04 Sep '22 01:06>
@divegeester saidForever is no time at all, you helplessly addicted freak.
Yes it does, and “forever” is a long time.
@divegeester saidForever is no time at all, you helplessly addicted freak.
Yes it does, and “forever” is a long time.
@divegeester saidBlah blah blah -- and the take-home message or executive summary is that you believe you can behave however you like because there will never be any Cosmic retribution or consequences.
[i]Jonah chapter 4
This change of plans made Jonah very angry. 2 He complained to the Lord about it: “This is exactly what I thought you’d do, Lord, when I was there in my own country and you first told me to come here. That’s why I ran away to Tarshish. For I knew you were a gracious God, merciful, slow to get angry, and full of kindness; I knew how easily you could can ...[text shortened]... ch are beloved by some and which also superficially indicate otherwise.
There is no hell.
@divegeester saidWhy present yourself as a Christian when you are not one?
@Kevin-Eleven
Rocks up Suzianne style.
Says nothing.
@divegeester saidYou seem to be a damaged or deeply hurt person who lashes out to hurt other people, and one who thinks that other people are unreal and therefore incapable of being hurt as you have been hurt, so it's okay for you to keep behaving as you do.
@Kevin-Eleven
Rocks up Suzianne style.
Says nothing.
@kevin-eleven saidHope the hangover isn’t too bag today.
@divegeester
Did someone forget to change your diaper?
@divegeester saidJonah 3:5
They hadn’t repented and they hadn’t changed their ways.
There is no hell.
@josephw said“Projected bias”
Wrong again divegeester. Your premise is false. Try reading the whole narrative before you spin your projected bias and spew the twisted heresy you've been programmed with by your liberal theological teachers.
@divegeester saidSorry, I got rather bogged down by the idea of an omniscient being changing its mind. It suggests it was not privy to certain information that came to light later.
[i]Jonah chapter 4
This change of plans made Jonah very angry. 2 He complained to the Lord about it: “This is exactly what I thought you’d do, Lord, when I was there in my own country and you first told me to come here. That’s why I ran away to Tarshish. For I knew you were a gracious God, merciful, slow to get angry, and full of kindness; I knew how easily you could can ...[text shortened]... ch are beloved by some and which also superficially indicate otherwise.
There is no hell.
@soothfast saidI concur.
Sorry, I got rather bogged down by the idea of an omniscient being changing its mind. It suggests it was not privy to certain information that came to light later.
@divegeester saidYes, seemingly that is so.
I concur.
So then to my point that the account is all about the messenger rather than the recipients.