A Brief History of Disbelief

Here’s a seventh post in a row just for good measure…
Sorry guys! I’ll try to stop doing that crap. :confused:

WTF??? Why are my posts erased constantly int he religion forum?

Are you sure you are posting them correctly?

I’m not joking, sometimes my internet connection has been very slow and I’ve closed the page before my post gets sent – especially with larger and/or picture containing posts.

For this people’s ears are dull of hearing… But blessed are your ears, if they hear.

I heard a voice inside my head once. I named it Jesus.

Did God choose to give those with ears to hear and give some ears that could not? Or is man the measure of all things, and HE himself chooses to hear or not? It is one way or the other.

Check this out… I’ve only recently begun to understand the implications of this thought and line of reason…

  1. If God preordained all, if God chose all that was going to happen, predestination, etc. then he is unjust or cruel etc. You cannot deny he created evil.

  2. If God truly gave us freewill, then WE are the measure of good and bad. We don’t murder because it is wrong, not because God says it’s wrong. If we are free, then God is not… and there is no God.

Do you see that things are one way or the other. Either we are free or God is free. Both points 1 and 2 are terrific reasons to doubt the existence of God.

I’ve obviously butchered the two points, but maybe some will understand. The videos links above have an excellent section on this. It very much concerns morals: Either God established everything and is unjust (thus doesn’t exist), or man established everything and there is no God. It is brilliant and very solid… if one gives it time to sink in.

The God central to Christian religion is illogical…
Therefore logic is not integral to the Christian religion. :sunglasses:

“In the end was a roll of dirty toilet paper, and the dirty toilet paper was with the Spaghetti Monster, and The Spaghetti Monster was the dirty toilet paper.” - Bane 1
This makes the same amount of sense as your quote. :confused:

I do agree with the sentiment that you have to “cure” religion from the cause. Religion is symptomatic of a human need, for comfort perhaps, or to answer the “big” questions with a positive answer. “Just because” or " we will never know" does seem to be intrisically rejected by many. Doesn’t mean that they are the wrong answers of course. :slight_smile: