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Quote from: {LAW} Gamer_2k4 on January 22, 2009, 12:12:14 amQuote from: echo_trail on January 21, 2009, 01:58:40 pmBut then, how can you be so sure what God expects of you?I'm going to answer this in the context of the Christian God, since that's the one I believe in and the one I'm most familiar with. A Christian's source of God's expectations is the Bible; it's the core of our whole religion. Why the Bible? Because we believe that it's not just some book written by wise men, but rather God's holy inspired word (2 Timothy 3:16-17). In other words, the authors were just writing tools for God, and the Bible is by him, not them. As God doesn't seem to contact us as directly as he used to, the Bible is our best bet for understanding what God wants for us. All of the following will be spoken as fact, but as you can see from my citations, it's all from the Bible, so take that however you will.You trust in the bible, yeah? How can you know it isn't a ripoff. If was written over a timeline that ended a long time ago, long enough for people to have grown an unquestioning trust towards it. And it was written by man, yes? Man is faulty, as we well see today. If one truely believes in God, how can you even consider taking the bible into account of his words?Also, you say that anyone who doesn't believe in Jesus and God will go to hell. But there are people around the world who have never even heard of them. What, they go to hell for not believing in something they were never introduced to? African or australian tribes, monks in Siberia, people living in remote parts of China or India.. even eskimos.And it seems to me that it is so easy for you guys to point your fingers and say "You're wrong, we're right. Now obey or be damned for all eternity", when you're growing up with it, when it's an acceptable part of your everyday. But say you live in India where the vast majority of the population is Hindu, suddently it's not so much accepted. Or if you're a protestant living in a catholic country. The whole concept of God and the bible.. really it reminds me more of a dictatorship. However, I will say this about God and his bible. I understand some of it's basic messages, and I like them. I like the good it brings out in people. I've always been interrested in faith and religion, though it should be noted that I see the two of them much apart. I admire a person who has faith in any god or any cause. I admire how a person can give him or herself wholeheartedly to what they believe to be something greater. That, even if I don't agree with the persons point of view, is a remarkable feature in a human. However, I see "religion" as a cage for said person, a set of predetermined rules applied to what would otherwise be the beings free natural sense of roaming through the world in the way that he or she sees fit.I'm not a believer, as you may have figured out by now. It's not that I don't want to be, or that I'm afraid to be. I just don't agree with it, and there are too many holes in all the major religions. It all goes against my nature. However, I am not a bad man. Even in the eyes of God, aside the fact I don't believe in him/her/it/them/whatever, I'm a good person, if I can say so myself. I try to always do the right thing, and I try to help those around me. I'm an honest person, and I respect others in their beliefs as well as anything. But I will still go to hell, won't I? 'cause that's how your religion survives, through intimidation. You're using fear to force your specific denomination in on people, to make it a part of peoples everyday on such a grand scale that they live out that religion with unflinching loyalty. I'm sorry to say, but that's cowardly and it's fraud.At least that's how I see it.
Quote from: echo_trail on January 21, 2009, 01:58:40 pmBut then, how can you be so sure what God expects of you?I'm going to answer this in the context of the Christian God, since that's the one I believe in and the one I'm most familiar with. A Christian's source of God's expectations is the Bible; it's the core of our whole religion. Why the Bible? Because we believe that it's not just some book written by wise men, but rather God's holy inspired word (2 Timothy 3:16-17). In other words, the authors were just writing tools for God, and the Bible is by him, not them. As God doesn't seem to contact us as directly as he used to, the Bible is our best bet for understanding what God wants for us. All of the following will be spoken as fact, but as you can see from my citations, it's all from the Bible, so take that however you will.
But then, how can you be so sure what God expects of you?
Well it's the simple truth. You will get told about rewards and consequences of your actions in life while you are groing up, and that will stay with you.
If I can't impose my belief on people then what is the point of having one?
Quote from: miketh2005 on July 10, 2009, 07:31:20 pmDonate to enesceHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
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