Subject:
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Re: The Brick Testament - More Teachings of Jesus
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.off-topic.debate
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Date:
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Thu, 19 Oct 2006 03:43:46 GMT
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Viewed:
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4947 times
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In lugnet.off-topic.debate, John Neal wrote:
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Well, lets say that it rings true to me; I find the wisdom valid for my
life. Why? I dont know the reason. But it does.
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To say that it rings true to you almost makes it sound like you are evaluating
it based on evidence and logic, rationally determining it to be the best
explanatory theory. But this is quite different than saying that you are
absolutely sure of it based on a personal revelation, so Im not sure which it
is for you.
Is it within the realm of possibility that you could be convinced otherwise?
That Jesus was mistaken about the nature of God and what God wants, and about
his own identity as the Son of God?
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Why do you believe what you believe?
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I would like to think that I form and modify my beliefs based on the most
rationally compelling evidence available to me. I will certainly not deny that
I accept many things based on authority--that is to say, trusted sources--but
that trust is provisional and based on the degree to which I am convinced such
an authority ultimately bases their own beliefs or theories on a rational
evaluation of the available evidence. I am always ready to reconsider and
perhaps update my beliefs based upon reliable new evidence or a theory that
makes better sense of available evidence.
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Upon what rational basis do you (presumably) deny the existence
of God?
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I deny the existence of the Christian god by the same basis I deny the existence
of the gods of any religion. Based on all the evidence, it seems to me
resoundingly more likely that these are all equally figments of the imagination.
I dont attempt to prove their non-existence any more than I would attempt to
prove the nonexistance of Santa Claus or the Tooth Fairy. It would seem the
onus is not on me to disprove the existence of any hypothetical supernatural
being someone might conjure up.
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How do you explain the existence of the universe? What revelation
leads you to that conclusion?
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I do not have an explanation for the existence of the universe. It is
possible that we will never have a great understanding of the question of why
there is something rather than nothing. But it hardly follows from the
existence of the universe that the Christian god exists. Im sure the
Cosmological Argument has been discussed here before, but to put it briefly,
positing some sort of intelligent being capable of creating a universe as the
precursor to the universe is not an explaination at all. The unavoidable
question becomes What created this intelligent being? If one argues that this
intelligent being is somehow uncreated, that allows for something to exist
uncreated and gets rid of the whole problem we were trying to solve.
Just because science may not have the answer to a particular question does not
imply that religion is therefore qualified to answer it. The other unfortunate
thing about simply positing that God created the universe and discouraging
scientists from exploring the matter any further is that surely there is useful
knowledge to be gathered about the universe by exploring different theories of
how it came about. Perhaps the evidence will suggest our universe is one of
many. Perhaps the evidence will suggest the universe in an eternal cycle of
expanding and collapsing. This seems like useful knowledge to have, and to
simply give the matter over to religion where non-rational dogma prevails seems
terribly misguided.
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Eh, that is the nature of Religion, of faith. I seriously doubt that any two
believers of the same faith believe exactly the same things. It is how
peace-loving Muslims and butchering Islamo-fascists can pray to the same
Allah.
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Yes, this is what seems so dangerous to me about religious faith.
Islamo-literalists can have blind faith that the Koran is the truth, and this
leads to terrible consequences. And to live in a world where this sort of blind
faith in dogma is not only accepted but given an aura of deep respect and
freedom from critical inquiry is providing a fertile ground for irrationality
and the acts of terrorism it can spawn.
A culture that supports blind faith creates people who (by definition) cannot be
reasoned with.
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To me, it isnt germane how one acquired ones beliefs or really what what
one believes, but how one puts those beliefs into action in ones personal
life. Its what Jesus was saying to the Pharisees-- if your piety doesnt
translate into a love of your neighbor, it is worthless.
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This allows you only to judge whether someones actions are in keeping with
their beliefs, but it does not allow you to judge whether their beliefs are
themselves rational. By this standard, you might judge that indeed, the 9/11
hijackers were acting in perfect concert with their beliefs. You might attempt
to criticize them by suggesting that the Koran doesnt really support suicide
attacks on non-Muslims, but that would be a rational argument based on evidence,
and if youre going to bother to be rational, you might as well ask what on
earth a person in this day and age is doing basing their beliefs about the
ultimate nature of the universe on a centuries-old book that makes no attempt to
establish itself as a source of reliable scientific knowledge and instead simply
makes claims about the way things are and how they should be, appealing only to
itself for authority.
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You are comparing apples and orbs. There are no facts (verifiable by
science) in religion.
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Religions makes all sorts of fact claims that should (at least in principle) be
verifiable by science. The Bible is full of such facts, and whenever it seems
like science might possibly back-up something from the Bible (The Flood, The
Resurrection, etc), religious beleievers are the first to trumpet such support
for their beliefs. Of course, when science inconveniently fails to support
other religious facts, believers fall back on the platitude that science has
nothing to say about religion.
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I disagree. Arguments or ideas should be judged based on their merits, not
their origins. Anything other is simply intolerance.
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So we both have intolerance, yours comes in once youve heard what someones
beliefs are, mine comes in when Ive heard how they arrived at those beliefs.
Imagine you are driving down a road and a bystander flags you down and says to
you the bridge ahead is out. Are you not curious as to how this person
arrived at this knowledge? If you asked, How do you know that? and he replied
Blorgar the invisible unicorn revealed this to me when I was five years old
would that not affect how you judge his proposition about the bridge being out?
On the other hand, if his reply was I heard the news bulletin on AM 640, and
just inspected it myself, I have to imagine that too would affect how you judge
his proposition that the bridge is out.
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State your position and argue its merits. Change, retain, tweak
as needed.
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But what are its merits? Doesnt the merit of a proposition depend on its
supporting evidence and explanatory power? And if it is discovered that it is
simply believed in blindly with no evidence, or especially if it is in contrast
to a mountain of evidence, doesnt that make the proposition meritless?
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On my reading of The Gospels, Jesus doesnt seem to have expected gentile
followers at all.
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Careful lumping them all together. Each has its own unique perspective.
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Yes, thats an artful way of acknowledging that they dont agree with each other
in important respects and portray Jesus quite differently. Which Jesus is the
real Jesus? A sythesis? Just one of the four? Pauls vastly different Jesus?
How can we know? If you want certainty of belief, I can only imagine blind
faith does the trick here.
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No. All Christians believe this, more or less. These are matters of faith,
not fact, as an earth is flat statement would be.
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Im not sure I see your distinction. That Jesus is the final revelation of
Gods nature is presumably either true or false, just as The Earth is flat is
true or false. Rational arguments could be made in support of or against either
proposition. If a tremendous amount of evidence could be produced to support
the idea that Jesus of Nazareth never actually existed, this would rationally
undercut the proposition that Jesus is the final revelation of Gods nature,
just as a termendous amount of evidence has been shown to undercut the
proposition that the Earth is flat.
Either proposition can be believed in on blind faith in spite of any and all
evidence to the contrary, but in either case the matter should be in principle
fair game for scientific inquiry.
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what you do expect people to learn from reading the Brick Testament? That
Judaism/Christianity are, after all, silly? That Christians and Jews are
going to suddenly stop believing in their faiths because of it? That doesnt
seem like a very realistic expectation.
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I expect that a fair amount of people will find it amusing to peruse and will
come away with an increased knowledge of the content of the Bible that they
would not otherwise get unless they read the Bible for themselves. I hope to
change what I see as some very widely-held misconceptions of the Bibles content
which stems from the fact that most people never read it for themselves and only
ever learn about the 5-10% of the Bible that is ever quoted in church or pop
culture.
What people do with that increased knowledge is up to them. I do hope it will
prompt some people to reevaluate their beliefs, since that is almost always a
good thing, especially in light of increased knowledge. I hope it will cause
people to question whether I am wildly distorting the Bible, and prompt them to
read the Bible for themsleves. I would like people to read The Brick Testament
and think to themselves, Would the God I believe in really do that? Is this
really how my religion portrays God? Why would Jesus say a thing like that?
Does this really align with my sense of what is good and kind and merciful?
But no, I do not realistically expect it to make a lot of non-believers out of
believers. Religious faith has a resilient hold on the human mind.
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What it really is is mockery.
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Is it? Imagine its mid-2004 and youve moved into a solidly liberal town in a
Blue State. It sort of blows your mind that there are so many rabid John Kerry
supporters all around you. But since they seem so convinced that hes got all
the answers, you decide to read over copies of all the campaign speeches hes
given over the past year. But as you do this, you are more shocked than ever by
what you are reading. You knew Kerry was a little off even before you started
reading, but you had no idea! It turns out that Kerry has been a longtime
supporter of genocide! Although he calls himself merciful, he has regularly
treated those he supposedly loves with all manner of malevolence, even to the
point of tortuing to death women and children! And even in the more recent
Kerry speeches where many Democrats have said hes toned down the violence and
become a kindler, gentler Kerry, you find that he supports the eternal torture
of anyone who holds the wrong religious beliefs!
And your feeling after reading these speeches, is that you cant believe
people are supporting this guy! Do they not know whats in these speeches?
Why do they keep campaigning for him and referring to him as compassionate and
kind? If they only knew! But since you realize that most people wont bother
to read these long, dry speeches on their own, you have an idea! Take all the
disturbing parts of Kerrys speeches (which turns out to be something like 90%
of the content) and illustrate it with LEGO on a website. Present it in a
fashion that does not openly mock Kerry, for that might turn Kerry-supporters
away before theyve even read the first speech excerpt.
So the question is, in this situation, would such a website be mocking Kerry and
his supporters? Im not sure I know the answer, and Im not sure Id say
whether The Brick Testament does or doesnt mock the Bible, Christianity, and
Judaism. I usually dont think of it as mocking because it simply presents
excerpt from the Bible I think many people would find as shocking as I do if
they only knew about them.
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And if you dont think so, try (if you dare) creating a Brick
Koran in the same vein as The Brick Testament. It would be
perceived as mockery to the point that I honestly wouldnt be
surprised if some mullah somewhere put out a fatwa calling for
your execution. Jeez, its chilling just to type it....
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Oh, I dont doubt that a Brick Koran would stand a decent chance of getting me
killed or causing casualties somewhere else in the globe if word of it became
sensationalized in Muslim countries. But does hypersensitivity and the threat
of violnce = moral right? When a deranged person is holding a gun in your face,
it probably not advisiable to do anything that might even stand the slightest
chance of being perceived as mockery because you will get killed. But this
certainly does not put the derranged person in the moral right, nor does it mean
that your perceived mockery would be taken by a sensible person as true
mockery.
We live in a day and age where it may simply be too dangerous for anyone to
create a Brick Koran, but surely the blame for that lies on religious believers
willing to kill for their dogma rather than the artist scared for his life and
the lives of others.
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Not ignore them, but not to lose sight of their purpose in the first place.
Boiled down: to love God is to love one another.
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But surely, if you have ever read the OT you would know that youd need to boil
away the 99.9% of it that flatly contradicts this interpretation.
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Shrug. Its not an issue of validity via voluminosity. Remember, the OT is
an ongoing story of the relationship between The People of God and Yahweh.
The understanding of Yahweh goes through profound changes from Genesis to,
say, Ecclesiates, for example. There isnt one set understanding at all.
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I very strongly disagree. On my reading, Yahweh is portrayed has having a very
consistent character from page one of Genesis right up to last sentence of the
last page of Malachi (where he speaks, as ever, of the curse of destruction
awaiting those who do not keep the Law of Moses).
If there are a few occasional descriptions of Yahweh that posit him not really
wanting animal saccrfices despite his making good on countless threats to bring
down all sort of pain upon his Chosen People for not following the Law of Moses
to the letter, I think it is far more logical to see these as what they are:
aberrations from the norm that fly in the face of everything else in the OT.
To paint these few scattered passages as the endpoint of an evolution in
understanding Gods nature seems like special pleading in the extreme.
There is also the obvious fact that nowhere in the OT or even in the NT is it
suggested that the OT is not to be taken literally when it says that Yahweh
said this or Yahweh wants that. The OT purports to tell you exactly what God
has said and done, and what his nature is. If Jesus wanted people to believe
otherwise, presumably he would have made a point of explaining this huge
misunderstanding about the OT, but instead says nothing of the sort, and says
that the Law of Moses will be valid until the end of heaven and Earth.
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Well, at the very least, the subject is debatable. And one could say that
ones personal understanding could be the result of a revelation. How else
would you describe it?
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Maybe were using the word revelation differently here. Theres the secular
meaning of revelation, kind of like aha! now I see the logic! and then theres
the religious sense of revelation, kind of like I am now convinced beyond any
doubt of this proposition, and no evidnce to the contrary could convince me
otherwise. I think theres a very significant difference, I had thought you
were claiming to ultimately base your belief in Jesus (and his being the son of
God, and his correct interpretation of the OT, etc) on a religious sort of
revelation. But now Im wondering if thats not the case.
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It would be something like me criticizing someone who
pays their taxes to the US government but looks for every last possible
loophole to pay far less than their fair share.
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hehe Like this?
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I heard U2 was trying to get themselves third world country status so they can
benefit from the very debt relief plan Bono is pushing.
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This exemplifies to me how the Law can be twisted by our understanding to
produce behavior that is contrary to the intentions of the Law in the first
place.
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And the obvious question in that case is why on earth a good god would have
given The Law of Moses in the first place, and then wait 1,500 years to correct
this supposed misinterpreteation of The Law which stemmed from taking what it
said at face value. And of course why God would brutally punish his own people
for failure to comply to the minutia of The Law--or allow his Chosen People to
write holy scriptures claiming that was the case.
How could anyone, especially Jesus/God, criticize the Jews for not understanding
the true intentions of The Law when those true intentions were not made clear,
when they were seemingly given every indication that minutia was exactly what
God cared about, and were scared to death to break from rote following of that
minutia since God was contsantly taking the harshest vengeance on anyone who was
so bold?
You seem to imagine some sort of evil trickster God at work here. And that, I
would argue, would actually be in keeping with the OTs portrayal of Yahweh.
but I get the sense you dont see your God in quite that way.
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Now John is an interesting Gospel. We havent even begun to talk about the
writers POV as it affects his presentation of Jesus story. I wouldnt
have pegged you as a literalist, Brendan. Or do you prefer to simply skewer
literalists interpretations?
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What did I say that gave you the impression I am a literalist? And what would
you contrast with being a literalist? Was it my reading of Jesus as being
obsessed with an imminent end-of-times apocolypse and judgment? I see no reason
at all to take Jesus as meaning any of that figuratively. Belief in an imminent
end-of-times apocolypse was fairly widespread among Jews in Jesuss time, and
from all my reading on the subject, I find no indication that any of these
believers were only thinking of a figurative apocalypse. If Jesus was
speaking figuratively, he would have had to make this abundantly clear if he
did not want to be misunderstood.
Or was it something else I said? :) I, of course, do not take the Bible to be
lietral truth, but I am quite capable of putting myself in that mindset, saying
to myself, OK, lets imagine just for a moment that the Bible is literally
true... and reasoning from there. In fact, that is the mindset I use when
illustrating The Brick Testament.
In has been my observation that religious people tend to retreat to figurative
interpretation of scripture when the face-value meaning of scripture is
untennable for them whether its because it conflicts with the science-based
views of the world, because it contrasts with their (non-Biblically based) moral
intuitions, because it would otherwise contradict a different and more
cherished part of scripture, or because they cant make any other sense of it
(and they desperately want to believe it makes sense).
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To you perhaps. I think it makes perfect sense. I brought the Law into the
world, and I can take it out! (apologizes to Bill Cosby)
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So it was important to God for the Jews to follow all that minutia, and it
was morally correct to murder homosexuals and anyone who worked on the
Sabbath, but later on it wasnt important to God for people to obey any
minutia, and it was not morally correct to murder homosexuals and people who
worked on the Sabbath. And this God is unchanging you say? Unchangingly
capricious, perhaps?
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Well, second-guessing God as a sort of Monday Morning Messiah is fine and
all, but it isnt really a valid argument to the contrary.
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Im not sure why it isnt valid. If you are positing a certain strong
motivation for Jesuss behavior, but I point out that Jesus acted nothing like
you would expect him to if that was truly his strong motivation, that would seem
to count against your argument unless you posit additional mitigating factors.
Monday Morning Quarterbacking is generally thought of as useless because you
cant go back in time and change what your team did. But if on Sunday night,
your team consistently took deliberate actions that made no sense given their
presumed desire to win the game (such as gingerly handing the other team the
ball, or running into their own endzone and waiting to be sacked for a saftey),
Monday Morning Quarterbacking might be very useful for determining whether or
not your team actually had any desire to win the game.
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Well, yes. He is beyond proof, so He may as well not exist if you prefer.
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I am not sure what sense to make of the phrase beyond proof? Does it mean
something more than not provable? I sometimes see people throw around phrases
like beyond this or beyond that when it comes to describing God, but just as
often these phrases seem to have no discernable meaning, and thus are
indistinguishable from gibberish.
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But can change really not be in the nature of something that is perfect?
What about a perfect sunset? Isnt change a part of any sunset? The sun
changes position, the clouds change colors. Perfect!
It seems more likely to me that the ability to change would be a necessary
part of the nature of something like God. Isnt a God who has the ability
to change more perfect than the God who lacks that ability?
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But a perfect God cannot by definition lack anything.
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So a perfect God does not lack maliciousness? Does not lack mortality?
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Eschew anthropomorphism:-)
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I would retort: eschew non-sense. Just because you can string words together
like a perfect God does not lack anything does not mean that actually means
something coherent. I know you want your God to be beyond all of these things
becasue you think that makes him sound grander, but I think you wander into the
realm of non-sense if you take this idea too far.
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Perfection is one of those terms that is really beyond definition and
relegated to abject subjectivism. Art is another of these terms. Trying
to wrap our minds around the concept of a Creator is as well.
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So if you agree that perfect is a subjective term, clearly it does no good to
describe God as being perfect becasue perfect in this sense has no clear
meaning.
I dont disagree that art is difficult to define, but then again, nobody is
trying to use art in their definition of God.
And finally, I dont think its all that difficult to imagine a creator of our
universe, be it a god, a set of gods, a super-intelligent race of aliens, or an
unguided process of natural selection on a multi-universe scale. But its much
harder to wrap my mind around why a creator needs to be posited in the first
place (in the lack of any evidence of one), or how that would possibly solve
the riddle of why something was created rather than nothing.
Whew! Keep me typing, and you may realize your wish of me never adding another
illustrated Bible story to The Brick Testament! :)
-Brendan
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: The Brick Testament - More Teachings of Jesus
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| (...) Must they be mutually exclusive? (...) How? Via torture? ;-) (...) I'm not sure I even understand what the term "Son of God" means. I do know that it isn't merely a synonym of "Son of Man", "Lamb of God", "Messiah", etc. As for His revelation (...) (18 years ago, 22-Oct-06, to lugnet.off-topic.debate, FTX)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: The Brick Testament - More Teachings of Jesus
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| (...) Well, let's say that it "rings true" to me; I find the wisdom valid for my life. Why? I don't know the reason. But it does. Why do you believe what you believe? Upon what rational basis do you (presumably) deny the existence of God? How do you (...) (18 years ago, 18-Oct-06, to lugnet.off-topic.debate, FTX)
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