I think Hemodoc is right. (Gosh). Read back over his posts and he is not actually saying we have to believe everything he says - just that this is the reason he does. Fair enough. I still love that we can have this conversation - I wish more people with other views would put them down too - but I think they just can't be bothered with the repercussion. I do cringe though Rerun when you tell people they are going to hell - I just can't understand how you think that's ok - it's not up to us to tell people that surely? Can't you see how that is more likely to turn someone away from God?
"With your belief you have EVERYTHING to lose. If you are wrong you will go to hell, If you are right then you have lost nothing. But in my belief I have everything to gain, If I am correct I have a paradise to look forward to when I die, if I am wrong then I have lost NOTHING, I will simple cease to exist and be void. Think about it for a second. If there is a GOD (which obviously I believe there is) then by you not having faith, and believing in evolution then you are basically denouncing GOD and therefor forsaking him. Which will not allow you to enter the kingdom of heaven."
Quote"With your belief you have EVERYTHING to lose. If you are wrong you will go to hell, If you are right then you have lost nothing. But in my belief I have everything to gain, If I am correct I have a paradise to look forward to when I die, if I am wrong then I have lost NOTHING, I will simple cease to exist and be void. Think about it for a second. If there is a GOD (which obviously I believe there is) then by you not having faith, and believing in evolution then you are basically denouncing GOD and therefor forsaking him. Which will not allow you to enter the kingdom of heaven."On the contrary, I would be losing the core of my being, my integrity, indeed, even my happiness for the concept of heaven as expressed in the Bible is not that appealing to me. I don't want to live this precious life that I have thinking that it is merely a dress rehearsal for an eternity without a body. Indeed, I would lose the reason to continue living. Pascal's wager only makes sense from the viewpoint of one who believes in heaven. I don't, and I certainly don't want to take up that shallow bet, destroying my peace of mind and hurling myself into a life of guilt and misery. Nope, to each his own. Petey and Jean, you are so sweet.Aleta
I keep hearing the word 'Hell' mentioned on this thread and I find it incredible that some Christians still believe in its existence. If we take the premise that christians take there beliefs from the teachings of the bible scriptures then it must be made clear that there is nothing contained in those scriptures which describes any kind of consciousness after death which involved permanent torment. The word often sited is 'Hades` which translated from ancient Hebrew means the grave or tomb or any place where the dead are interned. Another word often appears called 'Gehenna' also mistranslated to mean Hell. In fact Gehenna was a public garbage dump just outside the walls of Jerusalem where the poor and destitute were buried where there were no funds for a funeral. Also the old testament Hebrews never believed any conscious life after death heaven hell or otherwise and neither does Judaism to this day. The early christians of the Greek New testament scriptures believed that they were living in the last times and that during their lifetime Christ would return to rule the world so as the word eternal implies (without interuption eg. death) they would never experience death and therefor live eternally which of course did not happen,The idea of life after death was invented by the then tyrannical catholic church and the Spanish Inquisition in the middle ages using the concept of 'Hell' mistranslated from the bible in the way described above to scare the sh't out of people they sought to control.
I've been reading this thread with a certain amount of consternation and feel no need or desire whatsoever to declare my own personal beliefs on the existence of God. The topic is complex and many spend years debating and studying the Bible, both the OT and the NT, the Koran, the Upanishads and so on in their quest for understanding and for ways of bolstering their faith. Can people even agree on the definition of "God"? Some people convert from one religion to another, some reaffirm their faith in the religion of their parents or of their community. Very few study all of the major world religions in depth and then choose the one that convinces them best in their quest for the existence of GOD.Just as there exists on earth a variety of languages in which to communicate our thoughts, a variety of physical attributes such as skin colour to serve us best depending on the geography we inhabit, a variety of creatures that each have a contribution to make to a local ecology, a variety of landscapes which provide variously for their inhabitants, a wide variety of innate talents and abilities, is it not just possible that this "God" of which we speak so strongly might speak to different people in different ways. Many rivers arrive eventually at the sea, some quietly, some more spectacularly but the oceans consist of water from a wide variety of streams. Why would God, I wonder, present most things in such diversity yet reduce the judgment of what constitutes the worthiness of a life to only ONE single choice? I have no idea what will happen to me after I die, the only thing I know for certain is that I will die. Until then I hope to continue seeking a way to live peacefully with others and with myself, to try to listen openly to others and to respect those who may differ in their conclusions but who also continue to search or indeed who have searched and have found sufficient certainty to ensure personal peace of mind. I am grateful for the concern of those who worry about the eventual destination of my "soul" as I take this a sign of caring but the answers to the eternal questions posed by the mystery of what happens after death remain, in my view, deeply personal and in the end one has to convince oneself and, perhaps more importantly, live with oneself.
I deleted the contents of my last post here (which now reads "asdf") because if offended the most important person I know. We almost had a fight over it. Thank "good" it made a closer understanding instead. Just so as to not cause more confusion, my friend and I are polar opposite on the topic of "good" or "evil". I know Rerun approved and the intention was to bring the discussion down to a friendlier level. I'm so "passive aggressive" though, that often my message gets obscured. Anyway, I'd like to leave you all with a quote:"Can't you kids all just get alone?"Olivia (my mom)
Oh, what a deliciously delightful thread this is! So many things I could address...Hemodoc provides so many points to refute!Let's start with Pascal's Wager (that is the story about "If you believe and it's false, you've lost nothing, but if you don't believe and it's true, you've lost eternity"). It suffers from one giant, gaping logical flaw - it assumes there is only one religion. The "choice" is not between Jesus and atheism - it is between any hundreds of religions.I put the question to you - what if it turns out the Buddhists (or substitute religion of choice here) are correct? If you don't believe in Buddhism, you've lost any chance of reaching Nirvana...If I were God, I don't think I'd be very impressed with a "follower" who only "believed" in me as a bet.Also, Hemodoc seems most impressed by the prophecies regarding the crucifixion in the OT. He quotes the "wounds in his hands" verses extensively. First off, as a doctor, think about the anatomy of the hand and the arm. Romans did not crucify through the hand, as in the vast majority of cases, the hand is not structurally strong enough to support nearly the entire weight of the body on a nail driven through it. The wrists, however, are that strong. And that is why the Romans crucified by driving nails through the wrists (though that was only for the most heinous of offenders, most criminals were simply tied to a cross by the wrists and ankles). The wrists will support such weight.Sure, the Bible says he was nailed through the hand. But there are no eyewitness accounts in the Bible - the chronology doesn't fit.I offer you a second explanation for the close agreement between the crucifixion story and the prophecies. The Jesus story was written to fulfill as many prophecies as possible. Remember, we have no eyewitness accounts from the time.Also, you stereotype badly when you assume that anyone who simply reads the Bible will agree with you. I have read the Bible cover-to-cover more than once, and Biblical scholarship is still a hobby I indulge from time to time. And I do not agree with your conclusions. What if I told you that I was certain that you had not read the Bible, because if you had, you would reach the same conclusions I did? I wager you would find that offensive.For the record, I grew up a "born again" Christian, and I am now an atheist. I cannot possibly know if there is a "higher power" in the universe. But I am quite certain that if there is, no human religion has gotten it right.
Quote from: dwcrawford on January 03, 2010, 08:14:40 AMI deleted the contents of my last post here (which now reads "asdf") because if offended the most important person I know. We almost had a fight over it. Thank "good" it made a closer understanding instead. Just so as to not cause more confusion, my friend and I are polar opposite on the topic of "good" or "evil". I know Rerun approved and the intention was to bring the discussion down to a friendlier level. I'm so "passive aggressive" though, that often my message gets obscured. Anyway, I'd like to leave you all with a quote:"Can't you kids all just get alone?"Olivia (my mom)I like that quote, Dan!!! Just because we have different views on the world and the hereafter doesn't mean we can't get along. Monrein, I like your view on things . It is very similar to mine. What if the buddhists, hindus, muslims or any other religion is right?? We really have no proof of what is right. We can just study writings and try to interpret them as best we can and that often leaves to many different interpretations.Hemodoc, I see your point of giving the reasons why you chose your belief. We all have our own personal reasons for our beliefs and our questions about things.Rerun I understand your view as well.This thread continues to be very interesting!!
Dear HemodocI am fully convinced, by all that you have posted, that you have carefully read and are personally fully convinced by all that you have found in the Bible to support the Christian message of redemption through Christ. I do not question or doubt the detours that you have taken through Buddhism or other philosophies in order to arrive at your convictions. I agree that man often may not understand or hear "God" and there is certainly ample proof of man's evil in the world, including of course all that has been done in the name of God and religion. I note also man's frequent and profound disrespect for the world around us and even for the fragile yet brilliantly resilient human body in which we each individually reside.However, I struggle continually with absolutism and certainty of all kinds, not just in the matter of faith, and continue to feel (not to know, but simply to have an inkling) that God may well speak and be heard in a variety of ways. The world that I see around me contains many colours and even shades of each of these, not just black or white so while I admire the concern of those Christians who seek to show their understanding of God's intentions to others who may not have been listening or reading closely enough and so risk eternal damnation for themselves, may I be so bold as to say, that even if I agree with each and every biblical point that you put forth I would still not be sure that I had reached the one and only understanding that would hold universally true for every person on earth. I am in no hurry to leave the world as I find it a fascinating and wondrous place, despite it's contradictions and dichotomies, but neither am I afraid to die and find out what happens, or in fact face nothingness as some believe, once I no longer exist in my current physical dimension . We are inherently imperfect and that may extend also to our deepest convictions but yet we continue as a species to discuss and grapple with issues of faith and the meaning of life. I celebrate with you the peace that you have found in your quest for faith and the meaning that it provides you.
I cannot possibly know if there is a "higher power" in the universe. But I am quite certain that if there is, no human religion has gotten it right.
Dear Ken, I won't get into a long point for point discussion of your many contentions here but say that they are all not factually true.I will challenge you with a simple question: If there is no hell, no place of eternal separation from God, then why did Jesus go to the cross? What did His save us from? Jesus Himself spoke of hell more than He spoke of heaven. It is a real place just as heaven is a real place and it was not the Catholic church that invented this. If hell is only the grave as you assert, and if there is no existence after death as many also assert, then where did the references to burning in torment throughout the entire Bible come from? It is the reason that Jesus came to redeem us from an eternity of separation from God. Once again, the importance of the cross. Once again, the importance of the OT references to the death on the cross. I come back full circle again to the challenge of the cross. Your theology of hell simply does not fit with the story of Jesus dying on the cross. What was the purpose of Jesus dying on the cross if there is no hell?
I For example, how many wars have been waged in the name of religion - yet most religions that I know of claim to preach tolerance of others, "love thy neighbor" and variations thereof...
Quote from: RichardMEL on January 03, 2010, 10:39:34 PMI For example, how many wars have been waged in the name of religion - yet most religions that I know of claim to preach tolerance of others, "love thy neighbor" and variations thereof... How many wars have been waged that were not in the name of religion?
Quote from: BigSky on January 04, 2010, 06:35:56 AMQuote from: RichardMEL on January 03, 2010, 10:39:34 PMI For example, how many wars have been waged in the name of religion - yet most religions that I know of claim to preach tolerance of others, "love thy neighbor" and variations thereof... How many wars have been waged that were not in the name of religion?Probably as many as were in the name of various religions. It doesn't make it any more correct, whatever the excuse. Though there are times when doing the right thing involves making violent choices. This is unforunately how things are.Which leads me to ask, what do you think Jesus would have said of all the killing in his name? And, before you get your undies in an uproar, I am a Christan. I am not criticizing Christianity, just asking people to stop and think for a minute. Yes, I said I was a Christan, and my eariler posts here were misinterpreted by some to believe I am not. I am not asking this question to get people upset, or to argue.
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 03, 2010, 11:17:39 AMDear Ken, I won't get into a long point for point discussion of your many contentions here but say that they are all not factually true.I will challenge you with a simple question: If there is no hell, no place of eternal separation from God, then why did Jesus go to the cross? What did His save us from? Jesus Himself spoke of hell more than He spoke of heaven. It is a real place just as heaven is a real place and it was not the Catholic church that invented this. If hell is only the grave as you assert, and if there is no existence after death as many also assert, then where did the references to burning in torment throughout the entire Bible come from? It is the reason that Jesus came to redeem us from an eternity of separation from God. Once again, the importance of the cross. Once again, the importance of the OT references to the death on the cross. I come back full circle again to the challenge of the cross. Your theology of hell simply does not fit with the story of Jesus dying on the cross. What was the purpose of Jesus dying on the cross if there is no hell?Hemodoc my point was that Hell or Hades meant separation from god. But not separation in conscious torment but that all consciousness ceases to exist, the person ceases to exist. The living are conscious that they will die; but as for the dead, they are conscious of nothing at all ... for there is no work nor devising nor knowledge nor wisdom in Hades (the grave), the place to which you are going.Ecclesiastes 9: 5, 10The untranslated Hebrew and Greek scripture which formed the old and new testaments of the bible often warns sinners that they will burn not in hell but in Gehenna (again misleadingly translated as hell by bible scholars of the medieval catholic church. Its one thing to be threatened by separation from God in complete unconscious death but then quite another at the thought of conscious torture and eternal torment. Gehenna was a stinking garbage dump and was frequently set on fire with the bodies of criminals and the poorest of the Jews. This has since been subverted to to portray the eternal fire of the dammed. In biblical theology it is a complete perversion of it's original meaning and context of the time. The idea of an immortal soul does not appear anywhere in the in either the old or new testament. Ask any devout follower of Judaism who like Christians believe the Old testament as being the true word of God and they will tell you there is no belief in their religion of an immortal soul.I repeat that the early Christian belief was that the dead would stay dead until they were mortally resurrected on judgment day and the righteous would live eternally on this earth and the unrighteous would be separated from God by death and therefor cease to exist. All proclamations of a spiritual life after death come long after bible canon by the established church which by then were teaching a totally corrupt version of bible Christianity using the religion as a means of political control. Edited: Fixed quote tag error - okarol/admin