Originally posted by Felch
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Was God the greatest casualty?
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"My nation is the world, and my religion is to do good." --Thomas Paine
"The subject of onanism is inexhaustable." --Sigmund Freud
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Originally posted by Felch View PostWhat Kidicious said is how the question of evil is traditionally answered. God lets bad things happen because they shake humanity up, and make us better people as a consequence of hardship. If you've ever met a spoiled rich brat, you'll know that having an easy time of life doesn't make people better human beings. A tsunami forces people to reflect on what their purpose on Earth is, and focus more on spiritual betterment than physical wellbeing.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by Felch View PostWhat Kidicious said is how the question of evil is traditionally answered. God lets bad things happen because they shake humanity up, and make us better people as a consequence of hardship. If you've ever met a spoiled rich brat, you'll know that having an easy time of life doesn't make people better human beings. A tsunami forces people to reflect on what their purpose on Earth is, and focus more on spiritual betterment than physical wellbeing.
If this is what religion does to a man's brain, Praise the Lord he made me an atheist.
I mean really. Just think about it for five seconds. Thousands of people die and suffer terribly, just so the remainder can enjoy the benefits of some valuable soul-searching. Presumably your take on the Holocaust follows similar lines.
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Originally posted by Cort Haus View PostJesus ****ing wept, to coin a phrase.
If this is what religion does to a man's brain, Praise the Lord he made me an atheist.
I mean really. Just think about it for five seconds. Thousands of people die and suffer terribly, just so the remainder can enjoy the benefits of some valuable soul-searching. Presumably your take on the Holocaust follows similar lines.
Do you seriously blame something you don't believe in for plate tectonics?John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by Drake Tungsten View PostCardiff is the Detroit of Europe.
Anyway, I thought Sarajevo was the Detroit of Europe."My nation is the world, and my religion is to do good." --Thomas Paine
"The subject of onanism is inexhaustable." --Sigmund Freud
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Originally posted by Felch View PostYou're assuming that life on this earth is all there is. Given that Christianity promises eternal life after this, it's not such a big deal to die in a natural disaster.
Frankly this is one aspect of religion that comforts believers and causes no harm whatsoever to atheists. Why does it bother you so much? I can understand being bothered by religious violence, or bigotry. But this makes you come across as an ass.
Do you seriously blame something you don't believe in for plate tectonics?
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Originally posted by Kidicious View PostThe Holocaust was caused by a man.
I didn't realise you had this theistic-al thing going on, Kid, but it partly explains why you're such a lousy 'communist'. I think I'll nip up the road to pay a visit to Marx's grave in Highgate Cemetery tomorrow, kneel down in front of his grave and offer a prayer for you.
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Originally posted by Cort Haus View PostNo. it isn't 'given'. You are the one making fantastical and unsubstantiated assumptions. Yet still your take on this happily ignores the pain of the bereaved and the indirect economic suffering. My point stands - presumably the Holocaust is also a cause for joy at the spiritual benefits it bestows upon us all.
Ignoring other religions, either God exists, and there is an afterlife, or God doesn't exist and there isn't one. If there's an afterlife then natural disasters are no big deal. If there's no afterlife, because there's no God, then natural disasters suck, but they're no one's fault.
I'm not suggesting it causes harm, other than the disappointment at the madness of fellow humans, so it doesn't 'bother' me beyond wondering how a mass human tragedy can be interpreted as a cause for celebration.
No. Where the **** did you get that idea from?
If God doesn't exist, then it's irrelevant. Something that doesn't exist isn't at fault for earthquakes or the tsunamis they cause. If God does exist, then the question of evil needs an answer. I gave you the textbook answer and you missed the point completely.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by Cort Haus View PostMen, actually, but from the omnipotent-and-just-god angle, it doesn't matter whether it is geo-physics or a political agency that causes a human disaster, the hypothetical-supreme-being gives the nod - according to believers.
In other words, I'm not persuaded by your argument, because you don't know what I actually believe in. You're attacking childish straw man notions of the divine.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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Originally posted by Felch View PostIt is a given with being Christian. It's part and parcel with the ****ing religion. You want to bash on God for letting bad things happen, but you ignore the eternal salvation part of the equation.
Ignoring other religions, either God exists, and there is an afterlife, or God doesn't exist and there isn't one. If there's an afterlife then natural disasters are no big deal. If there's no afterlife, because there's no God, then natural disasters suck, but they're no one's fault.
No one treats it as a cause for celebration. Nobody said it was a cause for celebration. What I said was that it is a way of shaking people out of their self-centered ruts.
If God doesn't exist, then it's irrelevant. Something that doesn't exist isn't at fault for earthquakes or the tsunamis they cause. If God does exist, then the question of evil needs an answer. I gave you the textbook answer and you missed the point completely.
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I believe this conversation is distilling down to, as Felch put it:
Originally posted by Felch View PostBut this makes you come across as an ass.“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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