The . . . Flying Spaghetti Monster? What’s that?
Sounds yummy. Love to sink my teeth into that monster.
The . . . Flying Spaghetti Monster? What’s that?
Eilonwy Solstice wrote:The . . . Flying Spaghetti Monster? What’s that?
No Mr. Caliburn, the day will not be "too late". It shall arrive exactly when it is needed, and after a breif period of absolute chaos, all of the children of men shall be pressed into our battle.
Li-sensei is right... There will be a reckoning, before all is lost. That is the way it has always been...
I am sorry; I do not believe there is a misunderstanding of the nature of the Judeo-Christian God. It seems as though you are willing to give too much credit to the grace of this God while ignoring his punishments. I find it amazing that when things in a person's life are going well, they thank God for his interaction; but when things are going badly, that same person believes that it is his own actions that brought it on not the interactions of God. "God does good things for me, but I make bad things happen to me."KonThaak wrote:Master Lung... With your definition of prophecy, I do not believe they exist at all. You are right; the future is always changing, always moving, always malleable. We determine our own futures, and shape and change them through our actions. There can *never* be any kind of foretelling that isn't in some way self-fulfilling or absolutely set in stone. In the case of "self-fulfilling prophecy", if the "prophet" never foretold what they foretell, the events would've never happened...which means that whatever tragedy they foretell could've been avoided by them keeping their damned mouths shut, and there lies the implication that these are not set in stone, either.
However, I believe you misunderstand the implications of the Christian God... Many of them believe you will be condemned to Hell for your actions, but they at least claim that it is your actions--not God's will--that will condemn you. Many Christians believe that if you do not believe in God out of love, you should at least believe out of fear of damnation. This--I believe--goes against the teachings of Christ himself, who is now touted to be the "only begotten son of God", who teaches us to love others as we love ourselves, and to love God...and he defines God as love itself. Jesus never spoke of damnation... It was his followers who put these ideas in his mouth posthumously.
The "too long; didn't read" version is, yes, Christ and his followers believe God is omnipotent, but in his omnipotence, he gave us free will and allows us to exercise it. This doesn't stop people from blaming God when they make bad decisions, but they have no way of backing up these blames.