Spider-Who?
ERMERGERD!
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Hahaha, nice.RUSH
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Hahaha, nice.RUSH
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Make's it sound like a disease or something?
Certainly is treated as such by some.
There's a question I've always wanted to ask a group of rational atheists: How do you feel about the organized atheists who are (ironically) just as zealous as some nutty Christian groups? Because I swear, seeing atheist billboards and fliers on the street make my eyes roll just as hard as the Christian ones.
Exactly. Totally agree. I haven't heard a good enough response from a believer on this question. If God created us, and is omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent...then I don't understand how we have Free Will. If he knows everything from the beginning of the Universe to the end, then we don't have free will. Its already predetermined from God's perspective. Maybe Christians should say that God is not omniscient? Be easier to make the Free Will argument.
There's a question I've always wanted to ask a group of rational atheists: How do you feel about the organized atheists who are (ironically) just as zealous as some nutty Christian groups? Because I swear, seeing atheist billboards and fliers on the street make my eyes roll just as hard as the Christian ones.
I roll my eyes at them.
Everyone should make up their own minds, and trying to convert other people to your belief system is just stupid. I'll quietly judge religous people but I certainly won't try to tell them how to think.
I don't know if God's omniscience contradicts our "free" will. It depends on your perspective. I see more of a problem for God to give his perfect creation free will and purposefully negate his intent for them. God's omniscience becomes more problematic when you consider that he knew the outcome and decided to proceed with a course of action that would irrevocably lead to the downfall of humanity. Even more problematic, when considering God's perfection, is why we need to exist at all. As a perfect and omnipotent being, God would have no need for emotions such as love, boredom, or loneliness. He is outside of time or space, and would have no concept of its passage. There is no logical reason for such a God to create anything at all, much less humans, angels and otherworldly beings to begin some war the outcome of which is already known to Him. It's inefficient and sloppy.
If we were created with some intent in mind under the auspices of an omniscient being, then the only logical conclusion is that our current course was predetermined by that being, and we are not to blame for any choice we make since the being knew what choice we would make and that those choices would lead to the fulfillment of a plan put into place long before we were born or created.
It's such a sad statement on the human mind that so many of us buy into such claptrap.
I also consider even the small details such as early customs like tributes and sacrifices. Why would God, a being with infinite knowledge, impart the need on his newly created humans to bring to him offerings of meat? Even the idea of human sacrifice as an atonement for past transgressions is primitive and barbaric. Certainly not the behavior of a God with such a vast amount of knowledge.
There's a question I've always wanted to ask a group of rational atheists: How do you feel about the organized atheists who are (ironically) just as zealous as some nutty Christian groups? Because I swear, seeing atheist billboards and fliers on the street make my eyes roll just as hard as the Christian ones.
...I hate the word "atheist." It sounds icky to say. I think it's the "eist" part.
What are your views on Atheism?
Are they admiration, disgust, pity, fear, indifference, curiosity, or something else?
Do you shut yourself off to Atheist rhetoric, or do you find there is more then ample justification supporting this worldview?
Is faithlessness necessarily connected to immorality? Many make that connection, are they wrong?
Would you find a Godless world one not worth living in? Or is the vast complexity of life more then enough to keep you in awe of everything, and the concept of a Godless world with no afterlife encourages you to live your life to the fullest?
Personally I'd be interested in answers, and debate to these and more. Hopefully people will make a concerted effort to keep things respectful and on topic.
For those defending atheism, don't get condescending. For those defending faith, try not to get to emotionally driven, and take it as an opportunity to challenge yourself and your faith.
I'm curious...do you think for yourself, or do you just follow what ever juvenile attempt at humorous (yet so ignorant) pictures tell you?
Here is my two cents as a Christian to answering the OP. My views of atheism are apathetic, and indifferent. Whether someone is atheist or not does not effect my opinion of them, in fact my two best friends are atheist (actually most of mine are, that or agnostic). Nor does the apparent rise of "adherents" or media attention. I've read and watched several presentations by the New Atheists (Dawkins, Harris, etc), so I can't reall tsay if shut myself off. Since i am highly interested in theology, church, and biblical history, I have found many of their statements underwhelming and incorrect, and just downright ignorant of the Christian position. The only worrying thing about some of the outgrowths of atheism is people taking things like Da Vinci Code as history, or promoting some "Science vs. Faith" false dichotomy, which all goes to show that many of these "free thinkers" are not as free thinking (whatever that even means) as they tout themselves to be just and are just like the negative outgrowths of Christianity . I wouldn't say faithless = immoral, and from what I know the Bible agrees with that statement, that (all) humans are given a sense of right and wrong. Would i find a godless world not worth living in? Good question![]()
JAK®;20652329 said:The goal of Atheism is that one day nobody will be an atheist. Because there will be no religion to have a lack of belief in.
Me having a belief that is different than their's, and standing up for it, is "causing problems", but them having a belief that is different from mine, and them forcing it down my throat, is just "having my best interests in mind"
That attitude is the quickest thing for me to lose respect for those types of religious people. That attitude is the reason that I've lost nearly all respect for religion in general, and on a more specific level, why I can't be around my aforementioned family members without having my guard up, and consequently, shutting myself off to my own family members.