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09-30-2008, 04:29 AM | #52 (permalink) |
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Its hard to know if there is a god, afterall religion defies science. Its absurd to think that humans were created my a big bearded man in the sky, when we all know that we evolved from micro-organisms over the course of time.
To be honest i think the Christian religion is nothing more than a glorified cult. Of course Jesus exisited but he was not who we think he is. He did not come from a poor family, he was not of virgin birth, he was not the son of god, he married Mary Magdelene and quite possibly had a child. The christian religion was started in Rome as a new way to win over and control the minds of people by putting the fear of damnation into them. The truth is no one knows where we go when we die.
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09-30-2008, 08:11 AM | #54 (permalink) |
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i'm with Little Know It All
if there wasn't going to be anything after this life that would rob the meaning of it for me before i became a Christian the afterlife i was looking forward to was becoming one with the universe now that i am a Christian the afterlife i'm looking forward to is becoming one with God and it may be that they are one and the same thing but for now i know i have a purpose -- i might not know what it is but i have one i know i'm living a basically ethical life i know that when i die i will go to heaven and the only hell i need to concern myself with is the one other people are making of this world i wish there was a good way to explain it to all of you so that you could know that deep peace of spirit but until you have your own personal epiphany you won't be able to understand and you won't want to hear it so i'll QFT |
09-30-2008, 01:19 PM | #55 (permalink) |
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Living for something you can't prove to be true has to be the saddest way to live life. I've never been able to understand how people of faith are so content wasting their potential on the improbable instead of living for what is known to be true. Furthermore, ethics are subjective. Sure you find it ethical to do Christian things but I see it as a great injustice not only to yourself, but to those around you, to profess blind faith of any sort.
Also, a universe with no all knowing beings is a universe with much more inherent freedom, and thus a more hopeful universe. Freedom and hope are joyous things. I'd find it reasonable to conclude that a universe with God is definitely less joyous than a universe without God. |
09-30-2008, 01:53 PM | #56 (permalink) |
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I would have absolutely no problem with organized religion if it were practiced as it was surely intended to by the authors of it's fundamental scriptures - faith in the benevolence of human beings more than anything else - unfortunately, there are a multitude competing for our souls/money/social influence and any sense of unity or optimism is beyond reproach for myself and anybody with a brain.
If it's really every man for himself and philosophical elitism all round then fair enough. I've been raised on the principles of Western capitalism too, and I fall into the age group of the post-post-modern cynic but I'm no nihilist... I just don't know what to believe, that's the problem. argh. I just know I'm over looking for a cold, mathematical equation for everything under the sun. That's not what life's about. (imo) |
09-30-2008, 02:32 PM | #57 (permalink) | |
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Quote:
There's a Townes Van Zandt song about living life to the fullest: I won't say I love you, babe I won't say I need you, babe But I'm gonna' get you, babe And I will not do you wrong Living's mostly wasting time And I waste my share of mine But it never feels too good So let's don't take too long Well, you're soft as glass and I'm a gentle man We got the sky to talk about And the world to lie upon Days up and down they come Like rain on a conga drum Forget most, remember some But don't turn none away Everything is not enough, And nothing is too much to bear Where you've been is good and gone All you keep is the getting there Well, to live's to fly, both low and high So shake the dust off of your wings And the sleep out of your eyes It's goodbye to all my friends It's time to leave again Here's to all the poetry And the pickin' down the line I'll miss the system here The bottom's low and the treble's clear But it don't pay to think too much On things you leave behind Well, I may be gone, but it won't be long I'll be bringing back the melody And the rhythm that I find We all got holes to fill. Those holes are all that's real Some fall on you like a storm Sometimes you dig your own The choice is yours to make The time is yours to take Some dive into the sea Some toil upon the stone Well, to live's to fly, both low and high So shake the dust off of your wings And the sleep out of your eye Shake the dust off of your wings And the tears out of your eye ...and I don't think the hope of an afterlife is necessary to "shake the dust off of your wings/And the sleep out of your eyes." I'm siding with the Unfan here; if everything decays, that makes living right now even more important and makes every day that much more valuable, every moment more powerful, every action more meaningful.
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09-30-2008, 02:41 PM | #58 (permalink) |
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While I agree to an extent, I think that the main visualization of an afterlife is to dim the banality of death. Even for a Christian, death is still death, and the comfort of afterlife will certainly help allay any fears people have about the unknown.
Also, to note: nowhere in the Bible are pearly gates mentioned. In fact, the Bible doesn't seem to quantify afterlife by any worldy means. It just refers to the afterlife as unity with God, which can be interpreted in many, many ways. The point is, even Christians aren't offered a utopia.
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09-30-2008, 03:08 PM | #59 (permalink) | |||
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Quote:
i cant prove anything so i have to have faith and trust in science that what i'm told is true IS indeed true so i guess i was living a sad life to begin with Quote:
i didn't realize my potential until i became a Christian Quote:
since God gives us all free will i was thinking about the homeless people the other day and about how they are truly free but its a freedom that leaves them less in their lives and in their spirits thats what i was before becoming a Christian and believe me when i tell you THAT is the saddest way to live life |
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09-30-2008, 03:16 PM | #60 (permalink) | |
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Quote:
i can honestly say that i am not afraid of death it is a part of life and i was down with that before becoming a Christian now however i know where i'm going and just like any traveller along any road having the directions is making the trip so much easier and more enjoyable and for Christians unity with God IS utopia |
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