church of no god

church of no god

Spirituality

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Outkast

With White Women

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91452
05 Feb 06

Originally posted by rwingett
No. I'll never do a debate like that again. I thought it might be fun, but I was wrong. It was an excruciatingly painful process.
I feel your pain. Things are always easier when Jesus enters the picture. 🙂

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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05 Feb 06
1 edit

Originally posted by kirksey957
I feel your pain. Things are always easier when Jesus enters the picture. 🙂
So you place Jesus on a higher plane than say, Buddha or
Mohammed? I was wondering how this totem pole thing works.
Sorry, not meaning to redirect this thread, just curious.
I think the question of rights of the non-believers religion would
be the freedom to critizise, the freedom to draw images of other
religions' banned images, the freedom to have schools that don't
pretend to know what the gods they profess to believe in have in
the way of attributes, the freedom to have a school that isn't
contaminated by the local religion, the freedom to have a country
that isn't controlled by people who foist their religion into the
government, Iran and America come to mind there as examples
of governments foisting religions or the controls of such religions
on peoples lives. Is that clear enough?

Outkast

With White Women

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by sonhouse
So you place Jesus on a higher plane than say, Buddha or
Mohammed? I was wondering how this totem pole thing works.
Sorry, not meaning to redirect this thread, just curious.
I think the question of rights of the non-believers religion would
be the freedom to critizise, the freedom to draw images of other
religions' banned images, the freedom to have sc ...[text shortened]... oisting religions or the controls of such religions
on peoples lives. Is that clear enough?
Uh,...no. I was simply goading Rob. I think he knows that. I have no peckin order of Gods. I just try to get along with everyone.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by kirksey957
Uh,...no. I was simply goading Rob. I think he knows that. I have no peckin order of Gods. I just try to get along with everyone.
So you think all three were gods?

N

The sky

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by sonhouse
So you think all three were gods?
The Trinity? 😉

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by Nordlys
The Trinity? 😉
Have I got a GOD fo you! Such a deal, you can't resist...🙂

Outkast

With White Women

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by sonhouse
So you think all three were gods?
I'm just trying to get through the damn day. I don't get into discussions of the Trinity, eschatology, and other nonsense.

BWA Soldier

Tha Brotha Hood

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by rwingett
No. I'll never do a debate like that again. I thought it might be fun, but I was wrong. It was an excruciatingly painful process.
Really? For you? I had a blast with it.

Ming the Merciless

Royal Oak, MI

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by DoctorScribbles
Really? For you? I had a blast with it.
I'm sure my spirits will recover when the judges announce me as the winner. I suppose I would do it again, just not right away.

l

London

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by eamondo
how about a new religion for those who dont believe, with all of the same rights afforded to all of those religions out there?

could it be a force for good and help to balance the situation which is a little out of hand?

any thoughts on this?

come on people, lets hear the arguments for and against
No need for a new religion - one already exists. It's called [secular] liberalism.

e

london

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06 Feb 06
1 edit

religous groups often aim to influence decision-making by governments to suit their own religous agenda.

a Church of No God might be resist this by claiming, like others have often done, that something is "offensive to their religion".

if someone believed devoutly in "No God" then would they have a reasonable right of protest, the same as the member of any other religious denomination against initiatives or lobbying be ordinary religious groups? could No God be established as a faith?
of course one cant prove that there is no god, one would just need faith (or is it "un"-faith?)

ps-
anyone out there get the connection to alice through the looking glass? anyone know the song? who sung it?

Ming the Merciless

Royal Oak, MI

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06 Feb 06

Originally posted by eamondo
religous groups often aim to influence decision-making by governments to suit their own religous agenda.

a Church of No God might be resist this by claiming, like others have often done, that something is "offensive to their religion".

if someone believed devoutly in "No God" then would they have a reasonable right of protest, the same as the member ...[text shortened]... get the connection to alice through the looking glass? anyone know the song? who sung it?
Non-religious people would find your "Church of No God" to be ridiculous. They would have absolutely no use for it. Lack of belief is not itself a belief. Lack of faith is not itself a faith. There are groups such as the FFRF (Freedom From Religion Foundation) that lobby the government to observe the separation of church and state, but they are not anti-religious. They do not worship the concept of "No God."

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass were books by Lewis Carroll. And no, I don't know what connection you're driving at. I am unaware of any song by that title.

Devout Agnostic.

DZ-015

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08 Feb 06

Originally posted by rwingett
In pre-scientific cultures, perhaps. But I don't think that's true anymore.
david c. the post you found so hard to understand was in reply to the post quoted above. I was trying to point out to rwingnett that, we as a species still create our own gods to compensate for the void created for lack of faith. Also that God is not just an etheral entity but a moral compass, which TV seems to have become for so many people. Thank you for pointing out the fact that i did not make myself clear, and i hope that you are now suitably enlightened. I wouldn't want to think i had been too vague for your superior brain to handle.


🙂

Ming the Merciless

Royal Oak, MI

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08 Feb 06

Originally posted by huckleberryhound
david c. the post you found so hard to understand was in reply to the post quoted above. I was trying to point out to rwingnett that, we as a species still create our own gods to compensate for the void created for lack of faith. Also that God is not just an etheral entity but a moral compass, which TV seems to have become for so many people. Thank ...[text shortened]... tened. I wouldn't want to think i had been too vague for your superior brain to handle.


🙂
If people still create new gods it's only because they've had thousands of years experience in doing so. Old habits die hard. But if the first humans had somehow been scientifically literate, they would have had no need to invent gods in the first place. Indeed, the concept would probably sound quite strange to such a people.

I do not think your equation of TV with a new God is a valid one. It may be a very influential medium, but it falls far short of the status of a god. TV itself is not a moral compass at all, but rather a reflection of society's moral compass.