(October 18, 2015 at 5:14 am)Homeless Nutter Wrote:(October 18, 2015 at 3:24 am)Blondie Wrote: Very funny. It is a wonder you have just a fraction of a brain. What the crap is a unicornist anyway> You believe in unicorns pony boy? Learn to spell before you call someone closed-minded.[...]
Let me stop you right there.
Where exactly did I call you closed-minded, doofus? I used the word, sure - I didn't call you that. Learn to read, before you try to be witty, jesus-breath... Oh, no - I'm sure you're very open-minded, since obviously you lack basic knowledge, that teenagers are expected to have. I imagine you're pretty "open" to the idea of Santa Claus and Easter Bunny as well...
Oh and by the way, let me introduce you to something - it's called "a dictionary" and you might do well to pick it up sometimes.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/closed-minded
If it's all the same to you - I'm going to skip the rest of your effort, since you obviously have nothing interesting to say, you suck at insults and your a** has been torched enough.
Have a fine day.
Very funny that you are using a dictionary that Noah Webster wrote who happened to be a Christian. Don't you all have a dictionary written by atheists or something?
Religion was an important aspect of Noah Webster’s life. As a boy, he attended church with his family and learned to read from the King James Bible. His father was a deacon in the local Congregational church, the highest lay position. As he aged and raised his own family, Noah’s faith grew even stronger. He led his wife and children in daily prayers, using a prayer book he wrote.
In April 1808, Noah Webster’s two oldest daughters, Emily (17) and Julia (15), attended a revival meeting where they felt “God’s touch.” They convinced their father and mother to join them at another meeting where they too felt changed. The experience, referred to as conversion, was comparable to the experience of being “born again” as a Christian today.
In 1832, Webster took on what he called “the most important enterprise of my life” – transcribing the 1611 King James Bible into language more understandable to American readers of his day. His changes were minor ones – for example, replacing out-of-date terms such as “kine” with “cows,” and replacing more vulgar words with more refined versions.
Despite Webster’s careful attention to detail and humble desire to more clearly “present to the readers the Word of God,” his Bible was not well received. It is now one of the rarest American Bibles ever produced.
http://noahwebsterhouse.org/discover/noah-religion.htm