If you say so.And you are, no doubt, trying to substitute a bunch of mystical sounding piffle for ideas that will actually withstand scrutiny.
If you say so.And you are, no doubt, trying to substitute a bunch of mystical sounding piffle for ideas that will actually withstand scrutiny.
Iacchus, according to the Bible, it's a test you take after you die. Then you're judged, and punished with eternal suffering for getting it wrong. I don't see any opportunities for change there.
No, you are mistaken. This is when we get our grades, and rewarded accordingly.Iacchus, according to the Bible, it's a test you take after you die. Then you're judged, and punished with eternal suffering for getting it wrong. I don't see any opportunities for change there.
Actually, any person can be forgiven for their sins according to the bible. If you are truly sorry or given the evidence and still choose not to believe, than you are thrown down there. The test does not take place after you die, it takes place through this life and the next. Of course, that's all speculation. I just wanted to clarify this.
LOL. You think Wastepanel is "following the crowd" here at this site?Just don't claim to know anything outside of his point of reference (what he "thinks" he knows) and follow the crowd, and you and he will get along just fine.
The Bible, however, speaks of a mystery, and it isn't just a history lesson. So, if you don't get the mystery, whether you get the history right or not is pointless ... unless of course you're speaking purely from an historical standpoint.No, it doesn't. Within the manuscripts we are lucky enough to have, we've got ample evidence that the stories are not, in fact, intact.
This is part of the reason that no one takes your philosophical musings seriously, Iacchus. When you make statements that can be checked, you tend to get them wrong. This seriously detracts from your credibility when you then use those wrong statements as the basis for your untestable speculations.
I've seen various interpretations of this, but the idea of post-death redemption and reward is rather unusual. I suspect that the reason for this is that such a scenario would remove religion as a moral authority in this life, which, in my opinion, is one of the primary reasons why we have religion. But quite obviously, if anybody really did wind up in the Christian version of hell, they would acknowledge Jesus PDQ. If redemption were possible from the afterlife, nobody would stay in hell very long.Actually, any person can be forgiven for their sins according to the bible. If you are truly sorry or given the evidence and still choose not to believe, than you are thrown down there. The test does not take place after you die, it takes place through this life and the next. Of course, that's all speculation. I just wanted to clarify this.
Let me guess. You get the mystery, and all those who interpret the bible differently do not.The Bible, however, speaks of a mystery, and it isn't just a history lesson. So, if you don't get the mystery, whether you get the history right or not is pointless ... unless of course you're speaking purely from an historical standpoint.
He says he's just guessing. I'm not.LOL. You think Wastepanel is "following the crowd" here at this site?You must not be paying much attention to his posts. Point of fact, Wastepanel and I disagree markedly. But when you ask him a question, he answers. He does not obfuscate. He does not misdirect. He does not make things up. He does not reply with a non-sequitur question of his own. He answers.
It says that I don't follow the crowd?So what does that say to you, Iacchus? If it is not the ideas you are presenting that make you a comic foil here, what else could it be? Why can some other religious people manage to navigate this site with minimal friction, but not you?
Let me put it this way: if you created a universe with intelligent, rational beigns, and you, for some reason, wanted them to believe in you, what would you do ?
Would you just let them figure it out for themselves, which, considering the universe you've created is indistinguishable from a random quantum-fluctuation god mad; OR, would you actually provide them with clear indications of your existence ?? I'd go for option B.
I thought so. Just run away when pressed for evidence, crusader-man....
...Otherwise we're all doomed...
If there is no genuine mystery behind the Bible, then it is entirely worthless ... except perhaps for a handful of historians and anthropologists.Let me guess. You get the mystery, and all those who interpret the bible differently do not.
That doesn't answer the question......
... What's the lesson we're supposed to learn?...
... How can an absentee teacher punish those who fail to understand a lesson which has not been taught?
...How is taking a test, and suffering the consquences forever, a "lesson"?...
... It's pointless to teach something if you don't give anyone a chance to change
If there is no genuine mystery behind the Bible, then it is entirely worthless ... except perhaps for a handful of historians and anthropologists.
Iacchus, according to the Bible, it's a test you take after you die.....
...Then you're judged, and punished with eternal suffering for getting it wrong. I don't see any opportunities for change there...
Because there is something more to it?True enough. But then why does the bible HAVE to have any worth beyond the historical, besides the fact that you and many others have a lot of emotional investment in it having something more to it?
LOL. You think Wastepanel is "following the crowd" here at this site?You must not be paying much attention to his posts. Point of fact, Wastepanel and I disagree markedly. But when you ask him a question, he answers. He does not obfuscate. He does not misdirect. He does not make things up. He does not reply with a non-sequitur question of his own. He answers.
So what does that say to you, Iacchus? If it is not the ideas you are presenting that make you a comic foil here, what else could it be? Why can some other religious people manage to navigate this site with minimal friction, but not you?
If God (as he is described by Christians) wanted to talk to me, He could....
... Why should I take someone else's word for it when He could easily deliver it himself?....
... I distrust anyone who begins a discussion with the equivalent of, "God told me to tell you...
Right...so..if I accept Jesus into my heart, and buy the bible wholesale, and then I later change my mind, and do good things purely because I think they oughta get done, and I maybe treat homosexuals as equals, I fail, and burn in hell for all eternity?.....
...Man, those are some nasty trick questions....