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But you said earlier that you were hedging your bets by going to church and following certain doctrine just in case. So you must agree to some extent that your actions here on Earth effect what happens after you die. Therefore you believe that someone or something is making up these rules, you are not following your own logic.
And I'm not scared of enternal pain and suffering if I go 5 miles over the speed limit.
You're right in that I am no theological expert, that's because I don't possibly see how you can believe one thing and not another. All your responses show how narrow your veiw is. You have to rember that even the concept of one God is not practiced by all the people of the world. Religion and faith in the supernatural is not limited to the Judeo-Christian idea.
Previous post by me:TurfBurn said:Why are you arguing this at all? You can't unless you are accepting the premise that God exists in the first place
pingdum said:If you want to spread the concept of God so thin to include any kind of force that could create the universe and therefore people, with or without any specific purpose, then there is no arguing as reality does exist and it had to get here someway.
TurfBurn said:Second of all... since there is plenty of evidence of evolution it obviously is not the case that Adam and Eve just "popped up" out of nowhere... but Adam and Eve could be representative of the first human beings instilled with the self awareness and cognitive ability that sets us apart from apes and others based on our current knowledge. How do you suddenly figure that God "tricked them" into using free will to punish them for eternity? It is also arguable that the story from a Christian standpoint is reflecitive of the "evil" that man has the ability to do contrary to God's desire and is represented by that "first choice" contrary to God's desire for us. But again... if you don't accept or acknowledget hat God even exists in the first place discussion of what this non-existant being (per your view) does or doesn't do or me is completely circular and foolish. You are using your doubt of the judeo-christian stories and traditions and teachings to validate your disbelief of God. You are disproving something by arguing against something you already say can't exist in the first place.
Not all faiths and people maintain to the bible as an exact literal tradition... So trying to refute things further by going there is foolish because it is a false premise to start with. You give me reason to believe that you are not an active and studied Christian, therefore your understanding of teachings and philosophies of different religious groups is going to be quite far removed from actuality. Even people that are active christians are often not fully aware of the doctrines of their faith... much like not every driver on the road knows everything that is right or wrong or how it works (just go watch a 4 way stop sign for a few minutes and it's quite obvious) but it doesn't change that they are a driver....
But you said earlier that you were hedging your bets by going to church and following certain doctrine just in case. So you must agree to some extent that your actions here on Earth effect what happens after you die. Therefore you believe that someone or something is making up these rules, you are not following your own logic.
And I'm not scared of enternal pain and suffering if I go 5 miles over the speed limit.
You're right in that I am no theological expert, that's because I don't possibly see how you can believe one thing and not another. All your responses show how narrow your veiw is. You have to rember that even the concept of one God is not practiced by all the people of the world. Religion and faith in the supernatural is not limited to the Judeo-Christian idea.
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