(August 10, 2014 at 8:32 pm)Thumpalumpacus Wrote: I assume you received a sensation. Let us say then that that sensation was your imagination only, so as to take it out of hearing.ah, no. Feelings have nothing to do with biblical Christianity.
God has given me revelation and insight in business and in exegetical matters well beyond what I have train for. (That is why I can answer your unanswerable questions concerning biblical Christianity.)
Quote:My point about fairness is that making such an uncharitable assumption about your relative (lack of) sanity is about as fair as you making assumptions about the sincerity of my faith in my youth -- to wit, you're being very unfair, and insulting.and this point fails because it assumes that communication is based on feeling.
Quote:What if worms had machine guns? Birds wouldn't fuck with them, brotha.no where in the bible does it say God is an Omni max God. If you believe otherwise please provide book chapter and verse. Otherwise know what you believe to be the "Judeo-Christian God" is little more than a traditional/non biblical view of Him. One He seldom supports, and one that leaves you to believe because this 'traditional/non biblical version of God' does not exist, then no version of God can.
If god isn't omnimax, that's fine. Then he isn't the Judeo-Christian god. That brings up the point: what god are you talking about? There's a little shy of five thousand running around, which leprechaun is your favorite?
You reference Luke, and the Chritsian Bible, all the time. If you don't think that that god is omnimax, you're a blasphemer. If you do think he's omnimax, you're arguing disingenuously here. Which is it?
This is exactly what I mean by God allowing the trials of life to wash the foolishly built house away, and once your deeply beloved version was proven to be inaccurate, and if you kept knocking God could help you build your house on the rock.
(August 9, 2014 at 9:58 pm)Drich Wrote: and if God confirmed His presents to you while you thought He was an Omnimax God? Would you then tear down your house and seek out who God really is or would you continue to build your house that was built on the sand?
Quote:The god I believed in didn't answer, so I discarded that hypothesis.ah... No you didn't. If you discarded your Version of God once the experiences of your life showed you it was wrong, you followed the parable of the wise and foolish (you being the foolish one) builders to a tee.