ChatterBank8 mins ago
Who And Where Is Your God?.
101 Answers
I Do Not believe in God. However, I could be proved wrong if there are ABers who can account for the reasons that 'God' subjects us mere mortals to Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Lightning, Volcanic eruptions, etc. Also tyrannical forces such as Isis and killer diseases such as Cancer.
Surely, if 'God' is all powerful, he/she is able to control matters in a more appropriate manner than appearing to be 'sitting back' and doing nothing.
Hans.
Surely, if 'God' is all powerful, he/she is able to control matters in a more appropriate manner than appearing to be 'sitting back' and doing nothing.
Hans.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by HansUrbancka. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
I'm not a devout biblebashing Christian Hans, but I do have a faith in something. Not the bearded man on a cloud writing down all the sins we commit in our allotted lifespan. God, Yawah etc is the name given by the ancients, all powerful and that I believe is the force. it is the force of nature, flora, fauna, the sea the winds and weather, untameable, the beauty of the world I think is no accident. We were given our bodies, brains and faculties to fashion our world take care of it and make it ours, the pollution the diseases are all ours, the wars and machines of war are all our making. God gave us our lives to work out for ourselves for good or evil. I haven't any thoughts of what happens when we die. If we have a soul as Christian people believe, to return to God to see our loved ones again, it would make death less dreadful, secretly I hope we do, but the practical side says not.
Naomi - //Khandro, //Many people reject religion not because it's too trivial, but because it's too huge//
And why do those who don't reject it for that reason, reject it? //
Speaking as an atheist with none of the willingness to employ the deep analytical skills Khandro likes to display in this type of discussion, I can confirm that my reason for rejecting religion is nothing to do with looking inside myself and not liking what I see - it is entirely a matter of supreme indifference.
I cannot be bothered to spend my time wringing my hands because of the daily outrages a vindictive god visits on his worshipers, from earthquakes to cancer in children.
My solution is to conclude that no loving god would behave in that way.
There is no god, and I have no need of the psychological equivalent of a comfort blanket in order to bother to invent one, or to go along with society that chooses to invent one.
Life as an atheist is wonderfully simple - why struggle pointlessly as a Christian to justify the sheer malice of a god that still demands worship and fear?
If he does exist, then I am happy to repent for the sin of unbelief, and enter into heaven.
And why do those who don't reject it for that reason, reject it? //
Speaking as an atheist with none of the willingness to employ the deep analytical skills Khandro likes to display in this type of discussion, I can confirm that my reason for rejecting religion is nothing to do with looking inside myself and not liking what I see - it is entirely a matter of supreme indifference.
I cannot be bothered to spend my time wringing my hands because of the daily outrages a vindictive god visits on his worshipers, from earthquakes to cancer in children.
My solution is to conclude that no loving god would behave in that way.
There is no god, and I have no need of the psychological equivalent of a comfort blanket in order to bother to invent one, or to go along with society that chooses to invent one.
Life as an atheist is wonderfully simple - why struggle pointlessly as a Christian to justify the sheer malice of a god that still demands worship and fear?
If he does exist, then I am happy to repent for the sin of unbelief, and enter into heaven.
God is the presumed answer to the unanswered question for in having found and understood the real answer both likewise cease to exist. Acquiring knowledge, not submission to fear, is the proper response to ignorance. The more we learn about and come to comprehend the nature of ourselves and the world we live in the more we realise that the consequences of faith and devotion to religious dogma have throughout history been far more destructive and crippling to human development than any alleged ‘act of god’.
Lunol can't answer your question at 10:27 because I don't know what the heck you are on about, so I will repeat that I believe in life after death and I say this because of various things that have happened over the years when people I knew and loved have 'passed on'. I definitely believe there is something out there, but no idea how it manifests itself or 'works', but I believe and the belief gives me some hope.