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Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
Quote:I just find it really weird you took a comment like that seriously. I mean, the number of the beast doesn't even mean anything to me, since it's only in the Christian's New Testament. I just thought it was kind of funny.

I have to pay more attention to the Introduction threads.


Shalom.

Quote:Oh, and random fun fact: turns out that because of mistranslations, 616 might have been the original number.


I know. They hate to hear that. Bart Ehrman has made a career out of telling them that their inerrant writings are a pile of shit.
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
Alex, I'll have time to quote you on your stupidity tomorrow....At this point, I'm too tired to correct your ignorance on your post back....Especially on what it means for a religion to have it's own lobbyist here in the U.S. Back at ya, don't quote things you have no idea about....Are you really that naive??.....

Shalom brotherman.....Tongue
Intelligence is the only true moral guide...
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 24, 2010 at 10:33 am)Thomas Wrote: The sad part is you'll spend your life pooring over complex literature and twitching your upper lip in disgust at those lesser mortals around you who don't agree with you until you're laying on your death bed staring up at the ceiling, wondering why in the world you never considered religion before then.

You ever spoke to a dying Atheist? There's no such creature.
I'd go one step further and take out the word 'dying'. Wink Shades
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 24, 2010 at 4:56 pm)Minimalist Wrote: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-noahs-ark.html

* Some cave-dwelling arthropods can't survive in less than 100% relative humidity.

Cheers for the link, very nice site,

I thought 100% humidity was water?

A
EE WA EE WA, WIGGY WIGGY WIGGY, PLUNGA A PLUNGA A
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 25, 2010 at 2:26 pm)AngelaRachnid Wrote:
(February 24, 2010 at 4:56 pm)Minimalist Wrote: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-noahs-ark.html

* Some cave-dwelling arthropods can't survive in less than 100% relative humidity.

Cheers for the link, very nice site,

I thought 100% humidity was water?

A

Relative humidity, as in the maximum amount of water that air can hold at a certain temperature.
Best regards,
Leo van Miert
Horsepower is how hard you hit the wall --Torque is how far you take the wall with you
Pastafarian
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 24, 2010 at 8:37 pm)tavarish Wrote: I'll elaborate and clear up any misconceptions.

Taoism - Has huge influence in the eastern world, and was promoted by the Song emperors, then dismissed. It is, however, one of five religions recognized and funded by the state government of the People's Republic of China.
Which proves it seeks a theocracy how?

Quote:Fundamentalism - stems from a religious following. Fanaticism of any form can be detrimental to a healthy society, but moderate religion opens the door for fundamentalism, as there is no set standard and no fine line to cross. You either encourage everyone to practice what they want, or you don't. Notice I said encourage and not allow. I'm not advocating getting rid of the freedom of/from religion.
See, this is the thing though - fundamentalism and fanaticism can stem from many sources, religious, political or otherwise. It's the fanaticism that's the problem, not religion itself.

Quote:Buddhism - the 4th largest religion in the world with 1/3-1/2 of a billion people. It has massive influence in Asia and in many cases, is state sponsored.
It having a large number of followers is hardly evidence of some power-grabbing conspiracy.

Quote:Sikhism - had a formidable military and political organization during medieval India. They have a massive following in India as well. Though they make it a point not to proselytize, it is apparent that their previous Empire and political motivations (leading to a state-sponsored assasination) portray them as more than just people with a set of common beliefs. Many people have died and continue to perish because of this religion and others. If that's not control, I don't know what is.
Like Zoroastrianism, this is a religion that was once powerful but isn't anymore.

Quote:Jainism - Branched from the same Shramana tradition from which Buddhism came. It was the predominant religion in India in the 9th century, and continues spreading today, even to the western world. 10-12 million people make it the smallest of all major religions, they pretty much shaped Indian culture to what it is now. It has gone through many legal proceedings to be recognized by the Indian government as a minority religion, in order to gain influence in various regions.
Again, you seem to be confusing "influential" with "they're out for power!!!"

Quote:Shintoism - the religion of Japan. It has drawn massive influence by way of Japanese pop culture and anime/manga. Although Shintoism and Buddhism are not the same thing, people practice them both, as a mix called syncretism. Throughout Japan's history, Shintoism has been used for political control of regimes, and at one time required all Japanese families to register and practice the religion. Late 19th century gave rise to State Shinto, in which the process of mass indoctrination could occur with state support.
Hm, never knew that.

Quote:Tenrikyo - has had troubling times in Japan, but continues to grow, as it has 2 million followers worldwide and over 16,000 churches in Japan alone. They have church services (not necessary), doctrine, a belief system that in many aspects mirrors Christianity, and they seek political acknowledgement. It's classified as a new religious movement, and they promote proselytism via social work.
I guess this one is too new (religion-wise) to judge yet. I dunno though, I fucking hate proselytism.

Quote:
Unitarianism
- founded on Christian doctrine, but promotes itself as non-denominational.
Unitarian universalism, it's different from regular unitarianism (a type of Christianity which rejects the trinity).

Quote:They still employ a church hierarchy, which then enforces specific doctrine regarding spiritual growth and social control. They make it a point to proselytize with "elevator speeches". They are HEAVILY involved in civil rights matters, and hold conventions at their churches for the same reasons.
Indeed, but I'm still not sure what this is evidence of. A number of Gay rights groups are "heavily involved in civil rights matters", does this prove the homosexual community is out to rule the world?
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 25, 2010 at 2:00 pm)Watson Wrote:
(February 24, 2010 at 10:33 am)Thomas Wrote: You ever spoke to a dying Atheist? There's no such creature.
I'd go one step further and take out the word 'dying'. Wink Shades
Erm...you do realise most of us here are atheists right?
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
My point is it religion a method for control of people. They have massive influence, an internal hierarchy, and ways to promote their own sociopolitical agendas. Don't think any of this happened by accident. I was saying religion wants theocracies as an extreme statement. Most of them proselytize (social influence), all of them require government acknowledgement and often funding, (political/economic influence), and none are that way by accident or by-product of faith.

If you think that a thousand year old tradition, built on the fundamentals of theocratic agendas, does not want to retain its once-held power, then I suggest you check out how much legislation in the world is based on religious ideology. I'm not talking about not murdering people either. I'm saying bans on certain types of foods, practices, differences in working schedules, acknowledgement of scientific discoveries, and support of countries with other contrasting religions.

Also, just because a religion isn't popular now, doesn't mean it didn't hope to attain maximum political strength. It just means another religion took its place, which is exactly what happened. The same thing when a market gets oversaturated and switches its buying habits. People just liked the other product better.

I would love it if religions were just groups of like minded people that had beliefs and kept it to themselves and didn't try to impose on my beliefs or lifestyle, economically, socially and politically. Unfortunately the world does not work this way.
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
(February 26, 2010 at 3:07 pm)Tiberius Wrote:
(February 25, 2010 at 2:00 pm)Watson Wrote:
(February 24, 2010 at 10:33 am)Thomas Wrote: You ever spoke to a dying Atheist? There's no such creature.
I'd go one step further and take out the word 'dying'. Wink Shades
Erm...you do realise most of us here are atheists right?

So, either we don't exist or we are immortal. That's fucking sweet.
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RE: Fifty Questions That Christians Can't Answer
Quote:They have massive influence, an internal hierarchy, and ways to promote their own sociopolitical agendas.


They also squeal like stuck pigs whenever anyone complains about any of this!
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