Faith is a fine thing. But I'd rather have reality.
You do realize that you use faith MANY times throughout a typical day?
Faith is a fine thing. But I'd rather have reality.
Speaking for myself, I have no faith, zero, ziltch, nada, the well of faith – it is empty.You do realize that you use faith MANY times throughout a typical day?
Azure
Speaking for myself, I have no faith, zero, ziltch, nada, the well of faith – it is empty.
"Moral high-ground", sorry but that is a copout, It is like saying “I didn’t do it, and so I would help out”.
Paul
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I don't know if this bumper sticker has been posted in this thread or not, but I saw this one in Catskill, New York a few weeks ago:
"In Case Of Rapture, This Car Will Be Unoccupied!"
Michael
Faith that your boss won't fire you, faith that the water you drink won't be contaminated, faith that your local deli doesn't server spiders in their sandwiches...etc, etc.
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Nope, still no faith.Faith that your boss won't fire you, faith that the water you drink won't be contaminated, faith that your local deli doesn't server spiders in their sandwiches...etc, etc.
Complete and utter BullShip. You post illustrates your hypocrisy.I get questioned on that all the time. Basically, since me and everyone else who believes in a God, knows that we cannot provide physical evidence to prove that our God exists, we usually take the moral high ground and stay neutral in religious debates.
You know, there's trust, and there's faith. Faith, for the most part, is fine. I believe that if I put the appropriate sequence of events together, I can and will be able to expect the appropriate result, without the experience of having done so before. That's at the root of education, research, invention, and good scholarship.
Trust means I've done it a time or two, and have some reasonable expectation of what will happen when I perform task X in concert with operation Y. That's what makes it possible for me to do my job: I've turned the key to the ignition in trucks so many times before, I don't have to ask what will happen next.
Faith is a fine thing, but it's usually based on some experience in the believer's life. If you pray and you get a positive answer to the prayer the first time, then you have some basis for believing that prayer works. On the other hand, if you pray, and you continually get negative results, you're going to question whether hitting your knees every time there's a problem in your life is such a hot idea.
True, we do use faith daily. But I'd rather operate on Trust. This means learning from those who have gone before, and applying what they learned before you make a misstep. I believe the burner on the stove is hot. Evidence from others who have gone before tells me I'd be an idiot to stick my hand in the flame. Trust has the greater value, if you ask me.
Not that you did...
Complete and utter BullShip. You post illustrates your hypocrisy.
Ossai
Well, I used BullShip in order to avoid violating rule8. It is close enough and used in such a manner that the meaning should be clear.You want to explain that to me, or is that the manner in which you always debate?Complete and utter BullShip. You post illustrates your hypocrisy.
Azure
Well, I used BullShip in order to avoid violating rule8. It is close enough and used in such a manner that the meaning should be clear.
Your posts – this would of course refer to your (Azure’s) posts
illustrates – clearly points out
your hypocrisy. - this would of course refer to your (Azure’s) hypocrisy
Hypocrisy:
1. The practice of professing beliefs, feelings, or virtues that one does not hold or possess; falseness.
2. An act or instance of such falseness.
I was using definition #2, an act or instance of such falseness.
Is this enough clarification for you?
Ossai