RE: What makes the Christian God different from thr thousands of other Gods out there?
March 6, 2014 at 2:44 pm
Anybody who thinks they have communicated with a diety like Jehova has actually probably just misinterpurtted signs of the Aesir. Remember that Odin can assume the form of a Jehova like being. Remeber that Odin is the All-Father, and it is only his infinite wisdom of the future that he aquired at the cost of one eye that holds back ragnarok.
Jehova does not appear once in the sagas. That means he isn't real. The sagas are perfectly accurate and have never been proven wrong. There are no gods that are not in the sagas. The sagas hold knowledge that could only be known by the Aesir themselves. When science has tried to disprove the sagas it has failed miserably.
Let me put it this way: If we presuppose that the sagas are correct would you rather follow Thor and be brave and true and therefore at the end of all thinks be allowed to join the shieldwall and face Jorgundmr as a man or would you rather be devoured into oblivion before the final battle? If we presuppose that the Sagas are correct then not following the teachings of the Aesir is pure folly. Whats more, since we know that the teachings of the Aesir are true we know that we are making the right choice. The Aesir form the only coherent basis for morality and knowledge because we know that their writtings cannot be false.
Let me put it to you like this: What do you have to lose by not believing in the Aesir? If we are right and the Aesir are real then you earn an eternity of feasting in the hall of Odin before the opportunity to be a hero at the battle at the end of all things. If we are wrong then you lose nothing, but you will have still lived a good and noble life following the tennants of the Aesir.
To anyone who thinks they have had a divine encounter with the god of the isrealites: ask yourself could it not have just as easily been Odin who can assume all forms? Did he not tell you of his son who is the protector and savior of humanity? That must surely be Thor.
Please provide evidence for the existinance of the god of the isrealites becuase I have provided concrete evidence for the Aesir.
Jehova does not appear once in the sagas. That means he isn't real. The sagas are perfectly accurate and have never been proven wrong. There are no gods that are not in the sagas. The sagas hold knowledge that could only be known by the Aesir themselves. When science has tried to disprove the sagas it has failed miserably.
Let me put it this way: If we presuppose that the sagas are correct would you rather follow Thor and be brave and true and therefore at the end of all thinks be allowed to join the shieldwall and face Jorgundmr as a man or would you rather be devoured into oblivion before the final battle? If we presuppose that the Sagas are correct then not following the teachings of the Aesir is pure folly. Whats more, since we know that the teachings of the Aesir are true we know that we are making the right choice. The Aesir form the only coherent basis for morality and knowledge because we know that their writtings cannot be false.
Let me put it to you like this: What do you have to lose by not believing in the Aesir? If we are right and the Aesir are real then you earn an eternity of feasting in the hall of Odin before the opportunity to be a hero at the battle at the end of all things. If we are wrong then you lose nothing, but you will have still lived a good and noble life following the tennants of the Aesir.
To anyone who thinks they have had a divine encounter with the god of the isrealites: ask yourself could it not have just as easily been Odin who can assume all forms? Did he not tell you of his son who is the protector and savior of humanity? That must surely be Thor.
Please provide evidence for the existinance of the god of the isrealites becuase I have provided concrete evidence for the Aesir.
Companions the creator seeks, not corpses, not herds and believers. Fellow creators the creator seeks -- those who write new values on new tablets. Companions the creator seeks, and fellow harvesters; for everything about him is ripe for the harvest. - F. Nietzche