(November 12, 2010 at 2:13 am)Shell B Wrote:Quite the special story that one, of course that doesn't tell the truth, there were some that didn't saw anything and became atheists because of it.(November 12, 2010 at 1:49 am)Minimalist Wrote: The gospel stories of how a crucified criminal was taken down for "proper burial" are a fine example of xtian special pleading.
I recently wrote an article about "Our Lady of Fatima" and it was interesting how much fluff every religious site put into their commentary on the events. They add so much "religious people are good" and "everyone else really wants to bow to god" shit that they make it more unbelievable. The "Miracle of the Sun," is said to have occurred when the children were done seeing their "visions" of the virgin Mary. The sun danced in the sky and convinced all present that Mary had really shown these kids visions. As if that wasn't unbelievable enough, they said that tens of thousands of people witnessed it and that the atheists who were present fell to their knees and began praying to god for forgiveness. Dipshits. First off, the visions supposedly happened over a matter of months in a small village in Portugal in 1913. So, they're basically saying that word spread like wildfire and tens of thousands of people thought this was so much more important than WWI that they just had to go. Also, who among the atheists here can imagine falling to your knees and praying?
The point with the kids is that they predicted events of WWI knowing absolutely nothing about the countries they were speaking off, supposedly, like russians backlashing against religion and all that shazz