The Norseman
Meandering fecklessly
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2008
- Messages
- 8,449
Ha! Proof-positive that my spell worked!Jesus never existed, I traveled back in time and prevented the birth.
I had to destroy all evidence of the time machine.
Ha! Proof-positive that my spell worked!Jesus never existed, I traveled back in time and prevented the birth.
I had to destroy all evidence of the time machine.
Leumas, I think you have difficultly with grey areas;
If it you can't prove it happened, then it didn't
If it you can't prove it didn't happen, then it did
If you cant prove its black, then it must be white
If you cant prove its white, then in must be black
I think this might be a False Dichotomy or a Fallacy of the Excluded Middle
Would you defend belief in the resurrection of Osiris the same way?
I neither know what that is or care about it enough to bother finding out,...
....There is only one thing worse that a religious zealot, and that is zealous atheist....
I was wondering if you would eventually say that.
But thanks for saying so.... enough said!
Jesus never existed, I traveled back in time and prevented the birth.
I had to destroy all evidence of the time machine.
Ha! Proof-positive that my spell worked!
....There is only one thing worse that a religious zealot, and that is zealous atheist....
I think the question of whether or not Jesus was resurrected is way down on the list of claims that need to BE PROVEN FIRST before we need to prove or disprove the resurrection.
So The burden of proof is SO BLOODY UNBEARABLE.
Arguing whether Jesus was or was not resurrected is like arguing whether or not Edward Cullen would be inebriated if he sucked the blood of a drunk Bella Swan.
But I think asking this kind of question does serve a purpose... it legitimizes all the preceding claims that lead to the questioned event.
Asking whether or not the resurrection did occur makes it seem as if it is a given fact that all the preceding events must have occurred since otherwise the resurrection would not be even considered at all.
- Did Jesus exist?
- Did he just run away when the going got tough?
- Did Judas kiss the wrong guy as a ruse?
- Was he crucified?
- Did he die?
- Was his body given back instead of being tossed on a garbage heap?
- Was the tomb really empty?
- Was the body stolen?
- Was CPR performed on him by some GURU?
- Was he an Alien who had advanced medicine?
- Did the purported sightings post the purported crucifixion actually happen?
- Did they see a double?
- Did they see the real Jesus who never actually was crucified due to the aforementioned ruse or lucky escape?
- Did they see an Alien Clone?
- So On
- So Forth
- etc.
- etc.
- etc.
- Was he resurrected?
As to that one how you decide that?
God committed suicide for you?
More like God had a gay bdsm exercise for you. He got tied to a cross and tortured and humiliated a bit, while knowing full well that he'll be ok on Sunday, and being in control all the time (by virtue of being an omnipotent God.)
That's neither sacrifice, nor even suicide. It's what some people actually pay a dominatrix to do to them. And if God felt more like playing with some muscular and sweaty guys in the uniforms of an oppressive empire, hey, I'm not gonna judge![]()
Wrong!... but keep trying young tyro…

In the spirit of speculation that seems to drive some Christian Atheists to assert that Jesus must surely have had a natural explanation behind all his magic....
I am going to reiterate a clever speculation made by HansMustermann a while ago which I think can explain all of Jesus' magic.
Jesus was a gay sadomasochistic alien who instead of coming to earth to do a bit of hunting like in the movie Predator, he came to Earth to have an erotic gay BDSM session as described below.
Can anyone disprove that Jesus was a gay sadomasochistic alien who came to Earth in pursuit of a good BDSM session?
In the spirit of speculation that seems to drive some Christian Atheists to assert that Jesus must surely have had a natural explanation behind all his magic.... I am going to reiterate a clever speculation made by HansMustermann a while ago which I think can explain all of Jesus' magic.
Jesus was a gay sadomasochistic alien who instead of coming to earth to do a bit of hunting like in the movie Predator, he came to Earth to have an erotic gay BDSM session as described below.
Can anyone disprove that Jesus was a gay sadomasochistic alien who came to Earth in pursuit of a good BDSM session?
Finally... FINALLY, you seem to be beginning to understand the points thatBrian-Mand myself have been making. Its only taken several days and a few dozen posts.
Many have left Christianity but can't quite let go of Christ.
Exactly.... this is the reason for this pathetic Christian "Atheism"
....
I have my own hypothesis for why.... it is an attempt to assuage their throbbing pangs of a chronic cognitive dissonance on so many levels and variations touching their inner psyches.
Much like children who are driven to tears and dismay after discovering the extent of the duplicity of their society and parents in deceiving them for so long and in so many ways with the Santa fable. They are desperate to prove that it is not all a big hoax like all the other woo they are increasingly beginning to realize is claptrap.
So they carry on ferociously debating against the fictiveness of the Jesus fables postulating tenuous modicums of possible likelihood of perhaps maybe something approaching a near similarity to some kind of similitude of a real person or an amalgam persona who they begrudgingly and with extreme consternation concede might maybe possibly not have had anything magical about him, but could have been a xenophobic zealously benighted fanatically religious Rabbi or terrorist or freedom fighter or old-new-age hippie or cult leader according to one's own wishful thinking for what one needs this Jesus to be.
1. The assertion of the unreality of God
2. The insistence upon coming to grips with contemporary culture as a necessary feature of responsible theological work
Varying degrees and forms of alienation from the church as it is now constituted
Recognition of the centrality of the person of Jesus in theological reflection
No, they can't, and neither can you prove it to be true.
Nonetheless, many Christians believe that he did. I personally consider such a belief to be irrational in that it defies what we know about medical science, and in any case, when has anything about belief in God; Magician been rational.
However, the story has persisted for two thousand years, been discussed for almost that length of time and is widely known and believed by over two billion people world-wide. Mass delusion? Intentional fabrication out of whole cloth? I don't think so. There must surely at some time been an origin to that story.
Like Brian-M, I believe the whole Judeo-Christian mythology of the OT & NT is a mishmash of separate stories, for example the burning bush, the resurrection, water into wine, fishes and loaves, the stopping of the sun in the sky, walking on the water and other, that each have practical, non-mythical or non-mystical real world explanations, but which have been misunderstood or misrepresented (either intentionally or unintentionally) and woven into the mytho-historical account by the numerous authors of those stories. The challenge for a non-believer like me is to speculate what might have been the seed of those stories, and in my case, I believe mis-declared death is a valid explanation for what Christians believe to be the resurrection.
As to the highlighted part it doesn't necessarily require supernatural powers, so the usual part of that the resurrection is against the laws of physics doesn't seem to apply nor does it require a God. So it may be the case that some form of life can be resurrected despite being dead for 3 days.
....
I have repeatedly stated in the past on this and other forums that I do not believe that Historical Jesus ever existed. The writers of the bible either made him up out of whole cloth , or assembled him by cherry picking attributes from some of the many itinerant preachers prevalent in the middle east at that time.
Nonetheless, many Christians believe that he did. I personally consider such a belief to be irrational in that it defies what we know about medical science, and in any case, when has anything about belief in God; Magician been rational.
However, the story has persisted for two thousand years, been discussed for almost that length of time and is widely known and believed by over two billion people world-wide. Mass delusion? Intentional fabrication out of whole cloth? I don't think so . There must surely at some time been an origin to that story.
Like Brian-M, I believe the whole Judeo-Christian mythology of the OT & NT is a mishmash of separate stories, for example the burning bush, the resurrection, water into wine, fishes and loaves, the stopping of the sun in the sky, walking on the water and other, that each have practical, non-mythical or non-mystical real world explanations, but which have been misunderstood or misrepresented (either intentionally or unintentionally) and woven into the mytho-historical account by the numerous authors of those stories. The challenge for a non-believer like me is to speculate what might have been the seed of those stories, and in my case, I believe mis-declared death is a valid explanation for what Christians believe to be the resurrection .
But notice what you say below in the blue highlight!
You are contradicting yourself.... much like the Bible does.
... The writers of the bible either made him up out of whole cloth, or assembled him by cherry picking attributes from some of the many itinerant preachers prevalent in the middle east at that time.
Mass delusion? Intentional fabrication out of whole cloth? I don't think so. There must surely at some time been an origin to that story.
...
So they carry on ferociously debating against the fictiveness of the Jesus fables postulating tenuous modicums of possible likelihood of perhaps maybe something approaching a near similarity to some kind of similitude of a real person or an amalgam persona who they begrudgingly and with extreme consternation concede might maybe possibly not have had anything magical about him, but could have been a xenophobic zealously benighted fanatically religious Rabbi or terrorist or freedom fighter or old-new-age hippie or cult leader according to one's own wishful thinking for what one needs this Jesus to be.
Oh please!!!!
<snip a load of moving the goal posts nonsense>
Leumas, it is quite apparent to me that you are utterly incapable of understanding what you read, even when it is explained to you over and over.
You are obviously an accomplished PTW... I give up, I'm going to stop feeding you, so you win...
Oh please!!!!
and
do NOT contradict each other. There is nothing contradictory about offering alternatives in conversation or debate, but expressing a preference for one over the others. I'm effectively saying that
a. fabrication out whole cloth is possible
b. mass delusion is possible
c. misunderstanding of reality based events is possible
My preference is c. but that does not rule out a. or b. as being the truth
Its akin to me offering someone a choice of three fine wines but suggesting they do try a particular one because its my favorite. Saying that one of them is my favorite does not mean the other two wines are no good, and does not make the person wrong if they prefer one of the other two instead.
You really do seem unable to comprehend the written word; every time you quote and argue against other posters, you confirm it with your own words. You appear to simply cherry pick certain phrases and words from posts and base your replies on those phrases without realizing that the context in which they were said is vital to understanding what was written.
Your debating skill set appears to consist primarily of Googling irrelevant references, posting irrelevant (and misapplied) links and using lots and lots of emboldened text and multicolored highlights. It makes your posts very pretty, but ultimately meaningless because little, if any of it is original thought.