Rock God X wrote:Perhaps, but I'm no more worried about it than I am about dying and finding out there is a hell after all. Both have a probability of close to 0.
If you are wrong, at least you'll be warm
True. I fecking despise harp music anyway.
Christianity: because you're so awful you made God kill himself.
Joined: Mar 05 2007 Posts: 13190 Location: Hedon (sometimes), sometimes Premier Inn's
Rock God X wrote:True. I fecking despise harp music anyway.
They aren't much cop with lager either
'when my life is over, the thing which will have given me greatest pride is that I was first to plunge into the sea, swimming freely underwater without any connection to the terrestrial world'
Joined: Feb 17 2002 Posts: 28357 Location: MACS0647-JD
McClennan wrote: ... unless you're a stand-up comedian doing some sort of satire what purpose does it serve to ridicule what can be a very personal belief?
I understand the point, but in my case, one of that poster's stated "very personal beliefs" is that I am Satan. Another is that Jesus shared a garden with his brother's rabbit. The statements don't need ridiculing nor could anyone add to their inherent degree of self-evident ridiculousness. It would be a genuine service to the poster if he could be made to realise how ridiculous these sort of beliefs are. (Though in this case, the words 'duck', 'back' and 'water' for some reason spring to mind).
Last edited by Ferocious Aardvark on stardate Jun 26, 3013 11:27 am, edited 48,562,867,458,300,023 times in total
kirkstaller wrote:But here's a fact - I have friends who are atheists, Muslims, Hindus - I disagree with their religious beliefs strongly but I've never treated them any different. They are friends.
Well thats it for me then. As long as your beliefs don't stop you from treating anybody any differently then its completely fair enough in my book.
I don't agree with your beliefs at all, but live and let live I say.
Joined: Mar 05 2007 Posts: 13190 Location: Hedon (sometimes), sometimes Premier Inn's
Horatio Yed wrote:They are friends, until the heathens die and burn in a fiery hell that is.
cynic
'when my life is over, the thing which will have given me greatest pride is that I was first to plunge into the sea, swimming freely underwater without any connection to the terrestrial world'
Friends are people you respect. I wouldn't find it particularly respectful if my 'friends' believed I had been 'deceived by Satan', that I would be going to hell for eternity, and if my 'friends' loved the being that would be sending me there.
Christianity: because you're so awful you made God kill himself.
Joined: May 10 2002 Posts: 47951 Location: Die Metropole
kirkstaller wrote:... If anything, other people have extracted them from me by asking many questions ...
Drivel.
If you'd announced your presence on this particular forum by starting a thread on, say, whether tea was better than coffee, the issue of your religious beliefs would hardly have arisen.
You didn't. You announced your presence on the Sin Bin by starting a thread against equal marriage: not about whether it was good, bad or indifferent, but against. When questioned as to why you opposed it, you took the first opportunity to proclaim your particular beliefs.
"You are working for Satan." Kirkstaller
"Dare to know!" Immanuel Kant
"Do not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive" Elbert Hubbard
"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." Oscar Wilde
Joined: May 10 2002 Posts: 47951 Location: Die Metropole
McClennan wrote:I'm a bit surprised at the response to Kirkstaller's beliefs tbh. It is not our beliefs that are critical but our actions. If I believe in a god then what does it matter as long as I live my life in an ethical way?
Ah, but we've done this one before.
Kirkstaller believes (or claims to believe) that "by grace are ye saved through faith".
In other words, deeds make no difference. So as an example, if Hitler had accepted Christ as his personal saviour right at the end, he'd be in heaven right now. I put exactly that illustration to Kirkstaller some time ago and he agreed with it.
My personal problem with Kirkstaller, as he chooses to represent himself here, is that he is a fundamentalist; an extremist. For want of a better way of putting it, and using religious terminology, his religiosity does not see him present a state of grace to the world, but his own belief that he is superior to most of the rest of the world because he has the 'correct' beliefs.
Indeed, his assertions earlier in this thread that god chooses who gets to have faith – in other words, god [i[]chooses[/i] who is going to go to heaven – illustrates perfectly the showing-off aspect of his testimony. Since the choice is up to his god, why would he bother evangelising? He cannot, by his own logic, make any difference. But he continues nonetheless, passing judgement on the majority of the rest of humanity and condemning them. And he believes (as respresented here) that this special chosen quality he has allows him to decide on other people's lives for them.
I really do not care what people choose to believe. It's none of my business – until they attempt to inflict those beliefs on others, either directly through evangelising or indirectly, by influencing political decisions that impact on others (abortion, equal marriage etc), and most particularly when their only arguments in such circumstances are of the circular variety that we've seen many times now from Kirkstaller.
"You are working for Satan." Kirkstaller
"Dare to know!" Immanuel Kant
"Do not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive" Elbert Hubbard
"We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars." Oscar Wilde
Joined: Jan 15 2007 Posts: 11924 Location: Secret Hill Top Lair. V.2
I've started worshipping the rabbit. I reckon Jesus was talking to him, not kirkstaller.
If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle.
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