Ergo, it must be that our prayers to god will not only fall on deaf ears but may actually invite god's spite, a fact that's written all over the pages of the holy books of the world. — TheMadFool
We can't pray. We shouldn't pray. — TheMadFool
1. This reply is not founded on empirical evidence, and no a priori knowledge exists. So it could be true or false, nobody knows. — god must be atheist
2. Rather allegedly, God wrote the ten commandments, but at a time when writing had not been invented by humans yet. How Moses made any sense of it is beyond me. Maybe there was a sort of Rosetta stone included in the package, with Egyptian hierogliphs and Mesopotamian clay writings to explain the jist of it. — god must be atheist
It was 15 commandments until he dropped one of the tablets..-Mel Brooks — Sherbert
Last Thursday I saw a squirrel outside. There is no empirical evidence that there this squirrel that I saw Thursday. By your argument I cannot say that I know there was a squirrel that I saw last Thursday. That is obviously absurd. — Sherbert
I choose to believe you therefore, and I accept your report as empirical evidence. — god must be atheist
Because the empirical evidence of god is missing, and only exists in legends, — god must be atheist
Prayers are said to be offered as if it's an act of giving but the fact of the matter is it's a taking - we ask for something in return for our supplications whatever form it may take. — TheMadFool
God, is all good, all knowing AND all powerful. — TheMadFool
To supplicate means to ask or beg for something. How is that different from petition? — Pfhorrest
Subhūti said to the Buddha: “World-honored One. When the buddhas attain peerless perfect enlightenment, is it the case that actually nothing is attained?”
“Exactly right. Subhūti, as far as peerless perfect enlightenment is concerned, I have not attained the slightest thing. This is why it is called peerless perfect enlightenment.”
The most powerful prayer, one well-nigh omnipotent, and the worthiest work of all is the outcome of a quiet mind. The quieter it is the more powerful, the worthier, the deeper, the more telling and more perfect the prayer is. To the quiet mind all things are possible. What is a quiet mind? A quiet mind is one which nothing weighs on, nothing worries, which, free from ties and from all self-seeking, is wholly merged into the will of God and dead to its own. — Meister Eckhardt
Because atheists are saying "this is what I take religion to be and I disagree with it", so if you say they take religion to be something it's not, then what they disagree with is not what you actually believe, ergo you actually agree with them. — Pfhorrest
God, is all good, all knowing AND all powerful. — TheMadFool
1. God is not your bitch to be bent over to do your will. — Sherbert
Not at all. That is specifically called ‘petitionary prayer’ and comprises asking for something or seeking a benefit. Human nature being what it is, people will seek advantage in anything, even prayer, but prayer itself might just as easily be supplicatory - seeking to understand the divine will - without asking or seeking gain. — Wayfarer
There are many contributors on this forum who write from an assumption of the foolishness of religious faith, and then, from that perspective, imagine what 'God' must be like, and what such terms as 'all good' must mean. But they have no real understanding of what the terms mean for the faithful, for the obvious reason that they themselves lack faith; accordingly they project caricatures of faith, and then scornfully ask why the reality doesn't conform with their projections. — Wayfarer
"When I was back there in seminary school, there was a person there, who put forth the proposition that you can petition the Lord with Prayer. Petition the Lord... with Prayer? YOU CAN NOT PETITION THE LORD... WITH PRAYER!" (Audience goes wild.) -- Jim Morrison, on the "Live in Concert" double album by The Doors. — god must be atheist
It seems to me to have been very easy for "God" to give life to the whole creation, and right after that same committing a mere deviation from its plans, abandoning it. Does this prove that "God" is omnipotent? No, it just proves that one of your biggest weaknesses is resentment. — Gus Lamarch
a god who cares not for our welfare — TheMadFool
That there are so many dissatisfied souls points to the failure of god's plan doesn't it? — TheMadFool
Would you agree then that we humans are god's, — TheMadFool
We (have to) fawn on him — TheMadFool
What is good for you is not necessarily what you want. — Wayfarer
you ask!How does he want you to "fawn" on him? — Sherbert
What is God's plan? — Sherbert
you ask! — TheMadFool
That there are so many dissatisfied souls points to the failure of god's plan doesn't it? — TheMadFool
Ergo, it must be that our prayers to god will not only fall on deaf ears but may actually invite god's spite — TheMadFool
Praying is not a quid pro quo. You open up what is most important for you and bring it into focus. That it is framed as an appeal to something outside of oneself is not like a letter where a person has to make it out to the proper address for the message to be sent. — Valentinus
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