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what being apart from the law means.
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 1:00 am)FallentoReason Wrote: I forgive you, as long as you understand the fundamental point though; that trivialities in someone's life are irrelevant. We're discussing the specifics from a philosophical point, meaning that particular events in our life are undermined by the fact that we could have been wrong from the very beginning, regardless of the outcome.
..And if a given philosophical point was literally designed to dismiss God, then what? Do i surrender my ablity to think so I can attain the status of being philosophically prudent to simply follow what the group thinks to be sound reasoning? Do you not see anything wrong with this philosophy?

Quote:Perfect. Then it seems like you agree with what everyone here is saying; that the believer fulfils their own needs.
Asked and answered like three times now.

Quote:Said every religion ever invented.
Said you.

Quote:Agreed, if your particular god actually existed. More to the point though, for the delusion to persist, one must keep overriding reason with faith.
Can you give an example of a healthy relationship where one person remain in a constiant state of unfaithfulness, and the other remains in said relationship?

This is what I was referring to in my opening paragraph. In that what if a ' philosophical point" was designed to exclude God? It seems you have over looked a great deal of Legitmate "philosophical points" to come to your final conclusion that excludes the existance of God.

Your fallacious reasoning gets tiring...(Those are actually your words here but I thought I could borrow them to undergird the Evidence I have provided that shows your actual "fallacious reasoning" in action.)

Quote:You need to cut out this modified use of the No True Scotsman fallacy.
ROFLOL Your Calling.. you know what never mind. I wrong you by bring your personal stuff into the conversation, when it was not warranted, so let me give you a pass on your 'modified no true scotsman.' That said take the time to look up that fallacy before you "modify it" and try and use it again.

Quote:Throughout these threads, I persistently keep seeing you tell people they're doing it wrong and that you have the True Method™ for whatever might be the discussion at the time. I.e. the person didn't achieve the desired outcome, therefore the "Drich Verdict" is that you've got it all wrong and that Drich clearly has it right, always.
Smile
If there were people literally dying of thirst, and they were all standing before a water fountain that only works if the knob is turned clockwise, but the person in front dying of thirst will only turn it counter clock wise, and as a result get no water. Angered, he turns to the crowd and say to move on, the water fountain is broken.. Isn't it the responsiablity of the person who knows how to get water from the fountain to say something to the rest? Even if it makes ALL of them look foolish for turning the knob the wrong way? even if the rest judge him as proud, for being able to drink when the rest are dying of thirst? to what end is this person obligated to help those who want to drink the water from the fountain? Or is it ok to quitely drink while others die of thirst?
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 12:27 am)Drich Wrote: What is being advertized? that anyone who A/S/K will experience The Holy Spirit/God. How is this false advertising?

Because it is presented as if it is a matter of inquiry, of asking a question and receiving an answer. It is nothing of the sort. It is coming up with an answer yourself and awaiting verification. The answer is entirely dependent on what you expect to get.

Quote:Have you considered that the reason this method was put into place was to help seperate the wheat and the weeds? To even further seperate the wheat from the Chaff?

Of course I have, and that is why the whole thing is a stupid joke. You can't ask the question honestly and ever expect an answer.

Quote:God Demands that we first Humble ourselves before Him, and then allow Him to lift us up.
Ever think that if You can not Humble yourself before God and do this one thing, then maybe He does not want anything to do with you?

That is precisely what I am demonstrating: you have to make assumptions for this to even work. You cannot humble yourself before God until you assume he's even there and before you assume that the Bible is correct in requiring you to humble yourself. Just a giant con for giant suckers.

Quote:NONE of this stuff is needed. Christ tells us (whether you believe it or even know of it or not.

Fuck's sake, listen to you. I have to accept ALL of those things on that list before what "christ tells me" matters!


Quote:All that one needs to have is the faith of a mustard seed that will lead him to A/S/K, and the Holy Spirit will take care of the rest of your list and then some.

I don't think mustard seeds are capable of faith.

Quote:When I started I could not check any of those items off of the list. All I had was an honest desire to know the truth, and enough loyality to be faithful to what God gave me. And even then I was only as faithful as i needed to be. The only real thing I brought to this adventure was a driving desire to know God if there was a God to be known.

That paragraph is full of assumptions. The biggest one is assuming that you ever got an answer.

If you did not have the assumption that there was a personal God who cared about you, you would never have attempted to contact that specific God using a specific biblical method. Perhaps you would have made a naked plea to whatever God listened, but that would not have gotten you an answer from Yahweh. Yahweh is not interested in answering questions from people who don't already believe in him, you've said as much yourself.

Quote:How long does one masturbate before he has the courage to A/S/K out a proper mate?

Even if I had the courage to 'ask' a fictional person on a date, I'd have to seriously delude myself into thinking I could ever receive an answer.
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 1:39 am)Drich Wrote:
(February 27, 2013 at 1:00 am)FallentoReason Wrote: I forgive you, as long as you understand the fundamental point though; that trivialities in someone's life are irrelevant. We're discussing the specifics from a philosophical point, meaning that particular events in our life are undermined by the fact that we could have been wrong from the very beginning, regardless of the outcome.

..And if a given philosophical point was literally designed to dismiss God, then what? Do i surrender my ablity to think so I can attain the status of being philosophically prudent to simply follow what the group thinks to be sound reasoning? Do you not see anything wrong with this philosophy?

Yes, that you have strawmanned your way through it. It has nothing to do with trying to fit in. I've simply highlighted a very simple observation that the individual is able to feed to themselves what they require/expect of their particular belief. A/S/K/ is nothing but the elaborate trick of the con man, given that any religious person can tell me about their experiences with their god.

It's a simple concept that you can't grasp, because you won't for a second admit that you could be wrong -- that you are actually speaking to yourself like you [most likely] see people of other religions speaking to themselves because their god is false.

Quote:
Quote:Said every religion ever invented.
Said you.

Unfortunately, this doesn't buy you a special token that excludes your particular religion from the possibility of being a perfect con. Still waiting for justification as to why I should consider your variation of how to communicate with God over other religions' ways as the true way.

Quote:Can you give an example of a healthy relationship where one person remain in a constiant state of unfaithfulness, and the other remains in said relationship?

I can give an example of a relationship with 100% faithfulness that doesn't work: your wife comes home at very irregular hours of the night. Because you're so faithful, you don't for one second ask yourself that she's sleeping with other men.

Quote:This is what I was referring to in my opening paragraph. In that what if a ' philosophical point" was designed to exclude God? It seems you have over looked a great deal of Legitmate "philosophical points" to come to your final conclusion that excludes the existance of God.

Fail. I'm a Deist.

Quote:Your fallacious reasoning gets tiring...(Those are actually your words here but I thought I could borrow them to undergird the Evidence I have provided that shows your actual "fallacious reasoning" in action.)

Your delusions are proof that you can't properly grasp the points being discussed, just like you failed to realise I'm a Deist.

Quote:Your Calling.. you know what never mind. I wrong you by bring your personal stuff into the conversation, when it was not warranted, so let me give you a pass on your 'modified no true scotsman.' That said take the time to look up that fallacy before you "modify it" and try and use it again.

The fallacy has to do with excluding someone from a particular group as having never been a "true" member of that group. You do the exact same thing, but with theological methods such as A/S/K. People continually keep telling you they have tried when they were a Christian, but you keep telling them they were doing it all wrong i.e. they never tried out the method properly. Not only are you being fallacious, but you're being arrogant by claiming that YOU know the way and we don't. You are literally stripping the former believer of everything they used to stand for and discrediting the sincere faith they used to have. That's low.

Quote:If there were people literally dying of thirst, and they were all standing before a water fountain that only works if the knob is turned clockwise, but the person in front dying of thirst will only turn it counter clock wise, and as a result get no water. Angered, he turns to the crowd and say to move on, the water fountain is broken.. Isn't it the responsiablity of the person who knows how to get water from the fountain to say something to the rest? Even if it makes ALL of them look foolish for turning the knob the wrong way? even if the rest judge him as proud, for being able to drink when the rest are dying of thirst? to what end is this person obligated to help those who want to drink the water from the fountain? Or is it ok to quitely drink while others die of thirst?

Your assumption here is that people are thirsty to begin with. I can tell you right now the only one thirsty is yourself. I don't know your past, but I do know of more people than I can count who are Christian because they have had a traumatic experience/mental issues/lost a loved one... basically it's a crutch they need and they thirst for a resolution -- an answer to their suffering. I personally thirst for truth, but what you offer is too vague, too mysterious, too ambiguous for it to be called a self-evident truth.
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it" ~ Aristotle
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 12:50 am)Drich Wrote:
(February 27, 2013 at 12:44 am)Question Mark Wrote: No problem, I'll use words with less than four syllables.

ASK, Ask, Seek Knock.

Ask and it shall be given to you, seek and you will find, knock and the door will be opened to you.
In effect, ask god to prove himself to you, and apparently he will. The clever cover up here is that if someone is bent upon finding god, then sure, they'll fool themselves into believing it for any reason. I've heard of people walking through parks and seeing three waterfalls on a decorative water display, and interpreting it as a sign of the trinity.
Anyone of moderate or skeptical tendencies who isn't going to fall into something so fanciful, are brushed off as not having enough faith.

The whole thing is predicated upon having faith. As Ryan explained earlier, you have to accept that the christian god and the christian dogma is true in order to reach the conclusion that god will reveal himself through this means.
Other cultures have used the same argument of ask and you shall receive to prove any number of gods.
I am having the same conversation with Ryan right now, do I honestly need to have it with you at the same time? or can't you just read what I wrote to Him and you respond to what has already been said?

Well then let me get to the point.

On the advice of several people years ago when I was first questioning the accuracy of the christian belief system, I tried asking god for guidance int he same manner as is described in Matthew, and a few other ways such as outright praying, reading some scripture, etc., and none of it worked.

Why would you say that god did not reveal himself to me when I A/S/Ked?
If you believe it, question it. If you question it, get an answer. If you have an answer, does that answer satisfy reality? Does it satisfy you? Probably not. For no one else will agree with you, not really.
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 1:39 am)Drich Wrote: If there were people literally dying of thirst, and they were all standing before a water fountain that only works if the knob is turned clockwise, but the person in front dying of thirst will only turn it counter clock wise, and as a result get no water. Angered, he turns to the crowd and say to move on, the water fountain is broken..
I like how your analogy combines "sour grapes" and "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink." Or you can lead an atheist to the Living Water, but you can't make him believe.
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 9:39 am)ChadWooters Wrote:
(February 27, 2013 at 1:39 am)Drich Wrote: If there were people literally dying of thirst, and they were all standing before a water fountain that only works if the knob is turned clockwise, but the person in front dying of thirst will only turn it counter clock wise, and as a result get no water. Angered, he turns to the crowd and say to move on, the water fountain is broken..
I like how your analogy combines "sour grapes" and "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink." Or you can lead an atheist to the Living Water, but you can't make him accept.

Such a loose argument cuts both ways; you can lead a religious person to reasons why they're irrational, but you can't make them accept those reasons.
"It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it" ~ Aristotle
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 9:41 am)FallentoReason Wrote: Such a loose argument cuts both ways; you can lead a religious person to reasons why they're irrational, but you can't make them accept those reasons.
I didn't mean that it what a convincing proof. I just thought it was a clever formulation. Personally, I thinks it applies to any particular set of beliefs. What I mean is this. An informed person can make a the case for certain facts, but an ignorant person can still choose not to be convinced. What Drich did was make the old proverb even more interesting. Not only does the ignorant person choose not to be convinced he is actively hostile against anyone that goes against his assessment.

What I notice is that Drich presents his case respectfully and supports his arguements to the best of his understanding. Whether he is right or wrong is besides the point. For all his effort, he gets maligned, insulted and his claims are mocked. He doesn't stoop to that level. Point is a good many of the nihilists here are not just unconvinced. They are openly hostile to anyone who believes in God and they reason from that hate.
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 2:05 am)Ryantology Wrote: Because it is presented as if it is a matter of inquiry, of asking a question and receiving an answer. It is nothing of the sort. It is coming up with an answer yourself and awaiting verification. The answer is entirely dependent on what you expect to get.
Again, for some yes. And for those (as you can personally atest) Their faith peeters out because they come to the realization that they are the ones making God fit everyday situations.

For Other's God is a force completely independant of How one thinks/operates. For example I responded to one of your posts 2 or 3 different times (same post) and for whatever reason the post would not stick. I press send/post and nothing would happen. One time it posted but the whole message was lost. I thought/prayed about what I had said and realized everything I told you was wrong. I wound up telling you the oppsite.

Quote:Of course I have, and that is why the whole thing is a stupid joke. You can't ask the question honestly and ever expect an answer.
Why not?

Quote:That is precisely what I am demonstrating: you have to make assumptions for this to even work. You cannot humble yourself before God until you assume he's even there and before you assume that the Bible is correct in requiring you to humble yourself. Just a giant con for giant suckers.
actually you can. When i did all I did was admit openly to any deity listening that I did not know if anything was out there, but followed up with a desire to want to know the truth.

Quote:Fuck's sake, listen to you. I have to accept ALL of those things on that list before what "christ tells me" matters!
Or you can just admit to what you don't know, and ask for help understanding the decrepencies between how you have been taught to think and how God says He presents Himself. Faith of a mustard seed is all it takes to get this process started.

Quote:I don't think mustard seeds are capable of faith.
Now your beginning to understand..
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mustard_seed

Quote:That paragraph is full of assumptions. The biggest one is assuming that you ever got an answer.
That is why it is called exploration. Do you think humanity would have survived as long as it has, if everyone was so afraid to explore beyond what we currently can comperhend?

Quote:If you did not have the assumption that there was a personal God who cared about you, you would never have attempted to contact that specific God using a specific biblical method.
I started out just looking for the truth, and decided to follow it no matter where it lead me.

Quote:Perhaps you would have made a naked plea to whatever God listened, but that would not have gotten you an answer from Yahweh. Yahweh is not interested in answering questions from people who don't already believe in him, you've said as much yourself.
when/where?

(February 27, 2013 at 3:01 am)FallentoReason Wrote:
Quote:Yes, that you have strawmanned your way through it. It has nothing to do with trying to fit in. I've simply highlighted a very simple observation that the individual is able to feed to themselves what they require/expect of their particular belief.
Only for a short time, then like you their faiths collaps when they are honestly confronted by the lack of actual activity of God in their lives. You yourself admitted to as much.

Quote:A/S/K/ is nothing but the elaborate trick of the con man, given that any religious person can tell me about their experiences with their god.
A/S/K as Luke 11 demonstrates is not about seeking the experiences of Others. At the End of that Passage Christ promises to deliver a Measure of the Holy Spirit to the person who A/S/K for themselves. To A/S/K is to meet God for yourself. Not to listen to how someone else met God.


Quote:It's a simple concept that you can't grasp, because you won't for a second admit that you could be wrong -- that you are actually speaking to yourself like you [most likely] see people of other religions speaking to themselves because their god is false.
It's hard to accept any substitutions when you've been to the mountain yourself and seen the promise land with your own eyes. The Reason nothing can convince me other wise is because i experienced God for myself.

Put your personal beliefs aside for one second and ask yourself if you experienced God on His terms, and He Himself gave you a confirmation/proof daily. Ask yourself what 'philosphy' could anyone offer you that would replace your relationship? what religion could shake your beliefs?

Quote:Unfortunately, this doesn't buy you a special token that excludes your particular religion from the possibility of being a perfect con. Still waiting for justification as to why I should consider your variation of how to communicate with God over other religions' ways as the true way.
It's real simple. If you wish to seek and worship the God of the Bible, then it is by the bible that you will find Him.

Quote:I can give an example of a relationship with 100% faithfulness that doesn't work: your wife comes home at very irregular hours of the night. Because you're so faithful, you don't for one second ask yourself that she's sleeping with other men.
This is not what i asked. I asked for you to provide an example of a healthy relationship where one or both of the two people being in a relationship where being unfaithful.

The Point being if 'we' do not value/honor relationships where one is unfaithful to the other, then why should God? More over if you are not faithful to what God has given you in the way of a relationship, then why should He stay and enable you to be a wicked person?

Quote:The fallacy has to do with excluding someone from a particular group as having never been a "true" member of that group. You do the exact same thing, but with theological methods such as A/S/K. People continually keep telling you they have tried when they were a Christian, but you keep telling them they were doing it all wrong i.e. they never tried out the method properly. Not only are you being fallacious, but you're being arrogant by claiming that YOU know the way and we don't. You are literally stripping the former believer of everything they used to stand for and discrediting the sincere faith they used to have. That's low.
Do i need to beat you with the no true scotsman fallacy before you let this one go?

The No True Scotsmam fallacy Centers around the Idea that their aren't any prerequsites to be a 'true scotsman' and someone just randomly makes up rules to being a 'true scots man.'

How does that differ from Christianity? There are a written set of prerequsites of being a Christian. Meaning one can legitmatly discern a Christian from someone claiming to be one.

All anyone has to do is open the bible and compare what is written to what the person has done. If that person has not followed what is written, then it is pretty easy to discern whether or not that person fit the biblical defination of a Christian.

Quote: Your assumption here is that people are thirsty to begin with.
A non thirsty person would not argue as to how to operate the fountain. They would simply ignore the instruction and move on. No one would spend hours debating the operation of the fountain if he were not a little parched.

Quote:I can tell you right now the only one thirsty is yourself. I don't know your past, but I do know of more people than I can count who are Christian because they have had a traumatic experience/mental issues/lost a loved one... basically it's a crutch they need and they thirst for a resolution -- an answer to their suffering. I personally thirst for truth, but what you offer is too vague, too mysterious, too ambiguous for it to be called a self-evident truth.
Has the whole universe always revolved around how your understanding of it? I mean wow.. What I offer is a starting line and a direction. i wish I could give you more, but this is all God offers any of us to begin with. either you will take him up on what He has offered or you will not.

(February 27, 2013 at 8:44 am)Question Mark Wrote: [quote='Drich' pid='406824' dateline='1361940600']
I am having the same conversation with Ryan right now, do I honestly need to have it with you at the same time? or can't you just read what I wrote to Him and you respond to what has already been said?

Well then let me get to the point.

On the advice of several people years ago when I was first questioning the accuracy of the christian belief system, I tried asking god for guidance int he same manner as is described in Matthew, and a few other ways such as outright praying, reading some scripture, etc., and none of it worked.

Why would you say that god did not reveal himself to me when I A/S/Ked?

How does your version Compare to what the Neighbor did in the Parable?

I can see one huge difference right off the bat.

(February 27, 2013 at 9:39 am)ChadWooters Wrote:
(February 27, 2013 at 1:39 am)Drich Wrote: If there were people literally dying of thirst, and they were all standing before a water fountain that only works if the knob is turned clockwise, but the person in front dying of thirst will only turn it counter clock wise, and as a result get no water. Angered, he turns to the crowd and say to move on, the water fountain is broken..
I like how your analogy combines "sour grapes" and "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink." Or you can lead an atheist to the Living Water, but you can't make him believe.

Big Grin This is actually the second encarnation of this line of reasoning. The first time through it was about chocolate, and a vending machine.. (Something about pushing A2 over and over again when the Chocolate was under B1, but stll expecting Chocolate, simply because they went through the motions of putting money in the machine and pushing buttons.)

The water bit just seem to be easier to explain, I did not even think about the horse/living water bit till after I read it. I guess it's true that even a broken clock is right two times each day.

(February 27, 2013 at 9:41 am)FallentoReason Wrote:
(February 27, 2013 at 9:39 am)ChadWooters Wrote: I like how your analogy combines "sour grapes" and "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink." Or you can lead an atheist to the Living Water, but you can't make him accept.

Such a loose argument cuts both ways; you can lead a religious person to reasons why they're irrational, but you can't make them accept those reasons.

'Rational' is subjective. For what is rational in a given culture at a given point in time, can be deem irrational by following generations or even other cultures (Just ask: The Germans are Comming)

So to be deem irrational by irrational people isn't as worry some as you think it to be.

(February 27, 2013 at 12:31 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: Whether he is right or wrong is besides the point.

Indeed! For our only Charge is to be Faithful to what we are given. Being 'right' has little to do with anything, for the same Grace that covers us when we willfully sin also covers us when we are doing our best to repersent what we understand of the bible/God. Which subsequently allows for some many different expressions/'denominations' of this one faith.
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RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 3:27 pm)Drich Wrote: Well then let me get to the point.

On the advice of several people years ago when I was first questioning the accuracy of the christian belief system, I tried asking god for guidance int he same manner as is described in Matthew, and a few other ways such as outright praying, reading some scripture, etc., and none of it worked.

Why would you say that god did not reveal himself to me when I A/S/Ked?

How does your version Compare to what the Neighbor did in the Parable?

I can see one huge difference right off the bat.

[/quote]

So why would you say that it didn't work for me?
If you believe it, question it. If you question it, get an answer. If you have an answer, does that answer satisfy reality? Does it satisfy you? Probably not. For no one else will agree with you, not really.
Reply
RE: what being apart from the law means.
(February 27, 2013 at 12:31 pm)ChadWooters Wrote: What I notice is that Drich presents his case respectfully and supports his arguements to the best of his understanding. Whether he is right or wrong is besides the point. For all his effort, he gets maligned, insulted and his claims are mocked. He doesn't stoop to that level. Point is a good many of the nihilists here are not just unconvinced. They are openly hostile to anyone who believes in God and they reason from that hate.

The point is no one is obligated to listen without overt contempt to any moron who would neither change his mind nor change the topic.

If he can talk about something else equally idiotic, but so long as it actually is something else, then we will tolerate him at least once.
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