I see christians ... as ... human beings whose brains are hijacked by some version of a religious meme.
See. That's nasty as well.
I see christians ... as ... human beings whose brains are hijacked by some version of a religious meme.
To discuss science, people need to respect two things: The idea presented, and the laws of physics.
Darwinists have no time for either.
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I agree that christianity is nasty. But you seem to be confusing the fantasies of the christian meme with your own identity. Shouldn't I be sympathetic to the person who is in some way affected? If you read carefully, you see I attack the absurdity and nastiness of christianity: I play the ball not the man (except public creationists, who I think have gone past meme infection to 'lying for god' - they know they are lying). I don't attack personal identity, only the ideas people promote. Of course this is another aspect of religious meme infection that is very important, and best seen in islam: the meme makes you take on the religion as your personal identity, so it becomes impossible for the believer to separate the crazy ideas as abstract thoughts for critical discussion.See. That's nasty as well.
Nope.I agree that christianity is nasty.
OK. Your words are consistently nasty. Better? lain:I play the ball not the man.
:yawn:Except public creationists, who I think have gone past meme infection to 'lying for god' - they know they are lying.
And yet when we talk physics, you spew the same irrational nonsense.What if I am wrong about atomic theory, or Newtonian physics? I know a reasonable amount about both, but when the last Einstein came along and revolutionised physics, it wouldn't have been felt as a personal attack but an opportunity to gain a deeper understanding. If the next Einstein revolutionises what I think is true, I can't take that as a personal attack, only an opportunity.
What if you are demonstrated to be wrong about Jesus? How will that feel? I think for most christians it would be taken as a personal attack, because it took some effort to accept the absurdities of the stories of Jesus, and the impossible promises of existing forever are too much to give up: the Truth of Jesus is the Truth of your own identity. It can't be allowed to be wrong, it must be protected no matter how ridiculous or nasty the defense of it has to be.
Do you believe the ideas of christianity should be available for people to consider critically? What happens when the nasty ideas within it are exposed? Should that be suppressed? Maybe if you adopted an ethically defensible religion we could have fewer nasty words describing it.OK. Your words are consistently nasty. Better?
Example, please, or perhaps offer to withdraw the accusation.And yet when we talk physics, you spew the same irrational nonsense.
I believe in justice and mercy, but not the totalitarian christian kind, because that is neither just nor merciful.I think for most Darwinists, it would be taken as a personal attack, because it took some effort to accept the absurdities of atheists' stories, while the possibility that justice and mercy might be real terrify you. Your Darwinism can't be allowed to be wrong, it must be protected no matter how ridiculous or nasty the defense of it has to be.
:yawn:Do you believe the ideas of christianity should be available for people to consider critically?
Chapter and verse, please.Jesus ... demands love on pain of hellfire.
You can remain sick if you want. :idunno:organises for you to celebrate a human sacrifice because you were born bad and have no choice but to make yourself well.
No, you don't. You think that when murderers die, they cease to exist.I believe in justice and mercy.
I would be delighted if you could disprove Darwin's theory. It is falsifiable. Can you falsify it?
Trick question. Darwinism keeps evolving every time it faces a challenge.
Matthew 4:10 Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.Chapter and verse, please.
I'm not sick. There was nothing wrong with the way I was born the first time.You can remain sick if you want.
That is the merciful truth of our existence, it ends, which gives it meaning. But it sounds like you listen to the meme when it makes false promises of justice. Your version of justice sounds more like an attempt at vengeance. You have your own power to forgive, yet you seem intent on joining Tertullian deriving pleasure from watching the suffering of the condemned. Is that what your religion says mercy is?You think that when murderers die, they cease to exist.
Another castle in the air claim. I recommend not listening to the professional creationist liars out there. There is no justice or mercy in what they do.Trick question. Darwinism keeps evolving every time it faces a challenge.
Those are two disparate verses you've put together there.Stuu: Jesus ... demands love on pain of hellfire. Matthew 4:10 Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve. 2 Thessalonians 1:8 In flaming fire taking vengeance on them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Then what are you complaining about? :idunno:I'm not sick. There was nothing wrong with the way I was born the first time.
Oblivion has value? The worst offender just vanishes along with the saint, and you think this is justice? This bestows meaning on each of their lives?That is the merciful truth of our existence, it ends, which gives it meaning.
There's either justice or there isn't. Justice means each man will pay in full for his words and actions. You do not believe this will happen.But it sounds like you listen to the meme when it makes false promises of justice.
What's wrong with vengeance?Your version of justice sounds more like an attempt at vengeance.
No.You have your own power to forgive, yet you seem intent on joining Tertullian deriving pleasure from watching the suffering of the condemned. Is that what your religion says mercy is?
The only reason to add Thessalonians is to demonstrate that all the demands of the gospels are reinforced with hellfire, so it wouldn't matter what topic the other gospel verse was dealing with. In this case, you love or you burn.Those are two disparate verses you've put together there. [Matthew 4:10, 2 Thessalonians 1:8]
I guess loving others is optional. Loving Jesus / the deity is compulsory.Elsewhere, the Bible makes it clear that love cannot be "demanded." 1 Corinthians 13:1-13
I never understood why Saul of Tarsus couldn't take his own advice and give up on his childish belief in imaginary friends. But of course the meme infection occurred on that Damascene road......When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things...
Just one verse needed (you can add Thess, 1:8 if you need the 'commanded' part):Then what are you complaining about?
Yes, critical value.Oblivion has value?
How could it be anything to do with justice? It's just a natural process, one of the few things that unites us, rather than dividing.The worst offender just vanishes along with the saint, and you think this is justice?
Well you can't understand the meaning of death after you are dead, so no. The value is in the anticipation, and reflection on ones life course in that context.This bestows meaning on each of their lives?
I do, and it is one of the particular reasons I am against christianity, because if you believe that someone is responsible for actions that negatively affect others, then that person should bear the responsibility, including making amends. But since Jesus died for your sins, you no longer bear responsibility... for something: something invented to explain the sudden and unexpected execution of Jesus, the resolution of the doctrine of original sin. Whatever the fantasy crime is, vicarious punishment with removal of responsibility is immoral, and contrary to the justice you describe.There's either justice or there isn't. Justice means each man will pay in full for his words and actions. You do not believe this will happen.
Well, you tell me. Can you find any NT scripture that supports vengeance as a principle of justice, or a principle of anything? What vengeance would Jesus take?What's wrong with vengeance?
In Darwins day, some people might have thought there were various species of humans, but science has proved that wrong. As God's Word says,(and, as science helps confirm) we are all one blood. "Dozens of species" of humans is what lead to scientific racism, scientism, genocides, and a multitude of shoddy 'scientific' conclusions (like vestigial organs, dimwitted Neandertals, junk DNA, and pseudogenes).
Shifting the goalposts is a logical fallacy.
For a time, the geocentric model was better at predicting the positions of planets, because epicycles were so well aligned with what was known and the replacement model hadn't matured.
The Catholic church did many wicked things, like keeping the Holy Bible inaccessible to the people.Stripe agrees that the Catholic Church imprisoned Galileo within his home until death over the heliocentric theory.
Thank you. For admitting some sense
The Catholic church did many wicked things, like keeping the Holy Bible inaccessible to the people.
This is called begging the question; a logical fallacy. I showed you that love cannot be "demanded."All the demands of the gospels are reinforced with hellfire.
Love is always optional, otherwise it is not love.I guess loving others is optional. Loving Jesus / the deity is compulsory.
Nope. You sinned of your own accord. There is no need to bring anybody else into it.Romans 5:18 Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life. There it all is: visiting the sins of the fathers on the sons.
Oh, so you're the judge now?Both morally repugnant.
Oblivion has critical value. Explain.Yes, critical value.
You're the one who wants there to be justice. :idunno:How could it be anything to do with justice?
Every man's reflection will receive the same reward. As will every man's words and actions, which are what justice works on. Not his "reflections."Well you can't understand the meaning of death after you are dead, so no. The value is in the anticipation, and reflection on ones life course in that context.
You do believe everyone will pay for their words and actions? Where? When? How?I do.
Something that doesn't rely on mortals to rectify everything they do before they die.To me, justice is acknowledgement by the wrongdoer of the wrongdoing, and his attempts to heal social rifts and other damage he has caused, possibly including his own genuine involvement in personal reform to prevent reoffending. What else could you want?
What vengeance would Jesus take?
Isn't begging the question when you set as one of your assumptions the thing you seek to prove? I think you mean the fallacy of composition. But that would depend on whether you think all of the New Testament is good for teaching, as Jesus is claimed to have said. If it is all good for teaching, then there's definitely hellfire for disregarding any of it. But by all means tell us which parts of the NT you think can be ignored. In the case of Corinthians it doesn't mention who might be the object of the love described, in fact it doesn't even say that this is love directed to anyone or anything. But in Matthew, it says specifically you are to worship and serve Jesus / the deity.This is called begging the question; a logical fallacy. I showed you that love cannot be "demanded."
I agree entirely. Shame it's not like that in the NT.Love is always optional, otherwise it is not love.
I'm not a sinner from my own point of view. The word is irrelevant to the non-religious, except in regards to the religious doing some judging based on the rules of their club.Nope. You sinned of your own accord. There is no need to bring anybody else into it.
Well indeed. The whole nasty idea was basically invented by Saul of Tarsus.Try Ezekiel 18.
I sure am, or at least I am part of the judge: our inate inborn morality formed by eons of natural selection working through the pressures of tribal life, plus our collective thought are the source of morality. You would be a misfit if you took your morals from the bible. In a democracy you are the judge as much as I am, although there is usually some small leeway for those following their own consciences. Not in a totalitarian christian belief system, though.Oh, so you're the judge now?
Eternal existence, whatever that means, is laughably promised to people who haven't even got a clue what to do on a wet Sunday afternoon. But if you know your existence will end, and you have the usual ambitions to do things, whatever they might be for you personally, then the wet Sunday afternoon takes on a bit more importance. There is a tiny bit more urgency and significance to the fact that you will not always have Sunday afternoons, or indeed any time in any day. That urgency to live life for whatever purpose you have decided for yourself (and that purpose is definitely decided by you, under the influence of your genome) accumulates the more you realise what it means to live and die.Oblivion has critical value. Explain.
Can't decide if that's a platitude or a thinly veiled threat!Every man's reflection will receive the same reward. As will every man's words and actions, which are what justice works on. Not his "reflections."
No, that's a concept for someone thinking at Kohlberg's first tier of ethical thinking, that of the young child whose reasons for action centre around what other people will do to them. The stages above that are, basically, "You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours", then "What would a good person do?", then "We should all follow the law", and later "Follow laws that are based in ethical principles". Some fundamentalist christians appear superficially to be working at the level of ethical principles because they recall biblical commands, but very often they are actually working at the level of fear for what happens to them if they don't.You do believe everyone will pay for their words and actions? Where? When? How?
Well yes, a good example to give. The parable appears open to a lot of interpretation. It has never really appealed to me because I think it way oversimplifies the nature of human existence and is really an allegory for what happens to you if you ignore Jesus. Death for failing to engage in capitalism? Taken literally it's obviously vengeance and not justice.Try the parable of the minas.