Seems to be enough grounds to justify a sacking (or perhaps a stoning would sufice?).
[qimg]http://i176.photobucket.com/albums/w178/senahbirdr/lemmypope.jpg[/qimg]
Do you honestly think that God has anything to do with the Pope? Do you honestly think that the history of Popes would indicate anything other than that this one is far from the worst?
You see there?! Lemmy is a God!
KJV:I always thought that line was about the effect that the abuse had on the child, not the punishment for the abuser.
I think the implication here is that the punishment, were one to so offend, would be so bad that the person would wish to have drowned self rather than face the punishment.It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little ones.
Perhaps the KJV was wrong in its sense, but here we have someone leading others to sin ... a very different problem than simply sinning against the little ones.1 He said to his disciples, "Things that cause sin will inevitably occur, but woe to the person through whom they occur.
2 It would be better for him if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea than for him to cause one of these little ones to sin.
3 Be on your guard! If your brother sins, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him.
And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.
'Amen, I say to you, what you did not do for one of these least ones, you did not do for me
Only in a metaphorical sense, David. Which I suspect you know.
How is it metaphorical and what difference would that make. Explain this to me, if you would please.
To be a god means that one places a might upon something or someone which is greater than their own. So to say Lemmy is a god is no more metaphorical than saying Jehovah is a god. It depends upon the person.
But you see, first you must define the metaphier and the metaphrand, not to mention the paraphiers and paraphrands - which as you may or may not know, can really blanket the issue like white snow on the ground during winter time prior to the springing you intend.
I say God should not shower for a couple eternities, then totally snorkle the pope.
God should strike him with lightnings.![]()
We must, then, with much haste, run across the snow leaving the indelible footprints of chaos and disorder hither and yon.
Water the magnolias in the southern sector.
Green is the colour.
Shoe box, lightning, bread, foghorn.
To be a god means that one places a might upon something or someone which is greater than their own. So to say Lemmy is a god is no more metaphorical than saying Jehovah is a god. It depends upon the person
To be a god means that one places a might upon something or someone which is greater than their own. So to say Lemmy is a god is no more metaphorical than saying Jehovah is a god. It depends upon the person
.I think that in this case, a dismissal would consist of the pope suddenly disappearing in a column of flame.
...
Does anyone here have experience with incendiary devices?
It's a curious tale, is it not? Onan was slain for not properly rogering his sister-in-law. I suspect that were I to properly roger my sister-in-law, I'd be slain by her husband, not God, or my own wife. I guess they'd be doing God's work.If poor old Onan got his divine smite for not screwing his brother's widow, why shouldn't the Pope get a similar smite for all the little boys his organization -has- screwed?
Maybe Onan did something more than simply waste the seed ... since a good scrubbing and then keeping hands away from nether bits was the usual redress for this criminal waste of future prophets.This view – that wasted seed refers to masturbation – was upheld by many early rabbis. However, the Levitical regulations concerning ejaculation, whether as a result of heterosexual intercourse or not, merely prescribe a ritual washing, and remaining ritually impure until the next day began on the following evening.
I like.
But it appears you mistake my words as gimcrack. You posit:
And I ask of your/the metaphor "Jehovah is a god": what is the metaphier (the thing known) and what is the metaphrand (the thing less known)?
An aid to assist you here - consider the metaphor "the snow blankets the ground." The metaphrand is something about the completeness, thickness with which the ground is covered by snow. The metaphier is a blanket on a bed. The sensual nuances of the metaphor are in the paraphiers of the metaphier (the blanket) ie warmth, slumber.
Still with me?
Those "sensual nuances" (associations of the blanket) are the paraphrands, of the original metaphrand, the thick snow on the ground. Thus, the metaphor creates an idea of the earth sleeping, toasty, safe. This is all done with the use of the word "blanket" as a descriptive for the way the snow covers the ground.
And so my question to you remains, could you define your/the metaphor "Jehovah is a god" in these terms, as it is necessary to do so before we can come to that idea which you intend to spring when you posit:
.It's a curious tale, is it not? Onan was slain for not properly rogering his sister-in-law. I suspect that were I to properly roger my sister-in-law, I'd be slain by her husband, not God, or my own wife. I guess they'd be doing God's work.
I hadn't realized this last part, from wiki, so thanks for inspiring a look up:
Maybe Onan did something more than simply waste the seed ... since a good scrubbing and then keeping hands away from nether bits was the usual redress for this criminal waste of future prophets.
How is it metaphorical and what difference would that make. Explain this to me, if you would please.
To be a god means that one places a might upon something or someone which is greater than their own. So to say Lemmy is a god is no more metaphorical than saying Jehovah is a god. It depends upon the person.
Atheism is commonly described as the position that there are no deities.
God is the English name given to a singular omnipotent being in theistic and deistic religions (and other belief systems) who is either the sole deity in monotheism, or a deity in polytheism
Uh . . . huh?
All I know is that when I read that I get a dull aching pain behind my right eye.
I don't think it is a metaphor to say that Jehovah is a god, or Lemmy is a god since being a god simply means that there is might or strength attributed to Jehovah or Lemmy by the person who intends to establish them as gods. There is no distinction between the two which negates the fact that they are both gods. Now, Jehovah may not be the god of an atheist but that doesn't change the fact that Jehovah - or Lemmy - is a god. That Jehovah may not exist according to the atheist still doesn't change the fact that Jehovah - or Zeus, or Dagon - are still gods.
The idea of atheism by definition is stupid. Poorly thought out.
I have explained it, David. Many times. So have others. Yet here I go again.
AtheismWP means:
Not just any "gods"; deities. Now, "god" and "deity" are, in this case, synonymous. The meanings of "god" that are not synonymous to "deity" are not denied by atheism. The definition of godWP relevant here is:
So it's clear that no human being applies.
The mistake you keep making is claiming atheism means disbelief in what the Hebrew word "El" means, when in fact it means disbelief in what the English word "deity" means. None of us atheists are claiming that "mighty ones" don't exist. We're claiming deities don't exist. If you want to talk about atheism, talk about what we actually believe, not about what we would believe if we were a-El-ists.
DH my man, you are a hoot!
The bold is the very definition of metaphor. The hi-lite has the words "between" and "two" in it. More than one. That is a distinction. They exist singularly, apart from each other. Lemmy/Jehovah or Lemmy/God or Jehovah/God.
The underline part I never argued. Actually, here you speak in metaphor again.
met·a·phor \ˈme-tə-ˌfȯr also -fər\ noun
Etymology: Greek, from metapherein to transfer, from meta- + pherein to bear — more at bear
1 : a figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them (as in drowning in money); broadly : figurative language — compare simile
2 : an object, activity, or idea treated as a metaphor
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To the point then, the idea of atheism is just that, an idea. "Stupid" or "poorly thought out" are descriptives, apart from the idea. Do not hesitate, you and I are close in the grasp of what this means. I only ask that you take it a step further and deconstruct what may be your idea of "god". Put it into halves. What do you get?