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Topic: I do NOT believe in god  (Read 171807 times)

jordandog

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #540 on: April 29, 2010, 09:08:56 am »
 :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
Another one who has seen how 'upbeat' your posts are, marieelissa. You forget we can copy all the ones you delete and I could have shown you many of them, but chose not to waste the space or my time.
You are entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts.

queenofnines

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #541 on: April 29, 2010, 11:56:39 am »
Is life boring?!? Life isn't even 1% of what Heaven would be...

Yes, I think life can be boring at times.  If you take a step back and realize how pointless it all is - all of these grand systems we have in place just to survive - and it's all for nothing once you die...this realization makes a lot of things in life mundane.  

I really don't know why people think 80 years isn't enough.  Well, those are the people who hold themselves back and waste so many years not living life to the fullest, I suppose.

As for the good things in life being only 1% of what heaven will be like...again, you are making huge assumptions and have no proof for this.

Good quote: "Atheists will celebrate life, while you're in church celebrating death." – Anonymous
« Last Edit: April 29, 2010, 12:04:27 pm by queenofnines »
"It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring."
-- Carl Sagan

queenofnines

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #542 on: April 29, 2010, 12:01:55 pm »
Let me ask you about the Unknown....Crop Circles and designs from the sky - looks like bugs, any ideas? The pyramids, Stonehendge?

I've been to both the Pyramids and Stonehenge and you are really showing how cuckoo you are if you think they were made by anything but humans.  The Pyramids are even documented by history, Jesus!

Where's the face palm emote...
"It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring."
-- Carl Sagan

Falconer02

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #543 on: April 29, 2010, 02:54:39 pm »
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Where's the face palm emote...

There isn't one unfortunately so--


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So 'our kind' must hold our ground and continue making reasonable posts and putting plausible ideas out there. If we don't, the delusions might become real!
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As for the good things in life being only 1% of what heaven will be like...again, you are making huge assumptions and have no proof for this.
One thing you all have got to understand is a lot of religious/spiritual nutjobs (as we call them) believe that our reality is a delusion. They believe that we are wrong for accepting this reality as it is and not what they think is behind the curtain. They cannot grasp the idea that this might be it and instead choose to believe in crazy things-- crazy things to us but not to them. Even though I'm in favor of our reality just because...well...it makes sense...I do feel we're being a little ethnocentric to their ideas-- psycho-crazy as they are.

So why bother? You won't change her opinion. She has the guts to admit she has a few mental problems which is fine...I just feel like a lot of informed people are wasting their time arguing with someone who is far too stubborn to even grasp a basic argument against something they believe. She's bringing up crop circles, people. And aliens. She's trollin' you all!

Edit: Oh btw Queen-- I remember you saying you chose not to have kids. I think you'd be a prime example of why people should have kids with how you practice your logic and rationale. We need more of that in this world if we're ever going to get passed the old superstitions of yesterday. I imagine there's more reasons to it but consider it! For the sake of humanityyyyyyy!
« Last Edit: April 29, 2010, 03:13:04 pm by Falconer02 »

jordandog

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #544 on: April 29, 2010, 03:25:44 pm »
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You can't prove there is no God! So please stop acting like you can. A certain someone says it is impossible, it's not. Yes, I know the Flying Spaghetti Monster - we are talking about God. Quit being silly.

Let me ask you about the Unknown....Crop Circles and designs from the sky - looks like bugs, any ideas? The pyramids, Stonehendge?

marielissa, Please show me one statement I have made about disproving there is a God. You can't because I haven't. You actually refer to pyramids and Stonehenge as the Unknown?! Your own ignorance of the world is showing again. As queenofnines said, they were built by humans and have also been documented in factual publications, not a book full of allegory and fables supposedly intended to show us how to live and also includes fantasy lands of Heaven and Hell. The problem is, I am more than willing to listen to ideas from students of religion when they have their feet planted on the ground. People who also know what they are talking about and love to discuss/debate the other side of the question because they remain open minded. Your entire 'take' on God, heaven, hell, or any other BS you come up with is as intelligent and believable as the pills advertised on TV that "Burn 50 pounds of belly fat in 30 days and you don't have to do a thing!"

I am still sitting here completely blown away after reading that bit about pyramids. You really should get out in the real world or start informing yourself of life beyond your nose. Maybe you would have a better outlook on the days you still have to suck breath here. Ah, never mind - you probably already own the diet pills. I heard the can be dangerous for trolls though. Kind of like getting gremlins wet.
You are entitled to your own opinion, but you are not entitled to your own facts.

adam4000

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #545 on: April 29, 2010, 05:56:07 pm »
Figured all these people are posting about how they think god exists and blah, blah, blah.......so I thought I'd create my own topic.
I do not believe nor will I ever.  You can preach and testimony all you want, I grew up a Catholic, and was one until about two years ago.  I have researched, studied, and believed until that point.  I know alllll about being a christian, faith, god, etc.
Personally, I don't believe anyone should rub it into anyone's face that they are goin to hell for not believing...
That they are wrong for not believing...
That the person preaching is better than the non-believers or feels sorry for the non-believers because they don't believe...

Everyone is equal.  We need to respect ourselves, respect our fellow man, and respect our earth before we give respect to some statue who we 'think' died on a piece of wood.  Doesn't the bible tell you not to worship man-made idols?  Well, were you there at the time of christ?  Isn't the bible a tool of a man-made idol IE the cross?  Isn't the figure of your christ on a cross in churches an idol?  Furthermore, how do christians believe so differently amongst themselves...IE..Baptists, Catholics, Etc....... They all condemn each other because they all interpret the bible differently.  It's all very silly to me.  I believe in equality, I belive in peace and justice and love.  I don't believe there is some evil(my definition) person waiting for me at some pearly gates telling me that I lived badly so he can send me to hell.  Too many evil doers, injustices, and just plain nastyness in this would to suggest to me that someone is watching over us. 
lol good 4 u thank for sharing i would have died W/O that post

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #546 on: April 29, 2010, 08:47:29 pm »
I know this is a rather late response, and I will admit that I haven't read through the thread--just some particular random posts--so I apologize if I am treading over ground that has already been covered.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #547 on: April 29, 2010, 08:47:42 pm »
Hmm, well I really don't know what sugar-coated word I could use that could be seen as more considerate.  I consider myself lucky for being able to get out of the Christian lifestyle, as most people will not be able to.  They are too far-gone in their brainwashing and so desperately need more comfortable answers when it comes to death, purpose, etc.  My husband was raised strictly Mormon and was able to get out of that on his own;
I think you would be complicating the matter from a scientific/philosophical view. Instead, in a sociological context the conversation can be intelligible.

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As for having "proof" that god does not exist, no, you can not 100% prove that,
I don't deny "proof" in the traditional sense. I deny "proof" in the Modernist sense. Of course, so did all the greatest secular philosophers of the second half of the 20th century...

All this I am doing is asking you to give "proof" for any of your claims. You don't seem to be able to move beyond mockery, as evident in other posts, and the assumption that secular humanism is somehow "neutral" or "natural." One major point of bringing up all these different philosophers and such is to demonstrate that it's only "neutral" from the provincial perspective of somehow raised with secular humanist assumptions. (Which is true of basically any American, including those raised in Christian homes.)

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but it is akin to my saying that there is an invisible three-headed purple dragon in my garage.
Yes, it is certainly better to believe in god in general rather than subscribe to any conventional religion.  But THERE IS NO EVIDENCE to suggest that the natural processes in which our world was brought about had anything to do with a god.  I'm with the logical crowd in that no one can 100% say there isn't a creator (just as we can't 100% prove that there isn't an invisible pink unicorn who kisses me on the forehead at night), but where does the evidence point??
You are absolutely correct that the Christian God, belief and faith appear to you no different than does your "Invisible Colored Mythical Creature". There is no argument there.

But if you know you invented the invisible three-headed purple dragon (from Sagan) and so therefore know it is fake, then what you're saying is not that similar to having "proof" that god does not exist. They are different from each other. Christians didn't invent God. The credibility of your argument falls as the IPD does not share this commonality with God. Your thinking fails when you debate using a false "given". God is not akin to invisible dragons or unicorns. They have absolutely no backing.

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You cannot prove that there isn't!  That may sound silly, but it's true.
God cannot be compared to such things. On the one hand, we have looked through a lot of the world and never found an invisible three-headed purple dragon. However, such looking is irrelevant when it comes to the existence of God, because He is not a space-time entity. At best, this only tells us that we don't yet have good reason to believe either way. On the other hand, God is taken to be transcendental in nature. God is taken to be categorically different than all these things, because they are creatures/creations and He is taken to be the Creator. Both of these converge to say that discussing the existence of God is different from discussing whether or not there is milk in the fridge.

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As far as I'm concerned, the possibility for god is virtually non-existent so it's understandable why one would just round that figure down to zero.  If the Christian god actually did exist, I would want nothing to do with him based on the Bible.
While god is *a possibility* just like my pink unicorn is *a possibility*, the evidence is very highly AGAINST that being the case to the point that it is acceptable to "round down" the possibility of god to zero.
Basically what you just said is that theists haven't proven empirically that God exists. All the above claim amounts to is, "I don't agree with them." We know this, but the rhetoric isn't needed. I agree that empirical methods are legitimate, but you need to prove that we are limited to them. Or else you have no case nor accountability for this "lack of evidence."

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The scientific explanations for the universe are abundant.
And, yet again, not everyone is an empiricist. You are skipping ahead. Prove empiricism, as the claim that we are limited to empirical methods, and your claim that the possibility for god is virtually non-existent according to empiricism may have some purpose.

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But Christians will always have their ridiculous excuses as to why the evidence isn't good enough.  It's all from the devil, they'll say, or you just got to have "faith" and leave it at that.
You'd be hard-pressed to find in the Bible a faith-evidence dichotomy, as they are not mutually exclusive.

Additionally, evidence, in the sense of being simply facts and not merely utility, cannot be faulty. They are the dots, and the dots are true, as the evidence is just the facts and facts cannot be wrong.

However, it is what we think the dots picture that is important. How we use/interpret the facts is where fault comes in. So evidence is not faulty, but conclusions you draw from evidence are faulty.

For instance, I could say that your conclusions of the following evidence, research, etc are faulty:
I was shocked upon discovering there wasn't a god, but I was backed with enough evidence, research, and common sense that I personally could not deny the facts on a godless existence even if I wanted to.
It appears to me that through most of your posts you have accounted for this proposition by the links and TUH that you have provided by appeal to authority (never mind that this is a logical fallacy.)

So your argument that the utter lack of evidence in favor of God's existence is enough proof to support atheism is basically, if we already think that atheism is right, then we can conclude that atheism is right?

This is not very convincing.

Even if your premise is correct, though, it's not just support for atheism. For instance, it could just demonstrate that God can't communicate with us, for some reason.

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No one will change on this matter unless they personally have the desire to.  That is to say it has to be in the fundamental nature/personality of a religious person to value deep contemplation and have the courage to admit that everything they know may be wrong.
This is a non-sequitor fallacy. The latter doesn't automatically lead to the former.

http://www.godisimaginary.com/
As for the http://www.godisimaginary.com/ link, I'm skeptical as to if visitors did anything more than skim it.  Even if it's not written by Richard Dawkins, it brings up some very good points, even if you don't like it's style.  The only reason I suggested it is because it presents its info in a much easier style than other sources....
when I brought up the godisimaginary link, someone accused that website of being like a "your mama" joke and I was like what??  The points brought up by these webmasters played a part in convincing this once-Christian
Their arguments don't seem very rigorous.

Honestly, the most annoying thing about it is that they are trying to use logic. All the "if... then".. The problem is that, one, they are are not very logical and two, logic doesn't prove anything, unless you can first agree on a couple of base sentences.

For example, the statement at the end:
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The only way for Jesus to prove that he is resurrected is to appear to people. Therefore, each person needs an appearance by Jesus to know that he is real.

Clasic 'if... then' statement. Does the statement prove that Jesus has to appear to people? Of course not. It could only prove that, if we all agreed that "the only way for Jesus to prove that he is resurrected is to appear to people". Now, did he successfully prove that in the article? No. What he did, was put together a bunch of Christianeese responses as a proof of assertion fallacy. Not one scholarly response in the entire document.

In my opinion, this person isn't a real apologist, or logical. He is using quick and easy methods to try to attack Christianity.

Admittedly, I know they can bring their meat & potatoes of their belief (since it's hard to prove that which does not manifest itself regularly to sensory observation,) but just by that sentence alone the person is making the assumption that what is real is empirically verifiable, which, in the history of science has only been held (and constructed by) a small minority of naturalistic scientists. Which ironically, was created from their own "un-empirically or logically justifiable" assumptions of reality.

...These are just a few of the MANY examples of god wanting death for people who disobey.  

I don't understand how believers can read this stuff plain as day and make excuses for it.  Saying "that was meant for a different time" is not true because Jesus said you are not to take away any word from the law!  And anyway, that kind of *bleep* should not be in a "holy" book, spoken by a "loving, just" god under ANY circumstances.  And if you are in the camp that thinks such horrible verses are just metaphors or something, you are extremely ignorant.  I thought you saw the Bible as an "instructions for life" and history book, no?
For non-video resources, I recommend...http://www.evilbible.com.
This site is so anxious to 'willie nilly' prove anything in the Bible wrong that it overlooks some very important things. For instance, the Old Testament is basically a history book -- it is descriptive of what happened and what it meant for the people living through it, not prescriptive to how God wanted things to happen or how He wants them to happen today (necessarily).

With that being said, I just kind of glanced over the whole site and it's pretty thrown together. It would be like if I read through the Koran, looking for non-literal commands and contradictions, not taking into account any cultural or religious deviance, and tried to make a website about how evil the Koran was.

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read actual books by Dawkins, Hitchens, and Harris on the subject (try the library if you don't want to pay for 'em).
When did this debate take place btw?
It would have been much more worthy of a debate had Richard Dawkins or Christopher Hitchens been swapped in so that Dr. Craig didn't "win" due to a slew of cheap shots.
I encourage you to read books by Richard Dawkins or whatever you would consider "respectable" that is on the atheist side.  As for me, I am still capable of recognizing intelligence and what is truly true, even when the source is from an "average" person.
Why? They are equally folly and unpropitious as their antagonists. Besides, other than political preferences, there's no good existential reason to be very interested in this particular brand of militant atheism.

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http://exchristian.net/ is another good source.
This is equivalent to 'Creationist-testimonial' websites. They are no more biased than the other.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #548 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:01 pm »
As for having "proof" that god does not exist, no, you can not 100% prove that, but it is akin to my saying that there is an invisible three-headed purple dragon in my garage.  You cannot prove that there isn't!  That may sound silly, but it's true.  
Your "proof" that God does not exists is based entirely on supposition.
Interestingly enough, the naturalistic atheists/agnostics have claimed that laws of logic do govern reality. However, the problem is when asked how they know that these laws of logic exist or that they are absolute, we get answers like "Supposition" or "I don't know." They claim to have knowledge but won't substantiate it. Do I care whether or not the atheist knows the color of my eyes? No; it doesn't matter because the atheist has made no statement based on the color of my eyes. However, the atheists/agnostics have made statements based on logic. In accordance with that, I would ask them to account for said proposition.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #549 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:10 pm »
P.S.  The whole dragon thing actually comes from Carl Sagan, not me.  http://www.godlessgeeks.com/LINKS/Dragon.htm
This was deliberately invented to prove a belief of the atheist - their belief that there is no God (meaning it's in the traditional atheist stance as opposed to the "proper" atheist stance; that is, the belief that we're not sure either way being agnosticism). No true scientist could ever allow themselves to invent a result to prove their hypothesis. As such, by mundane terms, the argument fails logical scrutiny before it even has a chance to argue for its merit. By its own invention of the IPD atheism undermines itself with hypocrisy; and the argument falls even still.

God has not been proven false. The IPD was false before it was invented.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #550 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:21 pm »
I was a "true" Christian for 5 years before I finally decided to do some research on the matter, and was shocked when I discovered solid evidence against the existence of any sort of god.  Shocked because I truly had bought into the delusion of god like the next guy, but now I had found clear evidence that it's all a sham.

This is just as ludicrous as claiming there's solid evidence to support the existence of God. You girls are so full of self-righteousness-- it's quite am using, really. You've succeeded in becoming everything you supposedly detest.
it all comes down to the courage to THINK for yourself and question/analyze everything.
...
Fortunately, those that are intelligent enough to examine the evidence know that there is no hell or god, anyway.  :)
This whole response to the idea that atheists are silly to have evidence of God's non-existence just like someone else's claim to have evidence of God's existence reveals a very, very exclusive attitude toward epistemology and your general worldview. It basically comes across as saying that everyone who isn't an atheist is a moron, which is not only rude and annoying, but pointless to keep repeating, as it is pure rhetoric, lacking any sort of substantial argumentation.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #551 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:31 pm »
When I see folks refer to other faiths as a "scam" of "fairytales", it shows a lack of consideration and sets me off, but when I confront someone who claims they have "proof" either way that God exists or does not, then I really can't take anything they say seriously. C'mon now, Queen, you know that if such proof existed this matter would not be in contention. Please tell me you have another source other than that godisimaginary.com link, cause I perused that and it's just as one-sided and idiotic as any Christian site I've visited proclaiming they have definitive proof that the lawd does indeed exist.
The case that God doesn't exist is indeed where the default lies.
This is no way to debate. Assume that you are right at the outset, and then wait for me to disprove it? The Christian can just as easily assume Christianity at the outset, and wait around for you to disprove it.

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You must prove God exists or have evidence, not the other way around.
Not only is this wrong in this case, it is irrelevant...

I was a "true" Christian for 5 years before I finally decided to do some research on the matter, and was shocked when I discovered solid evidence against the existence of any sort of god.
She has the burden of proof to put forth a worldview that comports with human experience. So far, she has not done so.

Anyone attempting to put forth any worldview has the burden of proof.

However, the problem is that there seems to me sufficient reason to believe that Christianity is true. So I'm going to need a good reason to disbelieve.

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Bertrand Russel argued that it is impossible for mankind to argue logically against a teapot orbiting around the earth at incredible speeds if the teapot is so small that it is undetectable even by the most powerful telescopes and machines we have on earth.

He also went on to say that although we cannot argue against such a tea pot it would be completely silly to argue that it exists, it is, after all, an incredibly small tea pot that we cannot see.
I've already given primary criticisms of such a line of reasoning to queenofnines. As an addition to the final reason, I also stress that this frames the debate incorrectly. The debate between the atheist and the theist is not simply one about some base matter of fact (whether or not there is a tea pot orbiting Earth); the debate between the atheist and the theist comes down fundamentally to worldview-level commitments. If you suggest that atheism holds the prima facie in such a case, you are requiring that we begin with an atheistic worldview. This is obviously begging-the-question.

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I for one, see no reason why I cannot claim that there is in fact, no omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent being that is somehow listening to all the prayers of all the people in the world, and is capable of fathering human beings and making snakes talk.
Then I, as a Christian, make the following negative statement that "I see no reason why I cannot claim that there is no compelling evidence to believe that Christianity is anything but true." We can just keep rephrasing these, over and over again.

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Quote from: angel379227
You can't give me an analogy accurate enough, I'm afraid.
Well, I just did it(or Betrand Russel)
This uses the "Is there more milk in the fridge?" fallacy that I referred queenofnines to earlier. The existence of the IPD or tea pot is an interesting piece of trivia which can be easily tested by observation and the like. The truth of Christianity is a complete re-visualization of the world, a complete new language and field of perception.

Stealth3si

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Re: What's It Like To Be Atheist?
« Reply #552 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:42 pm »
Quote from: queenofnines
on February 06, 2010, 05:38:00 pm
Quote from: SherylsShado
on February 06, 2010, 08:07:55 am
I have some "friends" that are atheists.  I say "friends" because I care about them, I pray for them...but they are "earthly friends" because they don't believe in Heaven
True Christians are supposed to kill their atheist friends:
This probably isn't a fair or accurate statement.

Christian ethics is not and cannot be based on isolated appeals to scriptural commandments because the bible is not a list of do's and dont's. If you can't place what you're saying in the broader biblical narrative about creation and redemption and the kingdom of god and divine covenant and incarnation and crucifixion and resurrection and ascension and outpouring, then you're not talking Christian ethics.

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"If thy brother, the son of thy mother, or thy son, or thy daughter, or the wife of thy bosom, or thy friend, which is as thine own soul, entice thee secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods, which thou hast not known, thou, nor thy fathers; Namely, of the gods of the people which are round about you, nigh unto thee, or far off from thee, from the one end of the earth even unto the other end of the earth; Thou shalt not consent unto him, nor hearken unto him; neither shall thine eye pity him, neither shalt thou spare, neither shalt thou conceal him: But thou shalt surely kill him; thine hand shall be first upon him to put him to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people. And thou shalt stone him with stones, that he die; because he hath sought to thrust thee away from the Lord thy God"

Deuteronomy 13:6-10 (King James Version)
This is all talking about Israelites who stray from God, not about Gentiles. Today we apply these commands by means of excommunication -- the declaration of the removal of apostates from God's people.

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And the Old Testament is just as "valid" as the New:

"It is easier for Heaven and Earth to pass away than for the smallest part of the letter of the law to become invalid."  (Luke 16:17 NAB)
Virtually no Christians adhere to all of the Old Testament. The question isn't whether we hold to the Old Testament or not, but rather, which parts are still applicable today. It isn't that they "ignore" the Old Testament so much as they don't believe large sections (mainly the Law) were written for all cultures at all times.

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What Would Jesus Do?...

"Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets.  I have come not to abolish but to fulfill.  Amen, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not the smallest part or the smallest part of a letter will pass from the law, until all things have taken place."  (Matthew 5:17 NAB)
The Law is complex.

According to these verses, Scripture doesn't support your argument at all in the socio-cultural historical Christian context of today. Christians have had the law fullfilled in Christ and the Mosaic law is like prohibition is now. Hence it's really a non issue. If you haphazardly import sections of the law of Moses into our cultural context... it becomes immoral primarily because things such as laws are inter-related. So you can't just start picking laws and asking why we don't follow them in the same way anymore. Christ changed a lot of things about how the Law is applied.

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So, the question is, do you love god enough to adhere to the Bible?
The statutes and ordinances are no longer in play, see Col 2:14. It was God's Law for Israel. It was not ever given to all the Gentile nations in the first place. Not every law is given to every person. For example, the priests had certain restrictions on them and had to wear certain clothes. Not all Jews had to keep all of these regulations, just the priests. And, we are not justified by the law but by grace through faith. Again, the Law is specifically complex, so sweeping assumptions and statements like yours are rarely, if ever, true.

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Or do you throw out the parts that our worldly society doesn't agree with?
Well, there's always the question of how to take Biblical narrative and apply its authority in the contemporary horizon. However, you can never just grab isolated verses out of the Bible, Old or New Testament, and run with them. The Levitical Law, for instance, must be understood and applied by means of great wisdom, through the lens of what has happened in redemptive history since the giving of the Law, particularly Jesus.

Further, the OT Law was abolished when Jesus ushered in the New Covenant. All Old Testament laws of dietary, ceremonial, ritual and symbolism are no longer relevant but Old Testament laws of morality are but none of them are. The Law was given once and hasn't been re-given every time there has been a major change in covenantal/redemptive-historical situation. Each time we've had to build and apply wisdom in acting out our story, liturgical continuity is the fountainhead to all of it.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #553 on: April 29, 2010, 08:48:51 pm »
I have lived miracles that I know would'nt be possible without a God. Go ahead and laugh because I know your thinking I'm a crazy, stupid, idiotic, Christian. I don't care what you think.
A "miracle" is commonly understood as something "supernatural" that "only God could do." But this implies this picture: The world keeps on running "naturally," and every once in a while God intervenes into the world and does something "supernatural." That's deism, not Christianity.

Stealth3si

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Re: I do NOT believe in god
« Reply #554 on: April 29, 2010, 08:49:02 pm »
I'd much rather live my life based on truth, reality, logic, and reason
...
supported by heaps of observable evidence.
What empirical evidence do you have that empirical evidence and rational thought are your ultimate burden of proof?

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