Author Topic: Searching for GOD...  (Read 3889605 times)

Shaker

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13025 on: May 07, 2016, 11:29:52 AM »
... conveniently overlooking the innumerable Christians who supported slavery because they saw the inequality between cultivated and civilised white man and negro savage as divinely instituted, of course ...
Pain, or damage, don't end the world. Or despair, or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man, and give some back. - Al Swearengen, Deadwood.

Walt Zingmatilder

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13026 on: May 07, 2016, 11:43:17 AM »
Except they don't, do they? People who believe that they know the mind of God tell us, with rather disasterous consequences for individuals, for humanity and for the planet as a whole.
The rape of the planet starts but a few years after the enlightenment, a phenomenonPinker ascribes human improvement to.Is he also prepared to own the industrial desecration of nature?

ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13027 on: May 07, 2016, 04:07:51 PM »
Dear Ippy,

For your information, John Newton worked as a captain on the slave ships.  When he embraced Christianity, he saw the evil in what he had done, and wrote the song Amazing Grace.  He went on to join a group of Christians, led by William Wilberforce, who campaigned to abolish the slave trade.  Despite fierce opposition from those who profited from the trade, they succeeded in getting this dreadful practice abolished.

The Christian faith is not about guilt, but ultimately about love and forgiveness.

Thanks for letting me know where the song Amazing Grace came from, yes I know it well, my wife, someone else that you would refer to as an atheist, is a gospel singer in a local choir, the music is lovely, I also love the blues some of the best music I've ever heard, it was one of the very few good things that came out of slavery.

The terrible injustice that has been suffered by our black brothers and sisters over the years has been absolutely wicked, how ever anyone can live with themselves after haven taken a part in any of these horrendous injustices, I cannot imagine.

I discount your evil word as a mumbo jumbo religious word, it's meaningless to me.

At the time that the slave trade was going full tilt, most people would of had their education at that period of time where the religious still had their grip on education, so it's not that surprising religious people were involved with the abolition of the slave trade, I would be more surprised if they weren't.

Now days where just over about 150 years ago Darwin all but wrote religion off but the trouble is it wont lay down, why are you giving  me the impression, that you seem to think non-religious people have feelings that would be any different to those of your own, do you really think it needs or needed religious belief/faith, for any of us to be thoroughly repelled and against the injustice suffered by these peoples where their only apparent crime was being black. 

Then you say, "The Christian faith is not about guilt, but ultimately about love and forgiveness", as though you're the only people that have any warmth of feelings toward their fellow man, at the same time I can understand RC's feeling more guilty than most, by lets say off the top of my head, telling Africans that condoms don't help to prevent aids, child abuse, covering up child abuse, telling very young children there is a place called hell and all of the rest, inventing limbo, building the Vatican on indulgences, making desperate women go to back street abortionists, trying to prevent scientists doing stem cell research, there's a load more than that to make you keep your head down Alan and keep a low profile about.

Religions whatever you like to call them they're all an absolute waste of time, more trouble than any of them are worth and you still want to have an argument about souls, what a plonker you are Alan, arguing about the existence of souls or not, ridiculous.   

ippy
« Last Edit: May 07, 2016, 04:10:10 PM by ippy »

ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13028 on: May 08, 2016, 04:16:42 PM »
Yes, this makes me think of the parents that lock up their gay children to save them from 'sinning' and other abuses carried out by families in order to 'save' their offspring.

The guilt thing is a humdinger - an expert on mental health I read not so long (can't think who, read such a lot on this) said that low self esteem is at the root of much of the anxiety and depression people have. Well, rrligion's reslly helpful there - feel guilty for wanting things, feel guilty for having things, feel guilty for making mistakes, feel guilty for geing alive. And Jesus loves you but you're so shit his dad had to kill him before you're allowed to join the party.

Not remotely dysfunctional.  ::)

Quote from: wigginhall on May 06, 2016, 04:48:02 PM
Very interesting.  Freud wrote about this over a 100 years ago, the connection between 'obsessional neurosis' and religious ritual.   The ritual is a kind of defensive measure, to protect one against the feared thing that might happen, often punishment, or loss of control, or I suppose, pleasure.   

You also get a link with guilt - I am a miserable sinner - and also repression, I must squish down my instinctual search for pleasure, because that is BAAAD. 

It doesn't mean that the whole of religion is neurotic, but the similarities with neuroses are striking.

Yes, this makes me think of the parents that lock up their gay children to save them from 'sinning' and other abuses carried out by families in order to 'save' their offspring.

The guilt thing is a humdinger - an expert on mental health I read not so long (can't think who, read such a lot on this) said that low self esteem is at the root of much of the anxiety and depression people have. Well, rrligion's reslly helpful there - feel guilty for wanting things, feel guilty for having things, feel guilty for making mistakes, feel guilty for geing alive. And Jesus loves you but you're so shit his dad had to kill him before you're allowed to join the party.

Not remotely dysfunctional.   

Dorothy Rowe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dr. Dorothy Rowe (born December 1930) is an Australian psychologist and author, whose area of interest is depression. Dr. Rowe currently resides in the United Kingdom.
 

Dorothy Rowe at Humber Mouth 2009
Rowe came to England in her forties, working at Sheffield University and was the head of Lincolnshire Department of Clinical Psychology.[1] In addition to her published works on depression, she is a regular columnist in the UK.[2][3]
She spent her time working with depressed patients and, through listening to their stories, came to reject the medical model of mental illness, instead working within personal construct theory.[4] She believes that depression is a result of beliefs which do not enable a person to live comfortably with themselves or the world. Most notably it is the belief in a "Just World" (that the bad are punished and the good rewarded) that exacerbates feelings of fear and anxiety if disaster strikes. Part of recovering is accepting that the external world is unpredictable and that we control relatively little of it.
The BBC were required to apologise to Dorothy Rowe in 2009 after the production editing of her radio interview misrepresented her views on the impact of religion in providing structure to people's lives.[5]
Rhi I just wondered if you might find Dorothy interesting because you, it seems to me, arrived at a similar conclusion in this post of yours,

I can’t quote her verbatim but she has said that most of her work came from people that have developed various disorders because of their dealings with religion.

I did think you may have misunderstood my previous post to you on this thread, I was meaning that your conclusions were so very similar to Dorothy’s, to your credit, well that’s what I meant.

There’s plenty more about her on Wikki.

ippy
   

Alan Burns

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13029 on: May 09, 2016, 10:14:51 AM »
In contemplating my spirituality, I ask the question:

Am I driven by the lifeless atomic particles within my body?

The answer is no.  It is I, my spiritual self, which drives the parts of my body over which God has given me control.

You will not find me in the scientific examination of my physical body, but you will find evidence for me in the creative things I produce - particularly in my words, written and spoken.

Similarly you will not find God in the scientific examination of this world, but you will find evidence for Him in the creative things He produces - particularly my own self.

You do not need to search for God.  Just leave the door open and He will come to you and make Himself known.  God comes to people in many different ways and at different times in their lives.  The important thing is to leave the door open for Him to enter into your life.

So I hope and pray that each one of you will come to find God in your life, and be blessed with the wonderful gift of faith - the most precious gift you can possess.
Amen.
« Last Edit: May 09, 2016, 10:25:18 AM by Alan Burns »
The truth will set you free  - John 8:32
Truth is not an abstraction, but a person - Edith Stein
Free will, though it makes evil possible, is also the only thing that makes possible any love or goodness or joy worth having. - CS Lewis
Joy is the Gigantic Secret of Christians - GK Chesterton

Shaker

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13030 on: May 09, 2016, 10:17:24 AM »
Is this another valedictory post, Alan? Bloody hell, you've had more comebacks than a boomerang ;D
Pain, or damage, don't end the world. Or despair, or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man, and give some back. - Al Swearengen, Deadwood.

Gonnagle

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13031 on: May 09, 2016, 10:40:12 AM »
Dear Al, ( can I call you Al )

Quote
You will not find me in the scientific examination of my physical body, but you will find evidence for me in the creative things I produce - particularly in my words, written and spoken.

Similarly you will not find God in the scientific examination of this world, but you will find evidence for Him in the creative things He produces - particularly my own self.

Man the creator, yes! little mortal men trying to be gods :(

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ekim

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13032 on: May 09, 2016, 10:42:27 AM »
In contemplating my spirituality, I ask the question:

Am I driven by the lifeless atomic particles within my body?

The answer is no.  It is I, my spiritual self, which drives the parts of my body over which God has given me control.

You will not find me in the scientific examination of my physical body, but you will find evidence for me in the creative things I produce - particularly in my words, written and spoken.

Similarly you will not find God in the scientific examination of this world, but you will find evidence for Him in the creative things He produces - particularly my own self.

You do not need to search for God.  Just leave the door open and He will come to you and make Himself known.  God comes to people in many different ways and at different times in their lives.  The important thing is to leave the door open for Him to enter into your life.

So I hope and pray that each one of you will come to find God in your life, and be blessed with the wonderful gift of faith - the most precious gift you can possess.
Amen.

I believe that the word 'open' and 'hope' have a similar origin.  'Leaving the door open' is like living in hope or being open to the possibility that there is a god.  If you are suggesting that then you ought to say how a person recognises that it is YHVH or Elohim and not some other entity or figment of the imagination.   People have killed on the strength of hearing messages from God.

torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13033 on: May 09, 2016, 11:12:59 AM »
In contemplating my spirituality, I ask the question:

Am I driven by the lifeless atomic particles within my body?

The answer is no.  It is I, my spiritual self, which drives the parts of my body over which God has given me control.

You will not find me in the scientific examination of my physical body, but you will find evidence for me in the creative things I produce - particularly in my words, written and spoken.

Similarly you will not find God in the scientific examination of this world, but you will find evidence for Him in the creative things He produces - particularly my own self.

You do not need to search for God.  Just leave the door open and He will come to you and make Himself known.  God comes to people in many different ways and at different times in their lives.  The important thing is to leave the door open for Him to enter into your life.

That kind of ignores people who 'left the door open' but found noone coming in.  It also conveniently ignores the fact that some people have found Allah, Zeus or Ganesh coming in.  By 'opening the door', people are signalling a readiness to accept God, that they have made some space in their inner mental landscape to accommodate him, and into that space is drawn whatever culturally contemporary belief systems fits the bill.  There is a price to be paid for this trade off - critical faculties have to be switched off or subverted; suspension of disbelief has to become a way of life to allow this god to persist in the mind.

So I hope and pray that each one of you will come to find God in your life, and be blessed with the wonderful gift of faith - the most precious gift you can possess.

Faith is not a precious gift, in my book it is something immoral. Faith is an enemy of reason and a stranger to truth and honest inquiry.  Faith is what you do in order to avoid honest engagement with reality

Stranger

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13034 on: May 09, 2016, 11:35:50 AM »
Faith is not a precious gift, in my book it is something immoral. Faith is an enemy of reason and a stranger to truth and honest inquiry.  Faith is what you do in order to avoid honest engagement with reality

Well said.
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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13035 on: May 09, 2016, 11:54:49 AM »
torri,

Quote
Faith is not a precious gift, in my book it is something immoral. Faith is an enemy of reason and a stranger to truth and honest inquiry.  Faith is what you do in order to avoid honest engagement with reality

Quite so. The specifics of any given religious tradition can be despicable (homophobia) or good (love thy neighbour) or somewhere in between, but they share the same underpinning of that pestilential thing, faith. The moment we're told to privilege beliefs held as articles of faith over just guessing about stuff is the moment bad things happen. Why on earth should we do so as a general principle, and how in any case could we distinguish (say) AB's personal faith beliefs from a 9/11 hijacker's personal faith beliefs when each responds to challenge with, "but that's my faith"?.

It's faith that's the real enemy of reason and progress I think. When we can finally junk it and instead examine the claims of the religious just on their merits rather than on the strength of their convictions then - finally - religion will assume its proper place as an interesting anthropological and cultural phenomenon, but no more.
« Last Edit: May 09, 2016, 12:23:23 PM by bluehillside »
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God

ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13036 on: May 09, 2016, 12:13:49 PM »
Alan, you're as good an example of someone living in cloud cuckoo land as we are likely to get, you're nothing more than a Mr Cop Out man, you've completely/comprehensively surrendered yourself to unreason.

ippy
« Last Edit: May 09, 2016, 10:47:39 PM by ippy »

Gonnagle

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13037 on: May 09, 2016, 12:23:50 PM »
Dear Torridon,

Quote
Faith is what you do in order to avoid honest engagement with reality

Who's reality, yours, mine, Alans, it's all in the Mind.

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bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13038 on: May 09, 2016, 12:29:59 PM »
Gonners,

Quote
Who's reality, yours, mine, Alans, it's all in the Mind.

The reality we treat as pragmatically more likely to be true than not on the basis of intersubjective experience.
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Gonnagle

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13039 on: May 09, 2016, 01:06:05 PM »
Dear Mods,

Old Blue is using big words again :P

Dear Blue,

Inter-subjectivity, my inter-subjective experience, sorry, the worlds inter-subjective experience says God, the worlds inter-subjective experience has faith in God.

But neither you nor me can use this argument as it is one of those fallacious buggers. Just cause I say it is so don't mean that it is so.

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Stranger

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13040 on: May 09, 2016, 01:24:56 PM »
Inter-subjectivity, my inter-subjective experience, sorry, the worlds inter-subjective experience says God, the worlds inter-subjective experience has faith in God.

An experience (inter-subjective or otherwise) can't have faith. In what way do you think it "says God"? If you think there are any inter-subjectively verifiable reasons to believe in any of the many, many gods on offer, please feel free to share...
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torridon

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13041 on: May 09, 2016, 02:02:02 PM »
Dear Torridon,

Who's reality, yours, mine, Alans, it's all in the Mind.

Gonnagle.

I'd agree, it's all in the Mind. Every mind is unique, even identical twins have non-identical minds.  It follows from this that we cannot extrapolate our own personal experience as if it were valid for everyone, everyone is different, apart from one guy in the crowd in Life of Brian, that is.  To imagine that one's personal experience is valid for everyone is to overvalue oneself whilst underpriveleging the experience of others.

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13042 on: May 09, 2016, 02:52:16 PM »
Gonners,

Quote
Dear Blue,

Inter-subjectivity, my inter-subjective experience, sorry, the worlds inter-subjective experience says God, the worlds inter-subjective experience has faith in God.

No, "the worlds'" inter-subjective experiences may often say "gods", but two people only experience the same god when the narrative has been shared a priori - ie, it's memetic. That's why a previously undiscovered tribesman deep in the Amazon is never a Christian or a Muslim for example. The sharing of the stories is inter-subjective all right, but not the experiences or the causal explanations themselves. And that's because reaching for explanations for the otherwise inexplicable phenomena we observe is to a large extent hard-wired as an evolutionary trait; the differing characteristics of the explanations we opt for - Thor, Ra or the Christian God - doesn't matter much for that purpose.

By contrast, there are any manner of phenomena we broadly call "objectively true" that are independent of the opinions (or "faith") of the people holding them. Ask the London taxi driver and the Amazon tribesman what happened when his best mate jumped off the building/tree and the answer will be the same: "he got squished". Ask them to describe the causal explanation each calls "god(s)" on the other hand and the answers will be as far apart as can be.           

Quote
But neither you nor me can use this argument as it is one of those fallacious buggers. Just cause I say it is so don't mean that it is so.

Sort of, but then we turn to reason and logic to test our respective claims. "Faith" sits outside that paradigm (proudly so according to AB) so - absent any method at all to distinguish the truth value of one faith claim from the truth value of any other faith claim - it offers nothing more than a personal opinion on the matter. And there's a bewildering number of those personal opinions to choose from, so we'd have no choice in accepting one of them but to accept the rest too.

And as many of them contradict the others...
« Last Edit: May 09, 2016, 05:41:03 PM by bluehillside »
"Don't make me come down there."

God

savillerow

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13043 on: May 09, 2016, 05:34:16 PM »
I do live in England, I'm not bragging but right now I'm in Tennesse, it's very religious. I've just come across a god burger in a restuarant. (Ps I really did see Dolly Parton 2 days ago) yep and she's very religious too. It makes you realise how so many people can play make believe all at the same time.
i know this is hard for theists to agree with but . . . .we are flying this planet.

floo

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13044 on: May 09, 2016, 05:35:49 PM »
I do live in England, I'm not bragging but right now I'm in Tennesse, it's very religious. I've just come across a god burger in a restuarant. (Ps I really did see Dolly Parton 2 days ago) yep and she's very religious too. It makes you realise how so many people can play make believe all at the same time.

What is a god burger like?

bluehillside Retd.

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13045 on: May 09, 2016, 05:42:36 PM »
Floo,

Quote
What is a god burger like?

Dunno, but I bet the cheese is holey...
"Don't make me come down there."

God

Brownie

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13046 on: May 09, 2016, 05:49:05 PM »
Abbaye de Belloc is Hil-air=ious and I am told Saunte Maure is a pretty good second.
Let us profit by what every day and hour teaches us

Sassy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13047 on: May 10, 2016, 10:32:22 AM »
I do live in England, I'm not bragging but right now I'm in Tennesse, it's very religious. I've just come across a god burger in a restuarant. (Ps I really did see Dolly Parton 2 days ago) yep and she's very religious too. It makes you realise how so many people can play make believe all at the same time.

You just made me realise I have not eaten or had a drink yet.

Sounds good being in Tennesse. Bring some pictures back and post them please.  ::)
Why you posting when you should be enjoying your holiday. Off with you man... must tell me what their bourbon tastes like.
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Brownie

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13048 on: May 10, 2016, 11:30:37 AM »
God Burger:
http://tinyurl.com/zhazr8y

 I want a nice big one with lots of coleslaw, fried onions, tomatoes, fresh lettuce and cheese.  Sass and I could come and join you in Tenessee, SavileRow, and we'd all have them for lunch.  Think of how lively our conversation would be?
« Last Edit: May 10, 2016, 02:15:47 PM by Gordon »
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ippy

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Re: Searching for GOD...
« Reply #13049 on: May 11, 2016, 10:31:39 AM »
Something I've noticed about American burgers and pizzas there could be a connection with god, they always give me the impression that each one of them individually would be able to feed the five thousand; no small wonder a lot of Americans are so enormous.

ippy
« Last Edit: May 11, 2016, 11:39:40 AM by ippy »