+ Visit Cardiff FC for Latest News, Transfer Gossip, Fixtures and Match Results
Page 3 of 4 FirstFirst 1234 LastLast
Results 51 to 75 of 95

Thread: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

  1. #51

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by jon1959 View Post
    Wow, you don’t say!

    It’s all self righteous blah blah blah and ignores (as usual) the point that you are (again) putting words into other posters mouths to suggest they are engaging with your fairy tales. Sludge has never said anything to suggest he ‘hopes’ your imaginary friend is fictional. He doesn’t ‘hope’. Nor do I or many other posters on here who have indulged you. We know. Hope that helps?
    For people who 'KNOW' - you certainly have one thing in common, and that's not being able to present any evidence or answer one question for the agnostic stance you've chosen to make your world view!
    At the same time as circumnavigating the presentation of any verified evidence for a non-created universe including all life on earth, you claim to have a rock solid certainty that those who know God are the victim of fairy tales! - the irony is off the chart

    Unfortunately the world view you currently support is such a mathetical improbability, it requires more faith than any human could logically possess:-

    The likelihood of the spontaneous formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 noughts after it… and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.’”

    This is an astounding improbability! To put “a number with 40,000 noughts after it” in context, it is estimated that the number of atoms in the observable universe is only a number with 80 noughts after it, a tiny number in comparison. As an engineer, this says to me that the atheistic worldview is based on a mathematical impossibility. Don’t ever let an atheist tell you that they don’t believe in miracles, because the mathematics shows that if they believe that the molecules essential for life arose through purely naturalistic processes, they do.

    If you are an atheist, your confirmation bias may be screaming at you to ignore this evidence, but I hope you will research it for yourself. If you come across a good answer to this impossibility, I’d be interested to hear it.

    If you are an agnostic, has mathematics given you a good reason to get off the fence?

    This unimaginable mathematical improbability is only one of a number of difficulties that is causing a growing number of scientists to describe evolution as a theory in crisis. ...
    - article.

  2. #52

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    For people who 'KNOW' - you certainly have one thing in common, and that's not being able to present any evidence or answer one question for the agnostic stance you've chosen to make your world view!
    At the same time as circumnavigating the presentation of any verified evidence for a non-created universe including all life on earth, you claim to have a rock solid certainty that those who know God are the victim of fairy tales! - the irony is off the chart

    Unfortunately the world view you currently support is such a mathetical improbability, it requires more faith than any human could logically possess:-

    The likelihood of the spontaneous formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 noughts after it… and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.’”

    This is an astounding improbability! To put “a number with 40,000 noughts after it” in context, it is estimated that the number of atoms in the observable universe is only a number with 80 noughts after it, a tiny number in comparison. As an engineer, this says to me that the atheistic worldview is based on a mathematical impossibility. Don’t ever let an atheist tell you that they don’t believe in miracles, because the mathematics shows that if they believe that the molecules essential for life arose through purely naturalistic processes, they do.

    If you are an atheist, your confirmation bias may be screaming at you to ignore this evidence, but I hope you will research it for yourself. If you come across a good answer to this impossibility, I’d be interested to hear it.

    If you are an agnostic, has mathematics given you a good reason to get off the fence?

    This unimaginable mathematical improbability is only one of a number of difficulties that is causing a growing number of scientists to describe evolution as a theory in crisis. ...
    - article.
    How come you are the one in the know,you will die like me and you are dead end of.

  3. #53

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Well I speak to them daily and they speak to me by various means; I’m sure Gofer and any other person who knows Christ personally would give you a similar answer.

    As for God getting in touch, then since you were a child, you’ve had a major event EVERY year to remind you that Christ came into the world as a baby, and another annual bank holiday along with Hot CROSS buns to remind you how He died and later rose again from the dead, a fact confirmed OUTSIDE the Bible writings as well as in them.

    Some people say they have but that's either fellow religious people like you and I simply don't believe them.

    No Christian would tell you to believe THEM, they would ask you to honestly LOOK at the evidence.

    Until you do, all you are left with is the empty hope that it's somehow all fictional
    I have looked at the evidence

    And that's the problem

    There isn't any

  4. #54
    International jon1959's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sheffield - out of Roath
    Posts
    16,161

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    For people who 'KNOW' - you certainly have one thing in common, and that's not being able to present any evidence or answer one question for the agnostic stance you've chosen to make your world view!
    At the same time as circumnavigating the presentation of any verified evidence for a non-created universe including all life on earth, you claim to have a rock solid certainty that those who know God are the victim of fairy tales! - the irony is off the chart

    Unfortunately the world view you currently support is such a mathetical improbability, it requires more faith than any human could logically possess:-

    The likelihood of the spontaneous formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 noughts after it… and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.’”

    This is an astounding improbability! To put “a number with 40,000 noughts after it” in context, it is estimated that the number of atoms in the observable universe is only a number with 80 noughts after it, a tiny number in comparison. As an engineer, this says to me that the atheistic worldview is based on a mathematical impossibility. Don’t ever let an atheist tell you that they don’t believe in miracles, because the mathematics shows that if they believe that the molecules essential for life arose through purely naturalistic processes, they do.

    If you are an atheist, your confirmation bias may be screaming at you to ignore this evidence, but I hope you will research it for yourself. If you come across a good answer to this impossibility, I’d be interested to hear it.

    If you are an agnostic, has mathematics given you a good reason to get off the fence?

    This unimaginable mathematical improbability is only one of a number of difficulties that is causing a growing number of scientists to describe evolution as a theory in crisis. ...
    - article.
    God grief!

    You still have the gall to accuse others of lack of evidence, confirmation bias and - best of all - unintended irony!

    You are in a closed fantasy echo chamber and when others refuse to join you there you claim to have won some sort of argument.

    And stop trying to tell me I’m an agnostic. I’m not.

  5. #55

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by jon1959 View Post
    God grief!

    You still have the gall to accuse others of lack of evidence, confirmation bias and - best of all - unintended irony!

    You are in a closed fantasy echo chamber and when others refuse to join you there you claim to have won some sort of argument.

    And stop trying to tell me I’m an agnostic. I’m not.
    Most atheists think they can defend the atheist position; and even the top atheists that have the backbone to discuss their position (who debate theists) all without exception defend the agnostic position - and there's a very good reason for that, so I suggest you look up the definition of each before you state otherwise.

  6. #56

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by SLUDGE FACTORY View Post
    I have looked at the evidence

    And that's the problem

    There isn't any
    That's denial, not discussion.

    If you were confident in your conclusion then you would have used a few of your last ten thousands words to give your reasons; unfortunately you (like the majority) are standing on the conclusions of others, hoping that the 'ice' is thick enough to hold you up.

  7. #57
    International jon1959's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sheffield - out of Roath
    Posts
    16,161

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Most atheists think they can defend the atheist position; and even the top atheists that have the backbone to discuss their position (who debate theists) all without exception defend the agnostic position - and there's a very good reason for that, so I suggest you look up the definition of each before you state otherwise.
    Zzzzzzzzz!

  8. #58

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    For people who 'KNOW' - you certainly have one thing in common, and that's not being able to present any evidence or answer one question for the agnostic stance you've chosen to make your world view!
    At the same time as circumnavigating the presentation of any verified evidence for a non-created universe including all life on earth, you claim to have a rock solid certainty that those who know God are the victim of fairy tales! - the irony is off the chart

    Unfortunately the world view you currently support is such a mathetical improbability, it requires more faith than any human could logically possess:-

    The likelihood of the spontaneous formation of life from inanimate matter is one to a number with 40,000 noughts after it… and if the beginnings of life were not random, they must therefore have been the product of purposeful intelligence.’”

    This is an astounding improbability! To put “a number with 40,000 noughts after it” in context, it is estimated that the number of atoms in the observable universe is only a number with 80 noughts after it, a tiny number in comparison. As an engineer, this says to me that the atheistic worldview is based on a mathematical impossibility. Don’t ever let an atheist tell you that they don’t believe in miracles, because the mathematics shows that if they believe that the molecules essential for life arose through purely naturalistic processes, they do.

    If you are an atheist, your confirmation bias may be screaming at you to ignore this evidence, but I hope you will research it for yourself. If you come across a good answer to this impossibility, I’d be interested to hear it.

    If you are an agnostic, has mathematics given you a good reason to get off the fence?

    This unimaginable mathematical improbability is only one of a number of difficulties that is causing a growing number of scientists to describe evolution as a theory in crisis. ...
    - article.
    A number with 40,000 noughts after it is still more likely than a supernatural being putting it together during a slack period.

  9. #59

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    That's denial, not discussion.

    If you were confident in your conclusion then you would have used a few of your last ten thousands words to give your reasons; unfortunately you (like the majority) are standing on the conclusions of others, hoping that the 'ice' is thick enough to hold you up.
    As far as I am concerned it's a discussion

    The same one ....does God exist

    I have looked for evidence of God

    There isn't any

    That's the end of the discussion

  10. #60

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by Robin Friday's Ghost View Post
    A number with 40,000 noughts after it is still more likely than a supernatural being putting it together during a slack period.
    Not if you understand probability.
    If you know anyone with any interest in the field of probability or statistics then ask them.

    It's utterly impossible.

  11. #61
    International jon1959's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sheffield - out of Roath
    Posts
    16,161

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Not if you understand probability.
    If you know anyone with any interest in the field of probability or statistics then ask them.

    It's utterly impossible.
    As explained very clearly in The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide To The Galaxy, improbability is different from impossibility.

    Even if what you are discussing is really ‘improbable’ in a universal context.

    Douglas Adams has got the drop on Harrison Ford. You are backing the wrong horse again!

  12. #62

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Not if you understand probability.
    If you know anyone with any interest in the field of probability or statistics then ask them.

    It's utterly impossible.
    There you go again. A giant leap from improbable to impossible. My wife is a statistician incidentally.

  13. #63

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by Robin Friday's Ghost View Post
    There you go again. A giant leap from improbable to impossible. My wife is a statistician incidentally.
    We live in hope!

  14. #64

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by jon1959 View Post
    Zzzzzzzzz!
    Ok, let's see what your oft quoted "THE GUARDIAN" has to say re Christ:-

    The historical evidence for Jesus of Nazareth is both long-established and widespread. Within a few decades of his supposed lifetime, he is mentioned by Jewish and Roman historians, as well as by dozens of Christian writings. Compare that with, for example, King Arthur, who supposedly lived around AD500. The major historical source for events of that time does not even mention Arthur, and he is first referred to 300 or 400 years after he is supposed to have lived. The evidence for Jesus is not limited to later folklore, as are accounts of Arthur. - article

  15. #65

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    We live in hope!
    And in faith. And good for you that you do.

  16. #66
    International jon1959's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sheffield - out of Roath
    Posts
    16,161

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Ok, let's see what your oft quoted "THE GUARDIAN" has to say re Christ:-

    The historical evidence for Jesus of Nazareth is both long-established and widespread. Within a few decades of his supposed lifetime, he is mentioned by Jewish and Roman historians, as well as by dozens of Christian writings. Compare that with, for example, King Arthur, who supposedly lived around AD500. The major historical source for events of that time does not even mention Arthur, and he is first referred to 300 or 400 years after he is supposed to have lived. The evidence for Jesus is not limited to later folklore, as are accounts of Arthur. - article
    Another change of subject? Is that because your beliefs and arguments are built on sandy ground?

    Given up on claiming atheists (even ‘top atheists’ whatever they are) are agnostics?

    Given up on claiming lack of faith or religion is proof of faith or religion?

    Given up on claiming the Old Testament is literally true because it says so in the Old Testament?

    Given up on claiming up is down, left is right, or that cultural heritage proves that people (not just your fellow cultists) believe in magic?

    However, I think The Guardian is right in that quote. There is more historical evidence of a minor prophet called (in modern translation) Jesus than there is of a single Romano British warlord called Arthur.

    No evidence of magic for either of them - but maybe some similarities in the way their myth was expanded and changed over time.

  17. #67

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by jon1959 View Post
    Another change of subject? Is that because your beliefs and arguments are built on sandy ground?

    Given up on claiming atheists (even ‘top atheists’ whatever they are) are agnostics?

    Given up on claiming lack of faith or religion is proof of faith or religion?

    Given up on claiming the Old Testament is literally true because it says so in the Old Testament?

    Given up on claiming up is down, left is right, or that cultural heritage proves that people (not just your fellow cultists) believe in magic?

    However, I think The Guardian is right in that quote. There is more historical evidence of a minor prophet called (in modern translation) Jesus than there is of a single Romano British warlord called Arthur.

    No evidence of magic for either of them - but maybe some similarities in the way their myth was expanded and changed over time.
    Sure, whenever people read "The historical evidence..............is both long-established and widespread" they immediately think they are reading about a myth

  18. #68

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    I read somewhere recently that a myth/legend takes at least two generations after the last of the eye witnesses have died off to develop i.e. no one left alive to challenge any of the details. The earliest books of the New Testament were put together within about 40 years of Jesus's death with evidence from eye witnesses who were alive in Jesus's time.

  19. #69

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    I think most people accept a bloke called Jesus was around 2000 years ago

    The problem is that Christians

    think that rather than being a sort of community leader with a charitable side .....he was a supernatural visionary who healed the sick and performed magic tricks

  20. #70

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by SLUDGE FACTORY View Post
    I think most people accept a bloke called Jesus was around 2000 years ago

    The problem is that Christians

    think that rather than being a sort of community leader with a charitable side .....he was a supernatural visionary who healed the sick and performed magic tricks
    Actually that's quite an admission coming from an atheist. Obviously I don't agree with your second paragraph but I admit most people will acknowledge the historical Jesus simply as a great moral teacher, full-stop. Suppose if people just followed his moral teaching alone, think what a different world we could be living in! Of course, true followers of Jesus are trying as much as possible to emulate him but we are only human of course and none of us are perfect, so we have to rely on his grace and forgiveness at the end of the day, rather than depend on our "good works". At least he knows, that we know, we are sinners!

  21. #71
    International jon1959's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sheffield - out of Roath
    Posts
    16,161

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Sure, whenever people read "The historical evidence..............is both long-established and widespread" they immediately think they are reading about a myth
    You do struggle don’t you? I said I agreed that there was an historical Jesus. He just wasn’t the Paul Daniels of 1st Century Judea. That is where the myth comes from. And don’t tell me Paul Daniels was not ‘ the son of God’. That would be very disappointing!

  22. #72

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Question: do atheists know there is no God or do they believe there is no God?

  23. #73

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by Gofer Blue View Post
    Question: do atheists know there is no God or do they believe there is no God?
    Dr Edwin Orr summed this up very well. He showed how any atheist could be shown to be an agnostic in less than 60 seconds.
    He also pointed out that in all high level atheist/ theist debates, the atheist always seeks to defend the agnostic position and never the atheist position; which is just as well because the theist could win the debate before the audience were all comfortable in their seats.

    Then to answer your question he explained that there were two denominations of agnostics:-

    1. The agnostic who didn't believe there was a God but didn't dismiss the fact that God could possibly be discovered.
    2. The agnostic who also who didn't believe there was a God but insists that Almighty God will never ever be found by anyone.

  24. #74

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by Gofer Blue View Post
    Actually that's quite an admission coming from an atheist. Obviously I don't agree with your second paragraph but I admit most people will acknowledge the historical Jesus simply as a great moral teacher, full-stop. Suppose if people just followed his moral teaching alone, think what a different world we could be living in! Of course, true followers of Jesus are trying as much as possible to emulate him but we are only human of course and none of us are perfect, so we have to rely on his grace and forgiveness at the end of the day, rather than depend on our "good works". At least he knows, that we know, we are sinners!
    Ghandi

    Nelson Mandela

    Stephen Hawking

    Far more important to me personally than Jesus

  25. #75

    Re: Praying For Armageddon , American Fundamental Christians , BBC Four , 10 pm

    Quote Originally Posted by truthpaste View Post
    Dr Edwin Orr summed this up very well. He showed how any atheist could be shown to be an agnostic in less than 60 seconds.
    He also pointed out that in all high level atheist/ theist debates, the atheist always seeks to defend the agnostic position and never the atheist position; which is just as well because the theist could win the debate before the audience were all comfortable in their seats.

    Then to answer your question he explained that there were two denominations of agnostics:-

    1. The agnostic who didn't believe there was a God but didn't dismiss the fact that God could possibly be discovered.
    2. The agnostic who also who didn't believe there was a God but insists that Almighty God will never ever be found by anyone.
    His question is about atheists, not agnostics

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •