(March 13, 2011 at 11:32 pm)Godschild Wrote: OnlyNatural, have you ever be in a church setting, it does not sound like it from your response? If you were rescued from a life threatening event would you thank the person who saved you even though others may have died, I think you would and I know I would. So why is thanking God any different? Thanking God for ones life in an event such as this is only natural (no pun intended) for christians, however they did not stop there I'm sure, they have and are praying for the families and friends who have lost loved ones and are praying for those who need to be rescued. I would say that the christian churches in Japan are already giving aide to those in need and helping in any way possible, I know that the churches from my area sent volunteers to the victims of Katrina and they where some of the first to arrive to that disaster. Please don't think of christians as selfish just because we are grateful that God spared lives, I would say that a number of christians died in the disaster also, for all you know God may have spared the lives of many nonbelievers and I personally believe He did. Many christians in America and around the world are giving of their time to pray for the victims of this disaster and the amount of money and goods donated to the relief effort will be awesome and all this is a good thing and guess what no strings will be attached. So you see God is working to help the people of Japan, christian and nonchristian alike, He is doing this through the hearts of His people.Everything good that happens, god did it. Everything bad that happens Satan or humans did it. You cannot defeat this line of argumentation, it has an answer for everything just no evidence or valid reasoning to back it up. Its the trick of the conman, who has conned himself into believing this utter nonsense. Praise the Lord for killing thousands and then garnering his troops to send a few bottles of water! Well done Jesus!
Min save your words and time we know what you think....God doesn't exist.
"I still say a church steeple with a lightning rod on top shows a lack of confidence"...Doug McLeod.