Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
pertaining to the nature of a god....
draw the line if you can
What does that even mean?
I believe in god.pertaining to the nature of a god....
draw the line if you can
In response to this proposition, I would say "True."I believe in god.
What I don't believe is that anyone knows anything important about god, which is why I don't believe in religion.
But science is finding out some things. God likes spheres and spirals more than cubes and straight lines. God doesn't believe in beginnings or endings, but rather transformation and cycles.
Religion is fiction.
Tom
How did you get that out of the OP?I believe in god.
What I don't believe is that anyone knows anything important about god, which is why I don't believe in religion.
But science is finding out some things. God likes spheres and spirals more than cubes and straight lines. God doesn't believe in beginnings or endings, but rather transformation and cycles.
Religion is fiction.
Tom
I pay little attention to what is actually written in Thief's OPs.How did you get that out of the OP?
pertaining to the nature of a god....
draw the line if you can
The line between what qualifies as part of the nature of a god and what does not?pertaining to the nature of a god....
draw the line if you can
rotflmaopertaining to the nature of a god....
draw the line if you can
God is a word of entirely arbitrary meaning. Perhaps the most extremely arbitrary of all.
I will have to respectfully disagree.It seems we, believers and non believers, scientists and theologians, are all on the same quest, in search of how and why, whether by Scripture or super collider.
I don't, because I am not you and have not the capacity to understand your god as specifically as you understand it.True. And everyone knows who my God is.
What you seem to be describing is not only theism, or perhaps a longing for theism, but also a specific form of it.
The line between what qualifies as part of the nature of a god and what does not?
There is no such line. Literally anything goes if one feels like allowing it, and nothing does likewise.
God is a word of entirely arbitrary meaning. Perhaps the most extremely arbitrary of all.
Conflicting traditional and modern meanings don't necessarily make it arbitrary. Just hard to talk about between people who don't accept each others definitions.God is a word of entirely arbitrary meaning. Perhaps the most extremely arbitrary of all.