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The Struggle to do Good
#1
The Struggle to do Good
I used to view pornography, but I stopped because of God's prompting, and I believe this prompting, pull, or urge can be used as evidence for God's existence. I didn't grow up in a Christian home. I didn't even grow up in a religious home. And I've grown up during a time where pornography is no longer seen as a taboo. So, where did this very powerful urge to not view pornography come from? I've always believed in God, but this urge didn't come in the form of, "Do not look at this or you're going to Hell," or "Do not look at this because God says so!" This urge was voiceless, foundational, and powerful.

In an attempt to uncover the source of this urge, I remember asking myself various questions like if two consenting adults choose to have sex on camera and purposely disseminate the footage to the public, then in what way am I wronging anyone by viewing the footage in the privacy of my own home? Or perhaps an even better example would be an unmarried woman who photographs herself nude, and then purposely disseminates the photo to the public. Why am I being urged to not look at such material?

If societal pressures or my upbringing did not produce this urge, then what or who produced it? If I were an atheist, then I suppose my next step would be to look at nature itself or more specifically, evolution. But the urge doesn't seem to come from there either, because how would it benefit the survival of the species for its members to not gaze upon unmarried naked women? On the contrary, if evolution were truly unguided and chiefly about increasing the survivability of each species, then I'd expect to have a powerful urge to look at naked unmarried women without any inner conflict.

If upbringing, society, or nature isn't producing this urge, then is this not a signpost to God? More specifically, to the Holy Spirit? I believe so.

With that being said, if you feel this prompting to do good, then it is from God and you should listen. He's trying to guide you to Him.
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#2
RE: The Struggle to do Good
Cool story bro!

What's God? Who's God? Which God? Major fail right there.
When talk of god is mentioned, it also brings along a metric fuckton of baggage, presumptions, and logical fallacies.
No God, No fear.
Know God, Know fear.
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#3
RE: The Struggle to do Good
(May 30, 2020 at 9:57 pm)ignoramus Wrote: Cool story bro!

What's God? Who's God? Which God? Major fail right there.
When talk of god is mentioned, it also brings along a metric fuckton of baggage, presumptions, and logical fallacies.

Before we get into which God (hint: it's the Christian one) if this urge doesn't come from upbringing, societal pressures, or nature, then where does it come from?
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#4
RE: The Struggle to do Good
Welcome aboard. Sounds like god is trying to guide you, personally. He isn't yanking on my dick, after all...
I am the Infantry. I am my country’s strength in war, her deterrent in peace. I am the heart of the fight… wherever, whenever. I carry America’s faith and honor against her enemies. I am the Queen of Battle. I am what my country expects me to be, the best trained Soldier in the world. In the race for victory, I am swift, determined, and courageous, armed with a fierce will to win. Never will I fail my country’s trust. Always I fight on…through the foe, to the objective, to triumph overall. If necessary, I will fight to my death. By my steadfast courage, I have won more than 200 years of freedom. I yield not to weakness, to hunger, to cowardice, to fatigue, to superior odds, For I am mentally tough, physically strong, and morally straight. I forsake not, my country, my mission, my comrades, my sacred duty. I am relentless. I am always there, now and forever. I AM THE INFANTRY! FOLLOW ME!
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#5
RE: The Struggle to do Good
Hello! Big Grin

Congratulations on your recovery/change.

Hug

Looking forwards to interacting with you more in future.

Glad you're ovecomming personal issues.   Thumb up

Not at work.
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#6
RE: The Struggle to do Good
(May 30, 2020 at 9:37 pm)brokenreflector Wrote: I used to view pornography, but I stopped because of God's prompting, and I believe this prompting, pull, or urge can be used as evidence for God's existence. I didn't grow up in a Christian home. I didn't even grow up in a religious home. And I've grown up during a time where pornography is no longer seen as a taboo. So, where did this very powerful urge to not view pornography come from? I've always believed in God, but this urge didn't come in the form of, "Do not look at this or you're going to Hell," or "Do not look at this because God says so!" This urge was voiceless, foundational, and powerful.

In an attempt to uncover the source of this urge, I remember asking myself various questions like if two consenting adults choose to have sex on camera and purposely disseminate the footage to the public, then in what way am I wronging anyone by viewing the footage in the privacy of my own home? Or perhaps an even better example would be an unmarried woman who photographs herself nude, and then purposely disseminates the photo to the public. Why am I being urged to not look at such material?

If societal pressures or my upbringing did not produce this urge, then what or who produced it? If I were an atheist, then I suppose my next step would be to look at nature itself or more specifically, evolution. But the urge doesn't seem to come from there either, because how would it benefit the survival of the species for its members to not gaze upon unmarried naked women? On the contrary, if evolution were truly unguided and chiefly about increasing the survivability of each species, then I'd expect to have a powerful urge to look at naked unmarried women without any inner conflict.

If upbringing, society, or nature isn't producing this urge, then is this not a signpost to God? More specifically, to the Holy Spirit? I believe so.

With that being said, if you feel this prompting to do good, then it is from God and you should listen. He's trying to guide you to Him.

How do you know it is not the devil?
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#7
RE: The Struggle to do Good
I do not like being punched, stabbed, shot, assaulted, molested, I figure most folks don't like it either, so, I don't do those things.

Pretty simple. Wish-granting, magic sky fairies need not apply.
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#8
RE: The Struggle to do Good
(May 30, 2020 at 9:37 pm)brokenreflector Wrote: I used to view pornography, but I stopped because of God's prompting, and I believe this prompting, pull, or urge can be used as evidence for God's existence. I didn't grow up in a Christian home. I didn't even grow up in a religious home. And I've grown up during a time where pornography is no longer seen as a taboo. So, where did this very powerful urge to not view pornography come from? I've always believed in God, but this urge didn't come in the form of, "Do not look at this or you're going to Hell," or "Do not look at this because God says so!" This urge was voiceless, foundational, and powerful.

In an attempt to uncover the source of this urge, I remember asking myself various questions like if two consenting adults choose to have sex on camera and purposely disseminate the footage to the public, then in what way am I wronging anyone by viewing the footage in the privacy of my own home? Or perhaps an even better example would be an unmarried woman who photographs herself nude, and then purposely disseminates the photo to the public. Why am I being urged to not look at such material?

If societal pressures or my upbringing did not produce this urge, then what or who produced it? If I were an atheist, then I suppose my next step would be to look at nature itself or more specifically, evolution. But the urge doesn't seem to come from there either, because how would it benefit the survival of the species for its members to not gaze upon unmarried naked women? On the contrary, if evolution were truly unguided and chiefly about increasing the survivability of each species, then I'd expect to have a powerful urge to look at naked unmarried women without any inner conflict.

If upbringing, society, or nature isn't producing this urge, then is this not a signpost to God? More specifically, to the Holy Spirit? I believe so.

With that being said, if you feel this prompting to do good, then it is from God and you should listen. He's trying to guide you to Him.

"I used to beat off and felt quilty". Therefore, God!
God thinks it's fun to confuse primates. Larsen's God!






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#9
RE: The Struggle to do Good
(May 31, 2020 at 12:56 am)chimp3 Wrote:
(May 30, 2020 at 9:37 pm)brokenreflector Wrote: I used to view pornography, but I stopped because of God's prompting, and I believe this prompting, pull, or urge can be used as evidence for God's existence. I didn't grow up in a Christian home. I didn't even grow up in a religious home. And I've grown up during a time where pornography is no longer seen as a taboo. So, where did this very powerful urge to not view pornography come from? I've always believed in God, but this urge didn't come in the form of, "Do not look at this or you're going to Hell," or "Do not look at this because God says so!" This urge was voiceless, foundational, and powerful.

In an attempt to uncover the source of this urge, I remember asking myself various questions like if two consenting adults choose to have sex on camera and purposely disseminate the footage to the public, then in what way am I wronging anyone by viewing the footage in the privacy of my own home? Or perhaps an even better example would be an unmarried woman who photographs herself nude, and then purposely disseminates the photo to the public. Why am I being urged to not look at such material?

If societal pressures or my upbringing did not produce this urge, then what or who produced it? If I were an atheist, then I suppose my next step would be to look at nature itself or more specifically, evolution. But the urge doesn't seem to come from there either, because how would it benefit the survival of the species for its members to not gaze upon unmarried naked women? On the contrary, if evolution were truly unguided and chiefly about increasing the survivability of each species, then I'd expect to have a powerful urge to look at naked unmarried women without any inner conflict.

If upbringing, society, or nature isn't producing this urge, then is this not a signpost to God? More specifically, to the Holy Spirit? I believe so.

With that being said, if you feel this prompting to do good, then it is from God and you should listen. He's trying to guide you to Him.

"I used to beat off and felt quilty". Therefore, God!

If the guilt of beating off doesn't come from nature, societal pressures, or upbringing, then it would have to come from something metaphysical.

(May 31, 2020 at 12:41 am)Anomalocaris Wrote:
(May 30, 2020 at 9:37 pm)brokenreflector Wrote: I used to view pornography, but I stopped because of God's prompting, and I believe this prompting, pull, or urge can be used as evidence for God's existence. I didn't grow up in a Christian home. I didn't even grow up in a religious home. And I've grown up during a time where pornography is no longer seen as a taboo. So, where did this very powerful urge to not view pornography come from? I've always believed in God, but this urge didn't come in the form of, "Do not look at this or you're going to Hell," or "Do not look at this because God says so!" This urge was voiceless, foundational, and powerful.

In an attempt to uncover the source of this urge, I remember asking myself various questions like if two consenting adults choose to have sex on camera and purposely disseminate the footage to the public, then in what way am I wronging anyone by viewing the footage in the privacy of my own home? Or perhaps an even better example would be an unmarried woman who photographs herself nude, and then purposely disseminates the photo to the public. Why am I being urged to not look at such material?

If societal pressures or my upbringing did not produce this urge, then what or who produced it? If I were an atheist, then I suppose my next step would be to look at nature itself or more specifically, evolution. But the urge doesn't seem to come from there either, because how would it benefit the survival of the species for its members to not gaze upon unmarried naked women? On the contrary, if evolution were truly unguided and chiefly about increasing the survivability of each species, then I'd expect to have a powerful urge to look at naked unmarried women without any inner conflict.

If upbringing, society, or nature isn't producing this urge, then is this not a signpost to God? More specifically, to the Holy Spirit? I believe so.

With that being said, if you feel this prompting to do good, then it is from God and you should listen. He's trying to guide you to Him.

How do you know it is not the devil?

Does this mean you agree with the main point of the argument, that if this urge doesn't come from evolution, societal pressures, or upbringing, then it must come from something transcendental?
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#10
RE: The Struggle to do Good
So, what you're saying is, you'd rather be fucked by the biggest dick in existence?
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