LogGrad98
Well-Known Member
Contributor
20-21 Award Winner
2022 Award Winner
2023 Award Winner
2024 Award Winner
Yesssssssssssss.... I unintentionally made a valid argument...
UP TOP!
Dude, in 1564 tries it was bound to happen.
Yesssssssssssss.... I unintentionally made a valid argument...
UP TOP!
The test is how you treat people, ten commandments, how you raise your kids.....etc. I think that being religious or spiritual is just the cherry on top and helps people be more charitable.
Also the biggest reason we are here is to gain a body and gain knowledge.
Sounds like a bunch of hocus pocus to me.
Sounds like a bunch of hocus pocus to me.
Logic usually just falls flat dealing with any religion.
From New Testament scriptures alone, Jesus taught that there was a relation between believing and trying to live by his teachings, and actually coming to understand them. Encouraged folks to seek, said they would find. It'll always just look like hocus pocus until you choose faith.
Some folks just choose not to have that faith, and some even seem self-satisfied with that path. Nothing any "religious" person can say will make any difference so long as that is the case.
Funny thing about Christians. They keep hoping others will change. Saying prayers and stuff. Even fundamentalist Christians with ideas of a hell of everlasting torment for those who don't confess Christ in this life will still pray for their unblieving loved kids/good spouses/parents/friends and hope for them.
So if they disagree with Mormon doctrine, and they point to bible passages as evidence, they are wrong because they don't understand the bible?
Religion cannot be proven on either side of the argument. No matter how hard anyone tries, they cannot provide objective evidence there is a God, and no matter how hard anyone tries they cannot provide objective evidence there isn't one.
I just thought I would add my amazing grasp of the obvious to help bolster this conversation.
Carry on.
Obviously I would think someone that disagreed with me on a/some passage(s) of scripture does not understand my point of view. I am generally willing to discuss it as long as it's a respectable discussion. If I understand it one way, why would I think I am wrong at the start of a discussion? There have been many passages of scripture I have come to understand better, or in a different way based on conversations with other people. I have generally never changed my mind on anything when it is more of an argument than discussion. I don't know if that answers your question.
What a sanctimonious prick. Maybe you should pull your head out of your ***, you know, because not everyone fits these ridiculous self-serving stereotypes.Logic usually just falls flat dealing with any religion.
From New Testament scriptures alone, Jesus taught that there was a relation between believing and trying to live by his teachings, and actually coming to understand them. Encouraged folks to seek, said they would find. It'll always just look like hocus pocus until you choose faith.
Some folks just choose not to have that faith, and some even seem self-satisfied with that path. Nothing any "religious" person can say will make any difference so long as that is the case.
Funny thing about Christians. They keep hoping others will change. Saying prayers and stuff. Even fundamentalist Christians with ideas of a hell of everlasting torment for those who don't confess Christ in this life will still pray for their unbelieving loved kids/good spouses/parents/friends and hope for them, even after they've "gone on".
What a sanctimonious prick. Maybe you should pull your head out of your ***, you know, because not everyone fits these ridiculous self-serving stereotypes.
You could be the really sanctimonious person here. Is it important for you to believe you're some exception to the rule, because you fancy yourself to be reasonable or logical on your own terms? Inventing systems of belief which might be called ridiculous or self-serving, "sanctimonious", or judgmental of others didn't end when folks the first folks begain not believing other people's religions.
You take your place in the panopoly of hate when you're so touchy you take it so personally that others think they're "right" in what they believe that you just have to roll out invective like this. A system of belief that can sustain our own self-esteem or feeling of self-worth when you realize you're not appreciated or supported very well by some others is useful. Some call it essential to being a "grown-up". It means you really don't just have to blow off when you realize others are smugly believing they're better than you are, which is in fact generally what "others" always do. They have whatever they believe, and they think their belief makes them "better" somehow. Of course if they didn't, they'd be changing it right now. . . So if they think they know what your belief is, they'll imagine theirs is better somehow, or quickly re-inventing that fantasy right now.
You should go get yourself some Ambrose Bierce quotes to improve your sense of humor. What I said is descriptive of Christian belief based on the teaching of Jesus. He was not even the first to use this kind of self-conscious tautological "judgment". And of course, almost any other human belief system will find support in the psyche as adherents progressively act out their belief. It's human nature to justify our actions and become mentally invested in believing we do good.
Belief, or disbelief, will tend to follow what we choose to do, leaving others who don't do or "believe" as we do, despised or judged in our wake. . . .
The other, or opposite trend, sometimes called "repentance" in religious terms, or adopting a new ideal of reality in secular terms, takes effort, deliberate effort, after recognisiing something we don't like about what we're doing.
Now, having obviously outdone even myself in this kind of sanctimonious acrimony about all other humans, I think I'll repent and just be a humble unquestioning believer in Jesus and specialize in contructing some kind of frame of mind where I can unconditionally love others, or imagine I do. . . . even you. . . . or at least laugh at myself. But the really sad thing is, I just don't see any way people can really escape being this way. It's the way we are.
Even Ambrose Bierce didn't escape from himself, although it's rumored he tried to, with elaborate efforts. And, seeing that, I long ago grew up and realized how useful it is to fortify our belief/faith with devout christian principles such as realizing that "faith" really isn't supposed to be used as a weopon of self-righteous hypocrisy. Admittedly, this is an advanced concept most "christians" don't pick up on real quick, and in fact a failing that has cost millions of unbelievers their lives. And man, sometimes I wish secular humanists or atheists had an element like that in their creeds. Could have saved millions of believers their lives in the past one hundred years.
It can be proven, it just has to be proven one person at a time. It also depends on what you think objective evidence means. Personally I think everything on the earth that is not man-made is objective evidence that there is a God.
Just adding my amazing disregard for what you think is obvious to keep the conversation going.
That's what was missing from your first post, the last paragraph of which was absolutely ridiculous (without the addition above). It certainly seemed like you were painting "Non-believers" as obstinate jack asses and "Christians" as loving brothers.And, seeing that, I long ago grew up and realized how useful it is to fortify our belief/faith with devout christian principles such as realizing that "faith" really isn't supposed to be used as a weopon of self-righteous hypocrisy. Admittedly, this is an advanced concept most "christians" don't pick up on real quick, and in fact a failing that has cost millions of unbelievers their lives.
Obviously, I try not to be offended by others' opinions of what is right/true (and, obviously, this takes some effort at times). Why the **** should I care (all other things equal, of course...those going on killing sprees for their beliefs deserve some attention)? Again, I called you sanctimonious because you seemed to take a "we're good, you're bad" tack. I don't think responding to such statements with harsh words makes the responder sanctimonious. Touchy, short-tempered, hateful...maybe.You take your place in the panopoly of hate when you're so touchy you take it so personally that others think they're "right" in what they believe that you just have to roll out invective like this. A system of belief that can sustain our own self-esteem or feeling of self-worth when we realize we're not appreciated or supported very well by some others is useful.
It can be proven, it just has to be proven one person at a time. It also depends on what you think objective evidence means. Personally I think everything on the earth that is not man-made is objective evidence that there is a God.
Just adding my amazing disregard for what you think is obvious to keep the conversation going.
objective evidence
Definition
Information based on facts that can be proved through analysis, measurement, observation, and other such means of research.
No matter how much someone believes (or disbelieves), you can't really prove it. Even for one individual. The individual can become convinced that their belief is true, even to the point of laying down their life for the belief, but it is still, at it's core, a belief. It cannot be proved through analysis, measurement, or observation. On either side of the coin. Two people can look at the same rock. One can say, this is a great example of natural processes and involves nothing like a God. The other can say, this is a perfect example of the work of a God in creating this world. Which is right? Neither and/or both?
But I am not discounting faith. In the end it could be argued that nothing is really objective, because in every individual every bit of experience/information goes through each person's personal lens of perception. Here come all the stupid arguments we got into in philosophy classes. The old cliche story of the philosophy professor asking his class to prove through philosophical discourse that a chair he sets in the middle of the room really does not exist. The only person who got an A simply wrote "What chair?" The point is, your perception matters, to you. And your perception, no matter how closely aligned to any ideas from anyone else, will always be unique. But your perception only "proves" the reality of the topic to you and to no one else. You cannot take your perception of anything, measure it, analyze it, and give it to someone else so they get the exact same perception.
Even staunch die-hard unmoving mormon to staunch die-hard unmoving or staunch die-hard unmoving athiest to staunch die-hard unmoving the perceptions will always be different, even if almost imperceptibly.
So really, to the individual, beliefs are often much stronger than knowledge, because they are the final construct of who you are based upon your perception of whatever knowledge you may have. Proof of this (see what I did there? =) is in the fact that we have so many scientific publications and yet plenty of disagreement and discourse on whether the "science" is right or not. Everyone views those results through their own lens, which is always different from anyone elses, even if only by fractions of a degree, so there is always the possibility that the "science" is wrong or incomplete. Not necessarily because of any "objective evidence" but simply because we know that anything we learn is biased by the lens of the person presenting it. It is unavoidable. But it means that in the end belief is the stronger influence on the individual.
I've tried your little experience over 10 years, and it resulted in more misery than anything else. Mormons don't have a monopoly on positive media, contrary to what you're told in church.I have tried to prove to myself the Bible is true, and the Book of Mormon is true by first reading them, trying to understand what the meaning is, or the message... and then I have tried to prove it by living it, and really living it (not halfheartedly). If it is true I will see the changes and results expected. I have also gone through times where I am not living it, and I do notice the difference. Try this with music. Listen to some Death Metal and see how you feel inside. What are your moods, your feelings? Is it positive? Listen to some "church music" or hymns that are about Christ. How do you feel inside, what are your moods and feelings? Is it positive? I have proven that out that even though the church music may be boring sometimes and its hard to stick with it, I feel much happier and am more positive of a person when I do. That is as scientific a way of proving something as anything else in my opinion.
That being said, how do we prove what is Truth and what is not?
I have tried to prove to myself the Bible is true, and the Book of Mormon is true by first reading them, trying to understand what the meaning is, or the message... and then I have tried to prove it by living it, and really living it (not halfheartedly). If it is true I will see the changes and results expected. I have also gone through times where I am not living it, and I do notice the difference. Try this with music. Listen to some Death Metal and see how you feel inside. What are your moods, your feelings? Is it positive? Listen to some "church music" or hymns that are about Christ. How do you feel inside, what are your moods and feelings? Is it positive? I have proven that out that even though the church music may be boring sometimes and its hard to stick with it, I feel much happier and am more positive of a person when I do. That is as scientific a way of proving something as anything else in my opinion.
This is what I have "proven" to myself through observation and experience.
So did the spirit whisper the truth to her? If not, how do you explain it?