions.

Please go to the first post of this thread and cut and paste the questions.

I look forward to reading your answers.

Gaz
We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. - Plato
_Jersey Girl
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Post by _Jersey Girl »

Reading the thread backwards ;-) and came across this by Gaz.

With this in mind, what do you feel when you read the words of Christ in Matthew:
Matthew 24:37-39
37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38 For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe entered into the ark,
39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.

Here we have the God of the Old Testament who worked with Noah and brought the Flood upon the wicked testifying of the act itself. Do you give as much respect to this testimony as you do his two great commandments?


You have pulled the verses out of context, but I will reply to it anyway. What here suggests that Christ wasn't referring to ancient allegory?
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