Wednesday, July 7, 2010

thought of the day.432

Calling Jesus a Savior is like calling a fireman a hero for saving kids from a house he set ablaze.

7 comments:

Unknown said...

Calling Jesus a Savior is like calling a fireman a hero for saving kids from a house that they ran in to while it was on fire.

john evans said...

I didn’t run into any fire.

And, according to the bible, who thought up the whole idea of an eternal fire to inflict unimaginable suffering? That nice Jesus man of course! Who maniacally designed and keeps alive flesh-eating worms to feast on nerve endings that are miraculously healed so as to register unceasing sensations of pain? You know who! That nice Jesus man! Oh yes, God is great. God is good. God is love.

Unknown said...

Hell was not created for humans, Hell was created for Satan and fallen angels.

john evans said...

We’ve been over this. You may argue that God didn’t create hell for humans but if he is all knowing he knew before lighting the first match that most of humanity would end up there for ever. He knew before designing and unleashing the first flesh-eating worm that his fiendish creations would inflict suffering on most of humanity.

Face it, Hell is incompatible with anything but a demon of the most despicable kind.

Unknown said...

Yes, he did know that. And so he himself went to Hell and defeated death so there was no need for anyone to ever go there. Anyone who does, it is because of their own choice.

john evans said...

Choice or not, simply to conceive of such a place, let alone create it, requires such a demented mind/lack of compassion that I would pity such a god, not praise him.

I have no idea how anyone with any sense of self and empathy for their fellow humans could feel anything but contempt for the vindictive cartoon character that is the biblical god.

Well, I do know. Minds are vulnerable things. I do hope you continue your questioning and discover for yourself the truth about what you’ve been taught.

Unknown said...

"I do hope you continue your questioning and discover for yourself the truth about what you’ve been taught."

That sentence makes me curious, because for a couple of years now I have been diving deeper into Christianity and questioning everything I'm taught, and have come to the conclusion that Christianity is true and atheism/naturalism is not. This is what I believe to be the "truth about what I've been taught" - simply that what I was taught was true. Wouldn't this be acceptable?