Gregory
Gregory
Gregory
Bartricks
FreeEmotion
jorndoe
If the human brain were so simple that we could understand it, we would be so simple that we couldn't. — George E Pugh (1977), accredited to Emerson M Pugh (1938)
Bartricks
Of course there is a sort of reductionist argument that answers the omnipotence problem:
Simply put it means saying yes to every question about God.
Can God destroy Himself Yes
Can God destroy Himself and still exist? Yes
Can God destroy Himself and still exist but not exist? Yes
Can God exist and not exist? Yes.
Can God be eternal and die? Yes
Take your pick. In any case I am discussing a set of writings fixed in time and space, about which a limited number of rational statements are possible. — FreeEmotion
Bartricks
FreeEmotion
Bartricks
FreeEmotion
Gregory
I feel that there is a large audience that will accept this, it being a numbers game after all, in a sort of truth by vote world. — FreeEmotion
Bartricks
Bartricks
Gregory
Gregory
FreeEmotion
One man's patterns are another persons nonsense. Why can't Christians just discuss this stuff with themselves? Why do they try to sell it to other people? If you want to evangelize why not talk only about your relationship with Jesus? You're going down the apologetic path yourself. — Gregory
“How to go to Heaven, not how the heavens go.”
Posted on August 10, 2009 by thegodguy
The above quote was made by a Catholic Cardinal to soften the blow of new scientific evidence about the cosmos coming from observations being made with the telescope (Copernican theory). Science did one thing. Religion did another. So there was no conflict.
FreeEmotion
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