KRISTEN'S BOARD
KB - a better class of pervert

News:

Does God exist?

Grm · 125317

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline Grm

  • Freakishly Strange
  • ******
    • Posts: 3,413
    • Woos/Boos: +456/-117
  • Goodbye KB
Reply #380 on: June 17, 2012, 11:56:00 AM
"God spoke to me today, he said he loves me.
Yesterday my mum was run over by a truck."

unknown from Michigan.



Offline Gina Marie

  • So fucking done with it all.
  • Global Moderator
  • Burnt at the stake
  • ******
    • Posts: 9,470
    • Woos/Boos: +1376/-70
    • Gender: Female
  • Rumors Of My Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated
Reply #381 on: June 17, 2012, 01:05:31 PM



Offline RopeFiend

  • The Cleaner
  • Super Freak
  • Burnt at the stake
  • ******
    • Posts: 5,395
    • Woos/Boos: +672/-30
    • Gender: Male
Reply #382 on: June 17, 2012, 03:39:17 PM

Remember the Golden Rule: you do me, and I\'ll do you (paraphrased)


Offline Grm

  • Freakishly Strange
  • ******
    • Posts: 3,413
    • Woos/Boos: +456/-117
  • Goodbye KB
Reply #383 on: June 17, 2012, 03:57:35 PM



Nit:  I think you mean the theory of relativity has been accepted, not excepted.  They have vary nearly diametrically opposed meanings.
Correct. Typos can even happen to god like entities.



Athos131

  • Guest
Reply #384 on: June 21, 2012, 02:25:11 PM



Offline MissBarbara

  • Burnt at the stake
  • *******
    • Posts: 16,155
    • Woos/Boos: +3181/-41
    • Gender: Female
Reply #385 on: June 21, 2012, 08:12:10 PM
Atheist blogger Leah Libresco converts to Christianity
By Louis Casiano, msnbc.com

A prominent atheist blogger says she has converted to Christianity.

Leah Libresco made the announcement on Monday on her Patheos blog, "Unequally Yoked." The blog post, titled "This is my last post for the Patheos Atheist Portal," details how Libresco came to her decision.

She said she struggled with moral law, exploring where it comes from and what's behind it. As an atheist, she states that friends told her that her philosophy was unsustainable.

"I was ready to admit that there were parts of Christianity and Catholicism that seemed like a pretty good match for the bits of my moral system that I was most sure of, while meanwhile my own philosophy was pretty kludged together and not particularly satisfactory," she wrote.

She goes back to the night before Palm Sunday, where after a debate on religion she then had a discussion with a friend about morality.

After a back-and-forth where her friend asked her to make an argument about where moral law comes from, she couldn't think of any. She then realized that it had to come from something like a person or being.

"I believed that the Moral Law wasn’t just a Platonic truth, abstract and distant.  It turns out I actually believed it was some kind of Person, as well as Truth.  And there was one religion that seemed like the most promising way to reach back to that living Truth," she writes.

Despite her newfound religion, she said she's still confused about the church's stance on homosexuality.

Her post had received more than 750 comments by Tuesday afternoon, with most voicing support and congratulations.

One comment read: "So, so happy for you, Leah! I’ve been praying for you before, and I’ll ramp it up even more. The adventure has just begun!"

It's not the first time an atheist blogger has found religion. A blogger who goes by "The Raving Atheist" announced on his blog he was turning to Christianity a few years ago, The Blaze reported. The blog's name has since been changed to "The Raving Theist."

According to her blog, Libriesco grew up in a secular household in Long Island, N.Y. She dated a Christian, agreeing to go to church once a week in exchange that he go to ballroom dance class. She writes that both recommended books and blogs to each other that fueled all-night debates.

Libresco previously blogged for the Atheist portion of the Pantheos website. She said that her blog will now be moved over to the Patheos Catholic channel. The Patheos site is used for discussion and finding information on different faiths.

In addition to Patheos, Libresco has also blogged for The Huffington Post religion section.



http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/06/19/12299214-atheist-blogger-leah-libresco-converts-to-christianity?lite





"Sometimes the best things in life are a hot girl and a cold beer."



Offline Lois

  • Super Freak
  • Burnt at the stake
  • ******
    • Posts: 11,152
    • Woos/Boos: +768/-56
Reply #386 on: June 22, 2012, 04:43:58 AM



Janus

  • Guest
Reply #387 on: June 22, 2012, 05:22:47 AM
This woman is hot!


Hell yeah she is.......Whew. It's like I want her to call me names as she forces me to do naughty things.... 8)


Janus



Offline clowns

  • New Pervert
  • *
    • Posts: 22
    • Woos/Boos: +5/-0
Reply #388 on: June 30, 2012, 03:46:00 PM
I have spent alot of time on this subject.  I especially like reading all I can about the history of Christianity.

An atheist is simply a non-theist.  He/she has no belief in a God or Gods.  An anti-theist is a type of atheist that believes that there is no God or Gods.
 
For example, we are all born atheists.  We are taught to be a theist typically by our parents.  I would imagine it would be rare indeed for a Lutheran couple to discover their 3 year old is actually a Shiite Muslim.

Most theists like to group all atheists into the anti-theist group because it is easier to label them as haters or misguided.



Offline clowns

  • New Pervert
  • *
    • Posts: 22
    • Woos/Boos: +5/-0
Reply #389 on: June 30, 2012, 03:54:54 PM
Not sure if I am doing this right.  If you don't see the picture, sorry.



Offline DrWoody

  • Degenerate
  • ***
    • Posts: 148
    • Woos/Boos: +6/-0
    • Gender: Male
  • Gynoproctologist, Solaria, Outer Rim, 4th Quad, MW
Reply #390 on: July 04, 2012, 09:35:11 PM
If you have to ask the question, the answer is meaningless. However, here is a story that I would like to share:

During WWII, a US navy pilot was attempting to return to his aircraft carrier after a night raid on the Japanese mainland. During the night fighting, his very powerful P-38 fighter was heavily damaged by enemy flak fire and he was physically fighting to keep the craft airborne. If that wasn't enough, he was separated from his squadron and was running low on fuel. In fact, the subdued lights on his instrument panel showed that the fuel indicator was bumping on empty and he knew he didn't have long before his fighter plunged into the sea.

Because of Japanese night attacks on US shipping, all ships were running with lights out and even finding the carrier was a daunting task. It was simply a matter of extreme luck. Running down the length of the flight deck was a string of very dim landing lights that could be seen only by a pilot flying on the correct heading, and in the correct landing configuration. In order to find those lights, he first had to find the ship, and under an overcast and moonless sky, that seemed virtually impossible. Obviously, all odds were stacked against him.

Looking down on the very black ocean, he found himself not only utterly alone, but also, the most terrified that he had ever been. He knew that his chances of even finding the ship was very slim, landing safely on board virtually nonexistent, and the probability of his pending death very high. Fortunately, he had made his Last Will and Testament and had left it with the ship's executive officer as Naval protocol recommended.

Waiting at home in the states was a young wife and new born daughter who he had never seen, and at this moment he was convinced never would. Many things flashed through his mind as he accepted his fate. He knew he would never witness her first steps, never hear her whisper her first words, nor see her ride her first tricycle, nor would he ever see her prom dress, nor would he ever give her away at  her wedding. Most troubling of all, he would never experience the joy of holding his child in his arms for the first time. Pending death is cruel mistress.

Although, not a church goer, nor a believer in any faith, by instinct he knew the only hope he had left at this moment was a simple prayer. The saying is that "no soldier in battle is an atheist."  He closed his eyes and whispered: "Our father in heaven, I know I have never spent time in your house, nor have I ever confessed my belief in you. Chances are, you don't even know my name, and for this I ask your forgiveness. If you will let me live to see my daughter and at the very least, hold her in my arms, I promise you I will bring her up in your house and she will know your name. Amen"

He opened his eyes and glanced very briefly at the dim lights on his instrument panel. Suddenly, at that exact moment, the electrical system in the aircraft sparked brightly, burned out completely, and the instrument panel lights went out. The cockpit was plunged into total darkness. It was the blackest darkness he had ever witnessed. His first thought was, "Well, that was a quick answer." He again resigned himself to accept the inevitable.

Still fighting to keep the heavily damaged and shuttering aircraft in the air, his eyes slowly adjusted to the total darkness and he glanced down toward the waiting ocean. His immediate thoughts were, why keep fighting, I might as well let it go and get it over with. Just before letting go of the controls, something caught his eye.

At that moment, to his utter amazement, he saw, what appeared to be, a very dim, pale green light painted across the surface of the ocean almost directly beneath his flight path. It proved to be a path of phosphorescent light churned up by the aircraft carrier's powerful propellers cutting through the water agitating phosphorescent plankton. He didn't have to be told that this light across the ocean led to his ship.

Had his electrical system not malfunctioned, had the cockpit lights not gone out, had his eyes not adjusted to the darkness, he would have not seen that "highway" painted across the sea. He eased the nose of the aircraft onto a path to follow the pale green light, and nosed it down into a slow descent. Within moments, at the end of that highway, he spotted a row of landing lights sitting on the water.

Not only did he live to hold his daughter, he was also kind enough to share this story with others. Just thought I'd pass it on.
« Last Edit: July 04, 2012, 10:05:30 PM by DrWoody »

Upon returning home after a lifelong absence, you may find that the journey back was more impressionable than the arrival, and those you met along the way have already shaped your future.


Offline Lois

  • Super Freak
  • Burnt at the stake
  • ******
    • Posts: 11,152
    • Woos/Boos: +768/-56
Reply #391 on: July 04, 2012, 10:17:55 PM
I have no doubt that many people find comfort in prayer, especially when they believe they may die soon.  They may even have a spiritual experience in such a context, but it does not make god "real", except maybe for them.



Offline DrWoody

  • Degenerate
  • ***
    • Posts: 148
    • Woos/Boos: +6/-0
    • Gender: Male
  • Gynoproctologist, Solaria, Outer Rim, 4th Quad, MW
Reply #392 on: July 04, 2012, 10:33:05 PM
Nice story, but the "prayerful pilot" was Jim Lovell, Apollo Astronaut (VII and XIII).  He wrote this famous bit in his book "Getting Home" which was also quoted in the movie "Apollo 13" (1995):

Thank you for sharing the correct version of the story. I certainly stand corrected. I was told this version many years ago and passed it on as I remembered.
« Last Edit: July 04, 2012, 10:40:17 PM by DrWoody »

Upon returning home after a lifelong absence, you may find that the journey back was more impressionable than the arrival, and those you met along the way have already shaped your future.


Offline clowns

  • New Pervert
  • *
    • Posts: 22
    • Woos/Boos: +5/-0
Reply #393 on: July 05, 2012, 09:08:24 AM
A study was conducted where one group of patients in a hospital were prayed for where as another group was not.  The conclusion was prayer overall helped speed recovery. 

But then a different team did research where both groups were prayed for but only one group was told they were being prayed for.  The conclusion was the group who knew they were being prayed for seemed to have better recoveries overall.




Offline Grm

  • Freakishly Strange
  • ******
    • Posts: 3,413
    • Woos/Boos: +456/-117
  • Goodbye KB
Reply #394 on: July 05, 2012, 10:51:24 AM
A study was conducted where one group of patients in a hospital were prayed for where as another group was not.  The conclusion was prayer overall helped speed recovery. 

But then a different team did research where both groups were prayed for but only one group was told they were being prayed for.  The conclusion was the group who knew they were being prayed for seemed to have better recoveries overall.


Can we have a link to this 'study'?



Offline joan1984

  • Burnt at the stake
  • *******
    • Posts: 11,270
    • Woos/Boos: +616/-270
    • Gender: Female
  • Co-POY 2011
Reply #395 on: July 05, 2012, 01:47:25 PM
Does Higgs boson exist?

Some people are like the 'slinky'. Not really good for much,
but they bring a smile to your face as they fall down stairs.


Offline Grm

  • Freakishly Strange
  • ******
    • Posts: 3,413
    • Woos/Boos: +456/-117
  • Goodbye KB
Reply #396 on: July 05, 2012, 04:10:19 PM
Thank you Toe, that is enlightening and as one would suspect the studies were undertaken and financed by faith groups, which immediately puts into question the impartiality of the questions asked and collation of results.



Offline clowns

  • New Pervert
  • *
    • Posts: 22
    • Woos/Boos: +5/-0
Reply #397 on: July 06, 2012, 11:48:02 AM
Thank you Toe - it was a long time ago I had read about those studies.  The part of those who felt anxiety was not part of what I initially read, so I find that interesting.




Offline watcher1

  • POY 2010
  • Burnt at the stake
  • *******
    • Posts: 16,989
    • Woos/Boos: +1719/-56
    • Gender: Male
  • Gentleman Pervert
Reply #398 on: July 06, 2012, 10:10:47 PM

Emancipate yourself from mental slavery, none but ourselves can free our minds.


Offline clowns

  • New Pervert
  • *
    • Posts: 22
    • Woos/Boos: +5/-0
Reply #399 on: July 07, 2012, 01:58:16 AM
I still haven't figured out how to attach an image vs a file...
« Last Edit: July 07, 2012, 02:01:50 AM by clowns »