Originally posted by mikhael
So basically, all the Buddhists, Hindus, Shintos and the rest are doomed to go to Hell because they never got a visit from the Christ Faerie? Its rather interesting how your minority faith gets a claim over the majority of the world.
Do you hold the viewpoint of there being many "truths"? I certainly don't. Jesus said "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man can come to the Father but by me." That doesn't leave much room for other ways to reach fulfilment/nirvana/God/heaven/whatever.
BTW, I've stopped wasting bandwidth hedging my statements in this thread as "my POV" or the way "Christianity views things". You all know by now that I believe in what I believe in, and that all my statements are from my POV. So forgive the lack of political correctness.

Originally posted by mikhael
I could group judeo-christian morality with the rise of slavery or the hate crimes that continue here in the American South, but that doesn't make it a true link.
Yes, you could. And certainly the typical American "Christian" family isn;t setting a good example on retaining morals and being the model family... heck, divorce rates are higher within the church than without. Just goes to show what happens when people think that they're free to do anything and live life however they want, since Jesus will forgive them. Nigh on blasphemous if you ask me.
Originally posted by mikhael
I wasn't being sarcastic. Besides, why would a movie change my mind when the Book and its followers have never been able to offer anything to sway me? I'm far less likely to have my mind changed by a MOVIE than by rational debate with my colleagues.
No, I didn't mean for it to covince you to become a follower of Jesus or anything... it was simply in response to your (seemingly) sarcastic comment about Jesus allowing the world to be stuck without salvation. The movie, which portrays the last 12 hours of his life, by all accounts I've heard does an excellent job at conveying what he suffered for our sakes.
That's all I was wanting you to see in the movie - the price and the pain.
But if that comment truly wasn't sarcastic (which I honestly still find hard to believe), then nevermind.

Originally posted by mikhael
If I require proof, then my faith is false. Faith is, after all, a belief that does not require proof.
No, there's a different between false and meaningless. I have faith that there's a little old lady in China who stand 5'4" tall. That faith is (most likely, and for arguments' sake, definitely) true. However, it's also a completely meaningless faith for me - unless that faith in her existance causes me to take action in one way or another - pray for her wellbeing, send her a basket of food, whatever.
Originally posted by mikhael
That's a dodge because it doesn't address the question at hand.
In science, there is a school of thought called 'positivism'. Loosely, positivism is the idea that if two explanations of a phenomena both exactly desribe and predict that phenomena, then both are interchangeable for each other and equally valid. An example of this is the wave/particle duality of light. Wave theory and particle theory are both valid, if applied correctly. Usually such dualities are signs that the theories involved are actually subsets of a larger, more complete theory.
Both your explanation of the situation and mine fit the facts. I suggest that they are interchangeable.
I agree, but you said it yourself:
if applied correctly. I personally know one person who is quite well off - through her own brilliant business mind and hard work - and is quite humble and reliable with how she spends that money. Her goal is not the money.
But there are other people - a larger percentage, unfortunately - who do not have the self-discipline and wisdom to handle ever-increasing amounts of money wisely.
Originally posted by Nico
Now that's an argument. Muslims will say the same. Shintoists too. Everybody will say the same. Let's here the reason that makes YOUR truth ( which is not the only one since MY truth is that you're completly wrong
. Will you deny the fact that MY truth does exist? ) is the one?
Of course they will. And of course Christians do too. I mean, look at it objectively for a minute... if you see a building on fire, would you run into that building screaming at those people who don't know about the ire yet that they need to vacate the premesis, or would you go in and tell people that there's a fire, and accept it when they say "I don't see it, therefore I don't believe you."
Now I know that that's what
everyone says, but I'm just trying to help you see from my perspective. I know something you don't, and you refuse to believe me because you've had too many fire alerts recently that were false alarms, and besides, you don't see any fire.
Yet.
Did that make sense?
Originally posted by diamondgeezer
All you forgot to mention was that He was working through America and the UK and other countries, without the support of whom Isarael would not have been established and without whose arms trade would have had much more difficulty in winning those wars. I don't mean to try and burst your bubble but the Jews were given that land cos the west felt pity and guilt over what had happened to them in the past. Course that's not to say that God didn't engineer that generosity, but it could have been prevented by, say, a strong challenge by an opposition leader in one of those countries.
This is dangerous territory for me cos I doubt I know more about Israeli history than you 
But I suppose now we have to get really deep and start discussing free will. Those countries which helped establish Israel for the Jews - I say they chose to do so of their own volition. You would say that maybe that God was guiding their actions and working through them and the Jewish people to build Israel. The difference is I don't think human decision making is goverened by the Man™, I suppose.
Like you said, aside from the last sentence, we agree completely. Small example, but a cool one: According to the book of Revelation, when Jesus returns and His feet touch the Mt. of Olives, it will split in 2 down the middle, north and south (a crack from east to west/west to east).
Gess what they've recently (a few years IIRC) discovered running under the Mt. of Olives? Yep - a branch of the Syrio-African rift, running from east to west.
Originally posted by diamondgeezer
You're twisting what I'm saying. If I wanted to wriggle out from my responsibilites and let someone else suffer for my mistakes then Jesus' would have done me a great favour. And while I appreciate the gesture of goodwill, I maintain that my mistakes are mine to atone for - I will not unload the punishment on other people even if they volunteer and have got themselves nailed to a cross before I can even say 'thanks but no thanks'.
I understand that, an respect you for it, even though I'm not completely convinced that you understand the ramifications of paying the wages of your actions. But we've been over that one already...

Originally posted by diamondgeezer
I personally enjoy a good sulk now and then
Nothin like it in the world.

Originally posted by diamondgeezer
Israel was not pulled out of a hat - that would have gotten my attention - but was built by people. I credit the dedication and suffering that was endured by the people who built Israel. I do not credit God with it as He wasn't the one busting His arse with a spade digging over the desert.
You really should look into the formation of Israel then, because it pretty much was pulled out of a hat... or a grave, to be precise. 3 years after the Holocaust, Israel is formed and fights a defensive war against invading Arab armies from all around her. And prevails. It's really quite bizarre, and, dare I say it? Miraculous?

Originally posted by Stunaep
Thus being faithful without proving it, is a far greater virtue than proving it all the time.
How can one be faithful without proving it?

You can
have faith (in something/someone) without proving it, but you cannot
be faithful without proving it.
Originally posted by Su-tehp
So who's telling the truth? Well, the jury decides that from the evidence.
Exactly... which is the truth? I merely contend that the Bible is true.
I'm not talking about little nuances of "truth", which, when you get down to it, are not really truth or untruth, but differences of opinion. "She deserved it for what she did to me / He made me feel unloved and was ignoring me" - those are differing opinions, neither of which can be said to be truth or untruth. Smell the color nine, y'know?

Originally posted by Su-tehp
Does that include me, Sandy? I'm a secularist and that mantra of "As long as you don't cause others harm, everything's cool. If you both consent, it's fine" is one of my most ferverently cherished beliefs. Does that make me immoral in your eyes? You've met me face-to-face on more than one occasion, Sandwich. You know that I hold to a code of honor and I live my life according to that code, including that mantra of causing no others harm. I'm a lawyer with a sworn oath to uphold the laws of the United States of America, so how can I do any less? By all rights, I am a moral man AND a secularist; the two ideas are not incompatible.
Sandwich, you know me and I consider you one of my greatest friends, despite the fact we've met only twice in person and live thousands of miles from each other. After all this time we've known each other, do you really think me immoral?
After my stating it publicly that I'm a secularist, I need to ask: do you disapprove of me, Sandwich?
Chris, I consider you a person who is moral according to the ever-shifting morals of this world. I don't disapprove of your life in your situation.
But the morals you live by are not morals that I could allow myself to live by. Of course, many of them are... you're not gonna go on a killing spree, you're not gonna go break into someone's house and steal something. These we definitely have in common. But there are other ares, such as (I assume, and forgive me if I'm wrong and/or out of line) sexual relations, where we do not have the same morals. By the morals I live by, in such areas, you are immoral.
That does not mean that I disrespect you. It simply means that I try to hold myself to the stricter standards set in the Bible, whereas you try to hold yourself to the looser standards set by the world. And, I freely admit, I'm not a stranger to failure in that regard.