Audie
Veteran Member
As long as you mean imaginary teams, maybe playing Martian stickball, yes.Well that’s like discussing the best team in the NFL with someone who doesn’t watch football.
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As long as you mean imaginary teams, maybe playing Martian stickball, yes.Well that’s like discussing the best team in the NFL with someone who doesn’t watch football.
Thanks for the hint, but it’s obvious to me that I am not infallible. I believe the Creator of heaven and earth, an omniscient, eternal Being is infallible, though.There was no flood, but your “ inspired” book pretends there was.
There might be a gof, it might have true words but there’s
not a chance you know that or what it is or means.
Your chosen beliefs are not the same as “ truth”.
Maybe you think you are infallible at this discernment business?
Here’s a hint-
You aren’t.
Of course. We all make, say, math mistakes.Thanks for the hint, but it’s obvious to me that I am not infallible. I believe the Creator of heaven and earth, an omniscient, eternal Being is infallible, though.
Neither God the Father, nor God the Son, nor God the Holy Spirit fit your obviously-biased description.Let us look at the Abrahamic God from a more accurate scriptural perspective, which is one that Christians often omit from their "God is love" sermons.
According to the Bible, God has infinite power (Psalm 147:5; Job 42:2; Daniel 2:21), infinite knowledge (Psalm 139:1–6; Isaiah 46:9–10; 1 John 3:20), and is present everywhere simultaneously (Psalm 139:7–10; Isaiah 40:12; Colossians 1:17). Having established these biblical claims about God's divine attributes, I will continue with my viewpoint. In my opinion, God is evil because, based on these scriptures, he created Adam and Eve knowing that they would disobey him after using the serpent to purposely tempt them with a forbidden fruit. According to the creation story, God not only punished Adam and Eve for their disobedience (which he knew would happen), but he also punished the serpent for doing what he knew it would do. But he didn't stop there; he punished and unjustly cursed the rest of humanity with a sinful nature for the sin of Adam and Eve, which the rest of humanity had no control over. He then devised a wicked plan to murder his own son by crucifying him in order to atone for his initial sin of creating humanity, knowing that they would become corrupt.
Furthermore, if God is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent, as the Bible claims, then surely he would know better than to create Adam and Eve and the rest of mankind, knowing that he would later regret creating humanity and repopulate the planet with the same morally flawed humans that he just annihilated in a global flood. According to Genesis 6:6, he regretted creating humanity as well as every animal, every creature that creeps on the ground, and the birds of the air. Thus, he carried out his plan to annihilate humanity in a global flood, with the exception of Noah and his family (Genesis 6:7-8).
In accordance with these scriptures, it is my opinion that God is morally depraved (sinful, evil, sadistic) to first create Adam and Eve knowing that they would disobey him and that he would punish them for their disobedience; second, he punished and cursed Satan (the serpent), despite using Satan to carry out his nefarious plan to tempt Adam and Eve into disobeying him; third, punish and curse the rest of humanity with a sinful nature because of Adam and Eve's disobedience against him, despite the fact that the rest of humanity had nothing to do with it; and finally, he brutally tortured and killed his own son to "redeem" humanity for behaving exactly the way he knew they would behave before he created Adam and Eve. I think that is truly evil (Isaiah 45:7).
I like this quote by Richard Dawkins: "The god of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully." After reading the Bible numerous times, I believe that he has accurately described the biblical God. He is portrayed as a loving and merciful heavenly father, but I think of him as being far worse than an abusive parent. Speaking as a former Christian, I think that he is the perfect example of a narcissistic and abusive father who only expresses his warped sense of love to his children whenever they do or say precisely what he wants them to do or say. His frightened children think that if they don't provoke him, then he won't hurt them, but they're not entirely sure because of his violent temper and lashes out when he becomes angry. Therefore, disobeying and upsetting him will result in punishment and hell to pay. This isn't a healthy relationship built on unconditional love, trust, and respect, but rather a toxic relationship based on fear and mistrust.
God is the Father, Jesus is the Son, and the Holy Spirit is the Bounty of God, whose luminous rays emanated from Jesus.Neither God the Father, nor God the Son, nor God the Holy Spirit fit your obviously-biased description.
Oh, there’s a great deal more you can do.
Ask questions, study, think, open your mind, say.
Was there really a flood?
Of course not, test it ten thousand ways, it fails them all.
Earth created in a 6 day poof? Sorta poetic but not a word of truth.
Adam and Eve? No.
With that zero- credibility start a person might- just might- ask
himself what kind of “Gods word” this book holds.
Some outside reading might include learning about confirmation bias, and intellectual integrity.
So you have willingly given up eternal life. That's some mistake!I've met many other Christians who grew up in a Christian home where they learned early on in life to never question God, the Bible, or any other Christian-related beliefs that they were taught, because it would upset their parents, their extended family, their Christian friends, their pastor, and the rest of the church congregation. I believe that it is then that a person learns how to be a genuine critical thinker by honestly reexamining their beliefs and reading the Bible without wearing the rose-colored glasses that they were forced and coerced to wear during their Christian upbringing. It takes a lot of courage.
I learned at a young age that questioning God was considered a grave sin among other Christians. So, I learned to keep my mouth shut and keep all of my doubts about God and the Bible to myself until I was living on my own and mustered up enough courage to reexamine the Bible, my beliefs about God, and everything else I had been taught as a devout Christian. Therefore, I know from personal experience that renouncing a genuinely held belief in God and Christian indoctrination can be frightening. I believed in God for forty years, so it was frightening to me, but I eventually learned how to think for myself and how to stand on my own two feet. I've also learned that I don't need to believe in God in order to be a good person, make moral decisions, and take care of myself and my family. I see my former belief as nothing more than an emotional crutch that was detrimental to my own mental health.
I'm absolutely convinced that I'm far better off in my life now that I've renounced my belief in God and my Christian faith. It was a very liberating and positive experience that has profoundly changed my life. I wish I had done this years ago. It was very difficult for me to forsake my Christian faith and let go of my belief in God. It was a matter of being completely honest with myself. I found the courage within myself to face my reality and let go of my Christian beliefs. I eventually learned how to care for myself and my family without feeling the need to rely on my faith in God. I realized that my faith in God was nothing more than false hope and an emotional crutch. I understood that if I was ever going to truly heal emotionally and change my life for the better, I needed to let go of this detrimental crutch that was ruining my life. I had to let go of it all. I understand now that Christianity was a prison for me.
There is a scripture that states, "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart" (Jeremiah 29:13). Well, I genuinely believed in God and sought him with all my heart for forty years, but I never found him. I did, however, find disappointment, sadness, fear, confusion, and a constant feeling of hopelessness during the years I believed in God and was a devout Christian. I'm elated to say that I'm now free of what I consider to be the entrapment of my Christian faith. So I have no doubt that I am considerably better off in my life now that I have let go of the belief, faith, and false hope I had in God.
According to my beliefs you have also willingly given up eternal life. That's some mistake!So you have willingly given up eternal life. That's some mistake!
According to my beliefs you have also willingly given up eternal life. That's some mistake!
“The Book of God is wide open, and His Word is summoning mankind unto Him. No more than a mere handful, however, hath been found willing to cleave to His Cause, or to become the instruments for its promotion. These few have been endued with the Divine Elixir that can, alone, transmute into purest gold the dross of the world, and have been empowered to administer the infallible remedy for all the ills that afflict the children of men. No man can obtain everlasting life, unless he embraceth the truth of this inestimable, this wondrous, and sublime Revelation.”
Christians do not even know what eternal life is according to their own Bible.I haven't given up eternal life, only the preferred doctrinal beliefs of evangelical Christianity regarding it.
I do not even know how the Bible depicts the afterlife, I only know what Christians believe about the afterlife, and those two are not necessarily the same. Anyone can make the Bible say whatever they want to believe, and that is what I think Christians do.In my opinion, the wrong spiritual path for me is to believe that the Bible's depictions of the afterlife are true when, in fact, I have no valid reason to believe them. Given everything I've experienced for the last 45 years of my life, I genuinely believe it would be intellectually dishonest of me to accept the Bible's depictions of the afterlife as absolute truth.
And of course, you, in your "wisdom", don't.Christians do not even know what eternal life is according to their own Bible.
Most Christians believe it means living forever in heaven and JW Christians believe it means living forever on earth.
It is kind of sad when a Baha'i who was never a Christian and never studied the Bible has to point out Bible verses to Christians.
John 17:3 says, "And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent".
Jesus defined eternal life as knowing the only true God, and Jesus Christ. That is all there is to it.
Jesus also said who will attain to eternal life, and it is not what most Christians believe, since the Christian doctrine says all you have to believe that Jesus died for your sins. That is not what Jesus said.
Matthew 25
45 Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me.
46 And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
I do not even know how the Bible depicts the afterlife, I only know what Christians believe about the afterlife, and those two are not necessarily the same. Anyone can make the Bible say whatever they want to believe, and that is what I think Christians do.
This is like somebody boasting about a failed marriage. "I tried it but it wasn't for me. My marriage was a failure, therefore marriage itself is a failure."In my opinion, it isn't a failure on the part of a Christian to genuinely reexamine their doctrinal beliefs and preferred biblical interpretation. In my life, this personal reflection eventually led me to renounce my belief in God and Christian faith. My deconversion gradually began as I was training to be a street preacher and evangelism team leader. My growing doubts about God, Jesus, and the Bible became even more substantial as I helped my nephew earn his Master of Theological Studies (MTS) degree. He was studying to become an ordained minister, but his extensive study of the Bible led him to eventually deconvert, as I did. We both believed that extensively studying the Bible would strengthen our faith, but we studied our way out of believing in God, Jesus, and the Bible. We've referred to this experience as taking off our rose-colored glasses. It dramatically changed his life as it did mine. It changed our lives.
I've noticed that some Christians seem to readily enjoy boasting about how they supposedly have "spiritual discernment" to properly understand the Bible, whereas we (and other non-Christians) do not, but what they seem to forget or stubbornly ignore is the fact that we (and many other non-Christians) were once Christians and are well-versed in it. We read it, studied it, and prayed for spiritual guidance when we were Christians. We didn't forget what we had learned when we renounced our Christian faith. We retained that knowledge and are now able to use it to challenge the credibility of the Bible. During the years I was a Christian, I thought that reading and studying the Bible on a daily basis would strengthen and deepen my faith in God and Jesus, but all I did was eventually study my way out of believing in God, Jesus, and the Bible. I will admit that it was a real eye-opener for me, but I'm glad I stayed the course.
I diligently read and studied the Bible on a daily basis throughout the thirty years I was a devout Christian. I extensively studied it and Christian theology while training to be a street preacher and evangelism team leader. In fact, I was a very effective street preacher and evangelism team leader for several years. I led many people to Christ, which I now deeply regret. I also studied the Bible and Christian theology in depth while assisting my nephew in his extended theological studies to become an ordained minister. He was studying to earn a Master of Theological Studies (MTS) degree. He eventually studied his way out of believing in the Bible and God, just as I did. A few weeks after I renounced my faith, he told me that he also renounced his after studying the Bible and Christian theology with me.
I genuinely believe that I'm far better off in my life without what I consider to be the entrapment of Christianity. I diligently sought God for forty years through daily prayer, worship, Bible studies, and ministries, only to end up disillusioned and heartbroken. As I've previously stated, it felt like a prison to me. I also believe that renouncing my Christian faith was one of the best decisions I've ever made for myself. I don't regret it in the least.
I never felt the sense of inner peace in my life that other Christians claimed to feel in theirs. On the contrary, I consistently felt sadness, confusion, and hopelessness. In fact, I never felt peace until after I renounced my belief in God and disavowed my Christian faith. It took some time for me to finally feel it. Prior to this, I had never experienced personal tranquility or freedom from emotional bondage, despite years of sincere prayer, daily reading and studying the Bible, genuine dedication to serving God in church ministries, as well as being a devoted street preacher and evangelism team leader.
I merely went through the motions and played church in the dire hope that I would start to feel something—anything that indicated to me that God is real and that he cares about me. I was desperate to know the truth. I appeared to be a joyful Christian on the outside, but on the inside, I was deeply bereft of hope, joy, and inner peace. I was constantly hurting and suffering emotionally, and no one else knew about my personal misery other than my husband. I am not exaggerating when I say that being a Christian was a nightmare for me. I'm relieved to be free, and I have no desire whatsoever to ever return to it.
I further explained my exodus out of Christianity in the following post.
Eternity Alone
I find biblical Christianity extremely plausible and rational. The indocrinated tend to think so. Critical thinkers disagree. No Christian can explain how anything in Christianity is plausibel and rational. No believer in religious lore does so based on facts and sound reasoning. But...www.religiousforums.com
Christians do not even know what eternal life is according to their own Bible.
Most Christians believe it means living forever in heaven and JW Christians believe it means living forever on earth.
It is kind of sad when a Baha'i who was never a Christian and never studied the Bible has to point out Bible verses to Christians.
John 17:3 says, "And this is eternal life, that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent".
Jesus defined eternal life as knowing the only true God, and Jesus Christ. That is all there is to it.
Jesus also said who will attain to eternal life, and it is not what most Christians believe, since the Christian doctrine says all you have to believe that Jesus died for your sins. That is not what Jesus said.
Matthew 25
45 Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me.
46 And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
I do not even know how the Bible depicts the afterlife, I only know what Christians believe about the afterlife, and those two are not necessarily the same. Anyone can make the Bible say whatever they want to believe, and that is what I think Christians do.
Good for you!Before I continue, I'd like to state unequivocally that no amount of disparaging remarks, obnoxious insults, shaming, or guilt-tripping from judgmental Christians would ever convince me to become a Christian again. I'm not sure how I can say it more emphatically: I don't want to ever be a Christian again.
Maybe you believe you know but you don't know what the afterlife will be like.And of course, you, in your "wisdom", don't.
No, that is not the reason that @Sgt. Pepper left Christianity.You tried and couldn't make it as a Christian because you lack faith. IMHO, that is nothing to brag about. In fact, it's tragic.
Good for you!
I cannot understand why anyone would ever want to be a Christian, but as I recall you did not become one by choice, you were a victim of circumstance.
No, that is not the reason that @Sgt. Pepper left Christianity.
Since she is my good friend I know the real reason, as she has described it on this forum numerous times.
You remind me of someone who walks out of a Shakesperian play, saying the plot is garbage. I don't think anyone wants to hear about your leaving Christianity over and over and over. It gets really tiresome.I'm re-posting this because I corrected some grammatical mistakes in my prior post.
Before I continue, I'd like to state unequivocally that no amount of disparaging remarks, obnoxious insults, shaming, or guilt-tripping from judgmental Christians would ever convince me to become a Christian again. I'm not sure how I can say it more emphatically: I don't want to ever be a Christian again.
In my opinion, it isn't a failure on the part of a Christian to genuinely reexamine their doctrinal beliefs and preferred biblical interpretation. In my life, this personal reflection eventually led me to renounce my belief in God and Christian faith. My deconversion gradually began as I was training to be a street preacher and evangelism team leader. My growing doubts about God, Jesus, and the Bible became even more substantial as I helped my nephew earn his Master of Theological Studies (MTS) degree. He was studying to become an ordained minister, but his extensive study of the Bible led him to eventually deconvert, as I did. We both believed that extensively studying the Bible would strengthen our faith, but we studied our way out of believing in God, Jesus, and the Bible. We've referred to this experience as taking off our rose-colored glasses. It dramatically changed his life as it did mine. It changed our lives.
I've noticed that some Christians seem to readily enjoy boasting about how they supposedly have "spiritual discernment" to properly understand the Bible, whereas non-Christians do not, but what they seem to forget or stubbornly ignore is the fact that I (and many other non-Christians) were once Christians and are well-versed in it. We read it, studied it, and prayed for spiritual guidance when we were Christians. We didn't forget what we had learned when we renounced our Christian faith. We retained that knowledge and are now able to use it to challenge the credibility of the Bible. During the years I was a devout Christian, I thought that reading and studying the Bible on a daily basis would strengthen and deepen my faith in God and Jesus, but all I did was eventually study my way out of believing in God, Jesus, and the Bible. I will admit that it was a real eye-opener for me, but I'm glad I stayed the course.
I diligently read and studied the Bible on a daily basis throughout the thirty years I was a devout Christian. I extensively studied it and Christian theology while training to be a street preacher and evangelism team leader. In fact, I was a very effective street preacher and evangelism team leader for several years. I led many people to Christ, which I now deeply regret. I also studied the Bible and Christian theology in depth while assisting my nephew in his extended theological studies to become an ordained minister. He was studying to earn a Master of Theological Studies (MTS) degree. He eventually studied his way out of believing in the Bible and God, just as I did. A few weeks after I renounced my faith, he told me that he also renounced his after extensively studying the Bible and Christian theology with me. And to this day, he doesn't regret his decision, and I certainly don't regret mine either.
I genuinely believe that I'm far better off in my life without what I consider to be the entrapment of Christianity. I diligently sought God for forty years through daily prayer, worship, Bible studies, and ministries, only to end up disillusioned and heartbroken. As I've previously stated, it felt like a prison to me. I also believe that renouncing my Christian faith was one of the best decisions I've ever made for my mental health. I don't regret it in the least.
I never felt the sense of inner peace in my life that other Christians claimed to feel in theirs. On the contrary, I consistently felt sadness, confusion, and hopelessness. In fact, I never felt peace until after I renounced my belief in God and disavowed my Christian faith. It took some time for me to finally feel it. Prior to this, I had never experienced personal tranquility or freedom from emotional bondage, despite years of sincere prayer, daily reading and studying the Bible, genuine dedication to serving God in church ministries, as well as being a devoted street preacher and evangelism team leader.
I merely went through the motions and played church in the dire hope that I would start to feel something—anything that indicated to me that God is real and that he cares about me. I was desperate to know the truth. I appeared to be a joyful Christian on the outside, but on the inside, I was deeply bereft of hope, joy, and inner peace. I was constantly hurting and suffering emotionally, and no one else knew about my personal misery other than my husband. I am not exaggerating when I say that being a Christian was a nightmare for me. I'm relieved to be free, and I have no desire whatsoever to ever return to it.
I further explained my exodus out of Christianity in the following post.
Eternity Alone
I find biblical Christianity extremely plausible and rational. The indocrinated tend to think so. Critical thinkers disagree. No Christian can explain how anything in Christianity is plausibel and rational. No believer in religious lore does so based on facts and sound reasoning. But...www.religiousforums.com
What do you believe about the Bible?
1) From dualistic POV not all is from GodI believe the whole Bible is not from God.