P
PennitentMan
Guest
I’ve made myself clear enough. I said do not “assume”.
So, how is the catholic person the “hurt party”? If my assumption is false, do you mean they are not hurt, or do you mean that the catholic is the hurt one?
I’ve made myself clear enough. I said do not “assume”.
Hi PenitentMan, I was trying to make you understand that not all ex-Catholics who have been “hurt” by the Church are:![]()
So, how is the catholic person the “hurt party”? If my assumption is false, do you mean they are not hurt, or do you mean that the catholic is the hurt one?![]()
I’ve posted my proofs and detailed objections to religiosity so many times on this site I lost count. Not one single rebuttal. So deadheart no worries … even if you do post the most brilliant irrefutable objection to religiosity in history – everyone here will ignore it (because there is no good rebuttal to sound logic). Martin Luther said it best “reason is the whore of the devil” (and the enemy of faith). Yes indeed, reason is the enemy of mythology (unless that is you just enjoy reading or studying mythology for entertainment value & are astute enough to realize it’s not true).First of all, here’s where YOU go wrong. We don’t have to prove anything to YOU. YOU are on your own. No one here went on an atheist website and invited YOU to come here to challenge the existance of God.
You crashed the party dearheart. YOU came here. YOU made the challenge. It is up to the person who makes the challenge to prove his/her side.
When you do that, you let us know. K?
Excuse me, not one single rebuttal, how arrogant! And what do you think I’ve been doing for the last 2 months, making simple conversation?I’ve posted my proofs and detailed objections to religiosity so many times on this site I lost count. Not one single rebuttal. So deadheart no worries … even if you do post the most brilliant irrefutable objection to religiosity in history – everyone here will ignore it (because there is no good rebuttal to sound logic). Martin Luther said it best “reason is the whore of the devil” (and the enemy of faith). Yes indeed, reason is the enemy of mythology (unless that is you just enjoy reading or studying mythology for entertainment value & are astute enough to realize it’s not true).
Well I must say Francis, what we’ve said here just went in one ear and out the other. Even though in some instances it was more than apparent that you were in the wrong.personally, as an ex-Catholic, all my experiences with the church were wonderful. Church was great (beautiful liturgy, music, and depending on the church mass can be quite a production). The priests were always great. Heck Catholic school wasn’t even that bad (and no I never had nuns slap me with a ruler or anything like that). Indeed I usually think of the church in a fond way with some amount of residual affection.
I just intellectually stopped believing in the bible. After that it obviously became pretty pointless (though I guess my objections to the social influence of religiosity have been sharpening over time). I’m absolutely sure in my mind none of the miracles or supernatural claims of the bible are true (even if there are bits of historical accuracy in the bible).
However, when I think of Jesus, and the stories of his life; I do still harbor some level of affection. It’s a great story, let’s face it (or else one third of the earth probably wouldn’t be Christian). Forgiveness, love, charity, etc. who can argue with the value of those virtues? However, at the same time I know no man cheated death, there was never really a god man who walked the earth, there’s no such thing as flying angels or talking snakes, etc.
The problem I have is that in many areas we still base public policy on these myths (in the United States anyway). We don’t stop at merely pulling the good virtues from the story, many churches (and indeed an entire religious right movement) seeks to infuse themselves into public policy – as a sort of self-created quasi-law making organism. They invade science, reproductive rights, criminal justice, and even immigration law. They do this all in the name of a series of events that never happened. In other words part of the basis for our public policy in this country is mythological fantasy & when you have a flawed premise at the root of anything it will most likely poison the entire tree.
indeed not a single rebuttal to my core objections. However, I’ll post two of them and perhaps someone will rebut them point by point?Excuse me, not one single rebuttal, how arrogant! And what do you think I’ve been doing for the last 2 months, making simple conversation?
P.S. Did you purposely put “deadheart”? Cause if you did . . .![]()
No, of course, you don’t use ad hom attacks. How many times do you call people bigot that you’ve neglected to see this as a personal attack?indeed not a single rebuttal to my core objections. However, I’ll post two of them and perhaps someone will rebut them point by point?
Josie, Deadheart is someones screen name btw (so no I wasn’t being insulting towards anyone). If you read my posts carefully I’m not in the business of personalizing or ad hom attacks. I solely critique theism.
- The bible posits a god who performed profound miracles that no man on earth could mistake for anything but a manifestation of divine power. Working through Moses he split the red sea, he single handedly flooded the earth, destroyed Sodom, turned the Nile into blood, raised men from the dead, and countless other acts as reported by our ancient predecessors. Yet this alleged god has not performed a single such act in contemporary history, where it could be subjected to rigorous scientific scrutiny. Indeed there has not been a single verifiable profound manifestation of divine power in human history; and as mankind began quantifying natural phenomena through the prism of science claims of the supernatural have become exceedingly more rare (and the few claims that have been made in modern times have either not been subjected to rigorous study, or have been found to be false). Coincidence?
- The bible posits an all powerful god who created our entire universe, can move mountains, destroy planets, is present everywhere at all times (and even knows each of our thoughts). He can traverse through time, raise dead men, etc. In short according to the bible nothing is impossible with god; I guess with one notable exception. The only record we have of his revelations to mankind are copies upon copies of yet more copies of manuscripts that were written centuries after the alleged events they describe occurred. Couldn’t this god with such unimaginable power come up with a better way to relay his message to mankind? Additionally, why didn’t he ensure the consistency of his word? Coincidence?
here we go again … side bar comments & no rebuttal? Gee … why am I not surprisedNo, of course, you don’t use ad hom attacks. How many times do you call people bigot that you’ve neglected to see this as a personal attack?
P.S. I too solely critiqued atheism.
This question has been answered. You refuse to believe in the miracles and manifestations of God that surround us. If I mentioned the apparitions of Mary at Lourdes and Fatima, if I mentioned the dancing sun, if I mentioned the thousands (although only 67were catalogued as such due to rigorous standards set by an international medical bureau) of miracles that have occured at the Grotto, if I mentioned the tilma, if I mentioned the Shroud, if I mentioned the uncorrupted saints, if I mentioned the saints with their countless miracles, if I mentioned the eucharistic miracles, if I mention the daily lives that have been changed by Jesus Christ, if I mentioned my own life experiences, if I mentioned the beauty of our Universe, if I mentioned the implausibility of life happening by chance, if I mentioned the sheer joy and peace derived from loving God, if I mentioned the overpowering goodness of those who loved Jesus so much they gave everything they had to help others (people like blessed Mother Theresa, Saint Gianna Molla, Blessed Pier Giorgio, Saint Padre Pio, Saint Maximillian Kolbe, Saint Katherine Drexel), if I mentioned moral absolutes like freedom, justice, respect, equality (of which had to originate somewhere outside of ourselves), if I mentioned conscience, if I mentioned love and self-sacrifice, if I mentioned the power of prayer, if I mentioned the appearances of angels, if I mentioned near death experiences (of which the recipients were given a glimpse of the afterlife), if I mentioned Jesus Christ (who no human could possibly conceive of purely from imagination), if I mention the martyrs who died valiantly for truth, if I mention the survival of christianity despite the iron fist of communism to crush it, if I mention those who take a vow of poverty, chastity and obedience to walk in the ways of the Lord, if I mention famous atheist converts, or famous intellectual giants like Chesterton, Belloc, Dawson, Maritain, Muggeridge, Lewis, Augustine, Aquinas . . .would you bother to see God? Would you care enough to make an effort? Would you bother to humble yourself before God and pray? Would you be willing to give God another chance? Would you make excuses to disregard the above?indeed not a single rebuttal to my core objections. However, I’ll post two of them and perhaps someone will rebut them point by point?
- The bible posits a god who performed profound miracles that no man on earth could mistake for anything but a manifestation of divine power. Working through Moses he split the red sea, he single handedly flooded the earth, destroyed Sodom, turned the Nile into blood, raised men from the dead, and countless other acts as reported by our ancient predecessors. Yet this alleged god has not performed a single such act in contemporary history, where it could be subjected to rigorous scientific scrutiny. Indeed there has not been a single verifiable profound manifestation of divine power in human history; and as mankind began quantifying natural phenomena through the prism of science claims of the supernatural have become exceedingly more rare (and the few claims that have been made in modern times have either not been subjected to rigorous study, or have been found to be false). Coincidence?
I have never attacked atheists. Ever. Now prove it?here we go again … side bar comments & no rebuttal? Gee … why am I not surprised
And yes when people attack atheists (without restricting their comments to critiquing atheism) it is bigotry (so why is it unfair for me to call it what it is?) At any rate I expect more of the same … no one will address my objections (because no one can).
If you can’t control your emotions and not personalize the argument then why bother engaging in a debate with a non-theist (since it seems to anger you up so much)?This question has been answered. You refuse to believe in the miracles and manifestations of God that surround us. If I mentioned the apparitions of Mary at Lourdes and Fatima, if I mentioned the dancing sun, if I mentioned the thousands (although only 67were catalogued as such due to rigorous standards set by an international medical bureau) of miracles that have occured at the Grotto, if I mentioned the tilma, if I mentioned the Shroud, if I mentioned the uncorrupted saints, if I mentioned the saints with their countless miracles, if I mentioned the eucharistic miracles, if I mention the daily lives that have been changed by Jesus Christ, if I mentioned my own life experiences, if I mentioned the beauty of our Universe, if I mentioned the implausibility of life happening by chance, if I mentioned the sheer joy and peace derived from loving God, if I mentioned the overpowering goodness of those who loved Jesus so much they gave everything they had to help others (people like blessed Mother Theresa, Saint Gianna Molla, Blessed Pier Giorgio, Saint Padre Pio, Saint Maximillian Kolbe, Saint Katherine Drexel), if I mentioned moral absolutes like freedom, justice, respect, equality (of which had to originate somewhere outside of ourselves), if I mentioned conscience, if I mentioned love and self-sacrifice, if I mentioned the power of prayer, if I mentioned the appearances of angels, if I mentioned near death experiences (of which the recipients were given a glimpse of the afterlife), if I mentioned Jesus Christ (who no human could possibly conceive of purely from imagination), if I mention the martyrs who died valiantly for truth, if I mention the survival of christianity despite the iron fist of communism to crush it, if I mention those who take a vow of poverty, chastity and obedience to walk in the ways of the Lord, if I mention famous atheist converts, or famous intellectual giants like Chesterton, Belloc, Dawson, Maritain, Muggeridge, Lewis, Augustine, Aquinas . . .would you bother to see God? Would you care enough to make an effort? Would you bother to humble yourself before God and pray? Would you be willing to give God another chance? Would you make excuses to disregard the above?
If I look at all of this I know there is a God, and I know that God came in the form of Jesus Christ.
My emotions are as much a part of me as my rational mind is.If you can’t control your emotions and not personalize the argument then why bother engaging in a debate with a non-theist (since it seems to anger you up so much)?
they detract from the argument … but anyways, how can you compare flooding the earth, turning a river into blood, etc. with alleged miracles that could have just as easily been a normal statistical occurrence – like a small percentage of sick visitors to the Lourdes religious shrine recovering from their illnesses, or an obscure atmospheric event where its so called prophecy didn’t materialize until after the event took place (and where there were numerous different accounts of what happened that day).My emotions are as much a part of me as my rational mind is.
God is not bound by “contemporary” time. The Incarnation of the Word of God as Jesus Christ is “the” miraculous historical event and it is for “all times.” There is no greater miracle than this nor can there ever be! “God in His divine nature also takes on human nature as Man!”indeed not a single rebuttal to my core objections. However, I’ll post two of them and perhaps someone will rebut them point by point?
- The bible posits a god who performed profound miracles that no man on earth could mistake for anything but a manifestation of divine power. Working through Moses he split the red sea, he single handedly flooded the earth, destroyed Sodom, turned the Nile into blood, raised men from the dead, and countless other acts as reported by our ancient predecessors. Yet this alleged god has not performed a single such act in contemporary history, where it could be subjected to rigorous scientific scrutiny. Indeed there has not been a single verifiable profound manifestation of divine power in human history; and as mankind began quantifying natural phenomena through the prism of science claims of the supernatural have become exceedingly more rare (and the few claims that have been made in modern times have either not been subjected to rigorous study, or have been found to be false). Coincidence?
God demands Faith as a prerequisite for enjoying eternal life with Him. His test for admittance; we either pass or fail, we do not get to make the “rules” since He created us, we did not create Him.
- The bible posits an all powerful god who created our entire universe, can move mountains, destroy planets, is present everywhere at all times (and even knows each of our thoughts). He can traverse through time, raise dead men, etc. In short according to the bible nothing is impossible with god; I guess with one notable exception. The only record we have of his revelations to mankind are copies upon copies of yet more copies of manuscripts that were written centuries after the alleged events they describe occurred. Couldn’t this god with such unimaginable power come up with a better way to relay his message to mankind? Additionally, why didn’t he ensure the consistency of his word? Coincidence?
The Flying Spaghetti Monster is actually a good point though, it defeated and kept the Kansas State Board of education from teaching intelligent design. Someone had to think it a good idea or else it would have failed. As to being a little more original, would you like us to use Russell’s Teapot, or even, the Invisible Pink Unicorn?p.s i was wondering how long it would take before the famous "Flying Spaghetti Monster " would appear. Good grief can’t athiest come up with something a little more original?