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God helps when you're down.

Posted: Sun Jul 03, 2005 6:43 pm
by Reaper
Shinizo wrote: My theory is:


Scientists always say that the Earth's continents were always one, they fit together sccording to like.. the shapes and stuff. Well, if it was one giant land mass, I propose that the Garden of Eden was in the middle. Now, when Adam and Eve sinned and all the events started happening, like the Flood and so forth (Cause, if they were to go forth and populate, there had to be one single land mass?) Well, I think the Flood caused the land mass to move, and split apart. Now, if the Garden of Eden was in the middle, and you put all the continents back together.. the middle would be somewhere around Israel. Near Jerusalem.

I think this makes sense.. kinda makes you wonder, no?
That's a good theory.

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God helps when you're down.

Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 1:06 pm
by Shinizo
I know, I thought so too. I got to wondering.. what if that happened, and I think it might can be proven.. if I could find some proof. >.>

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Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2005 1:08 pm
by Clueless
anything can be proven if you find proof lol

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Posted: Wed Jul 06, 2005 4:19 pm
by OLKMED
I think it's great that you've found something that can make you a better person. Do whatever works for you.

I kind of live by my own golden rule that's basically pursue happiness and help others to do the same. You can't go wrong with that can you?

I honestly believe that strength comes from within. Whatever it takes for somebody to unleash it changes from person to person.

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Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2005 12:19 am
by Geisha
Stasi wrote: Well, just so you know where I'm coming from, I'm an ex-Mormon, now Agnostic.  I hold no hostility towards the LDS faith, or really any other religion, for that matter, as long as its expression is positive. 

Sooo, seeing as how you have a we'll tempered belief, I'm not interested in challenging it further.  That isn't to say we won't have our disagreements, both theological and secular.

I would REALLY like to know:
what made you leave the mormon religion? I have a really good friend who's mormon and when I visited her for a weekend, she told me ALL about and tried to convert me into it. I'm a bit skeptical about the religion since there are a plethora of things that clash with what I believe in (catholicism) and I am perfectly comfortable and happy in what I'm in now.... but I haven't heard an outsider's opinion of it and have heard only the "good" things about it. They claim a lot of things (extra prophets and books) that I have NEVER once heard about in my life.... until I met this friend of mine. One of the questions that bothers me about that religion is: if they have all this important information that is "vital" to humankind, then why doesn't the majority of the rest of the world know about it or even consider it? Why are they so "exclusive?" Why did they have to start from scratch and make people believe in their religion rather than unite all the religions?
Anyways... those are my "questions" about it.... and I would certainly love to hear a more neutral opinion about it, rather than one that is so faithfully/emotionally fuelled.... :wacko:



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Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2005 11:59 am
by Shinizo
Geisha wrote:
Stasi wrote: Well, just so you know where I'm coming from, I'm an ex-Mormon, now Agnostic.  I hold no hostility towards the LDS faith, or really any other religion, for that matter, as long as its expression is positive. 

Sooo, seeing as how you have a we'll tempered belief, I'm not interested in challenging it further.  That isn't to say we won't have our disagreements, both theological and secular.

I would REALLY like to know:
what made you leave the mormon religion? I have a really good friend who's mormon and when I visited her for a weekend, she told me ALL about and tried to convert me into it. I'm a bit skeptical about the religion since there are a plethora of things that clash with what I believe in (catholicism) and I am perfectly comfortable and happy in what I'm in now.... but I haven't heard an outsider's opinion of it and have heard only the "good" things about it. They claim a lot of things (extra prophets and books) that I have NEVER once heard about in my life.... until I met this friend of mine. One of the questions that bothers me about that religion is: if they have all this important information that is "vital" to humankind, then why doesn't the majority of the rest of the world know about it or even consider it? Why are they so "exclusive?" Why did they have to start from scratch and make people believe in their religion rather than unite all the religions?
Anyways... those are my "questions" about it.... and I would certainly love to hear a more neutral opinion about it, rather than one that is so faithfully/emotionally fuelled.... :wacko:
Not to be mean.. but mormons are scary >.< The visited me yesterday, and I almost slapped them for being so nice. They even offered to come back the next day to 'covert me' o.O *SLAP*

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Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2005 1:12 pm
by Reaper
Why do Mormons always try to convert people? That's crazy weird. Just like their religion.

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Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2005 1:26 pm
by sintekk
Reaper wrote: Why do Mormons always try to convert people? That's crazy weird. Just like their religion.
Same reason other religions try and convert people, To 'save your soul' or something to that effect, I imagine.

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Posted: Thu Jul 07, 2005 6:31 pm
by Red Squirrel
Switch to linux! Your corporate infrastructure will thank you for it! Do it now, before it's too late.

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God helps when you're down.

Posted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 9:14 am
by Joe
My take on religion is that anyone can feel and talk to God. I don't go to church as much as i use to and even though thats wrong i feel God can reach to you other ways. The breeze on your skin, water on your feet, sun on your face...that is God right there.

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Posted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 11:36 am
by Reaper
That makes me shed a tear. :cry:

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Posted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 1:22 pm
by Joe
am i picking up some sarcasm :unsure:

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Posted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 10:40 am
by Stasi
Geisha wrote:
Stasi wrote: Well, just so you know where I'm coming from, I'm an ex-Mormon, now Agnostic.  I hold no hostility towards the LDS faith, or really any other religion, for that matter, as long as its expression is positive. 

Sooo, seeing as how you have a we'll tempered belief, I'm not interested in challenging it further.  That isn't to say we won't have our disagreements, both theological and secular.

I would REALLY like to know:
what made you leave the mormon religion? I have a really good friend who's mormon and when I visited her for a weekend, she told me ALL about and tried to convert me into it. I'm a bit skeptical about the religion since there are a plethora of things that clash with what I believe in (catholicism) and I am perfectly comfortable and happy in what I'm in now.... but I haven't heard an outsider's opinion of it and have heard only the "good" things about it. They claim a lot of things (extra prophets and books) that I have NEVER once heard about in my life.... until I met this friend of mine. One of the questions that bothers me about that religion is: if they have all this important information that is "vital" to humankind, then why doesn't the majority of the rest of the world know about it or even consider it? Why are they so "exclusive?" Why did they have to start from scratch and make people believe in their religion rather than unite all the religions?
Anyways... those are my "questions" about it.... and I would certainly love to hear a more neutral opinion about it, rather than one that is so faithfully/emotionally fuelled.... :wacko:
Sorry I haven't replied sooner, I've just now read this post. First, I'll answer the question as to what made me leave the Mormon church.

Hmmm, this is very complex. As I got older, I had trouble with prayer and the general idea of faith. I would pray to God to help me have stronger, more firm faith in His existence. I would also pray to God to help me be strong and make friends more easily. See, my dad was in the Army and in three year's time, I went to about 5 different schools. This time period was when started becoming a bit antisocial, right, because what good is it to make friends and get emotionally involved with someone if you're just going to move soon after? And when I'd tried to write letters and whatnot, at some point I stopped hearing from anyone. This began to give me the terrible impression that most relationships are disposable. That you can get along with, hang out, and really like someone but as soon as you're apart for any length of time, their existence becomes more and more inconsequential. Anyway, I never felt that my prayers were answered.

And I know that religious folks would say that God doesn't always answer a prayer in a readily apparent manner and only will allow what follows His will.

Which leads to another issue I began to face: accepting the exclusive 'truth' of any single belief system over another. In church, people would say you know the true church when you feel a 'burning in your bosom'. But everyone from pagans, to Catholics, to Fundies, to Buddhists, etc. can feel a strong feeling that what they believe is very real and very true. And because God doesn't manifest Himself in any manner that one could consider to be empirical proof, why should I believe in one over another. I'd prayed to God to know the truth and I never felt anything.

Some things I like about the Mormon church:

1. This life isn't the only form of existence in which a person can find salvation. The Church believes that those who were never given a fair chance to accept or deny the truth of the religion will have the opportunity after they die. This is one HUGE plus, in my opinion, because other Christian religions believe that you have to be baptized and you have to accept Christ as your savior in order to find salvation, whether or not you're some decent, honest person who, say, lived in some remote part of the world and never even heard of Christ. According to other Christian denominations, such a person, who never even had a chance to accept Christ as their savior is damned to hell. Now, this belief does not give a member of the church free reign to do whatever they want, as if they'd have a chance to truly convert post temporal death. For those who have the truth and good access to it, they are held to a higher standard.

2. Discipline and temperance in what you consume. The 'Word of Wisdom' dictates restraint from using certain substances, such as alcohol and tobacco and has grown to include other things not explicitly mentioned like drugs (as in the abuse of).

3. Chastity. I am no prude, and I have no problem with the discussion of sexuality, however, where some people think the notion of refraining from premarital sex is old fashioned, I think it has quite the valid place in modern society. While I don't feel that it is necessarily wrong to have sex out of wedlock, I do think that too many people have sex with others where the emotional complexity and issues that can arise when there's little meaning behind it. My beliefs on the subject are more about respecting other people, not viewing them solely as a vehicle to experiencing some pleasure, and avoiding behavior that can become extremely complex, emotionally, when there really isn't any interest in the person in a deeper, more meaningful sense. I had asked church leadership about whether or not the church frowns on the use of birth control and each time I asked, the answer was that a family should only have as much children as they can reasonably take care of. Therefore, to plan out child-rearing most responsibly, birth control is acceptable. However, birth control is not acceptible if the married couple uses it with the intent to NEVER have children. The church believes that the central purpose of the family is to have children. And no, the church does not look down on infertile couples, but makes it relatively easy to find children to adopt.

I've heard people attack the idea of chastity as being oppressive and whatnot, but I don't see it as such. I've also heard people ask why premarital sex is so bad in the eyes of the devoutly religious (not just Mormon, Christian, or Muslim). You have to think about it from the religious perspective. First off, sexual intercourse is the act by which children are born, or as the religious believe, as soul is united with a body. Naturally, such a thing will be looked down on as it become more or less a commodity that is used more for a pasttime than either an effort to have children or bond with someone you really love.

4. Just in my personal experience, the bishops I've had have always been pretty level-headed and practical. Even now, when I think about what they've said and done, I can't view any of them as having been radical, fundamentalist, or anything else that defines a non-pragmatic, narrow-sighted type of mentality.

5. The church has its own welfare system that uses tithes to provide disaster relief, as well as more conventional personal welfare when some member and/or their family has hit really hard times. As any welfare system, it gets abused by some but is, in my opinion, a demonstration of care for the members (and others in the case of disaster relief).

6. The church hierarchy, including bishops, stake presidents, etc. aren't paid for the time they spend toward their responsibilities. This is a good thing, in my opinion, because the people in those positions do what they do because they believe in it and want to. There are exceptions, of course. Others in the upper echelons do get paid, but only because their duties are more full-time or more.

Some things I don't like about the Mormon church:

1. The tendancy for people to accept everything the prophet says as de facto law. The prophets have said not to watch R-rated movies. Well, there are pleny of R-rated movies that have far less corruptive material in them than other PG-13 films. My sister refuses to watch R-rated movies, including such harmless ones as '13th Warrior'. There's hardly anything in it about sex, and what there is is so lightly touched that it's hardly worth mentioning. Far as the violence goes, I am a big believer that the context in which violence in film falls has a great deal of impact on how it may be perceived by an impressionable audience. It's not careless, heartless brutality, rather people defending their homes and families against bloodthirsty marauders.

2. Cliquishness. Go to a family ward and amongst the youth, if you pay attention, you may notice something of an 'aristocracy' or upper class. I don't mean this in money terms, rather popularity, credibility, and 'coolness' terms. As the outsider more often than not growing up, I had a hard time really enjoying it. The best time I had was in Alaska. They were the most open and interesting members I'd ever known.

3. Inconsistency and contradictions. I really don't know if this is worth listing since EVERY belief system or ideology has varying degrees of adherence. Nonetheless....

4. The typical problems associated with second coming doomsayers.

I'm going to leave it at that right now. I need to get to bed. Ask and I'll expand. Or ask me about other things about the religion and I'll try and answer. But anyway, I'm an agnostic and see no religion in my future.

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Posted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 1:01 pm
by 000
To meet God, don't go to church, go to prison. God is always found in prison. He must hang out there. Ever seen him walking down the street? No! He's in prison. Go find him. Mike Tyson and countless others did. Go on. :)

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Posted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 10:15 pm
by Joe
Actually Mike went to jail a Christian and walked out a Muslim....

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 1:01 am
by 000
Joe wrote: Actually Mike went to jail a Christian and walked out a Muslim....
God is God is Allah. Same God, diferent name. Minor details.


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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 9:52 am
by Stasi
The God worshipped in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam is the God of Abraham, therefore, the same God.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 11:56 am
by manadren
I don't feel like reading through the entire thread so pardon if this has been said before. But to the original topic of God helping people, I've always thought it more, as some would call it, the power of positive thinking, or as others would, the power of self-deception.

If you look hard enough you can see the good in the bad. If you try hard enough you can see patterns and connections where others don't, if you believe enough that god is helping you, then for all intents and purposes, he might as well be. But you are the one that's really making it all happen.

Not that any of this is a bad thing. In this age, in all ages of man, self-deception has been an essential part of life, an essential component of your physical and psychological well-being. It's what allows us to wake up in the morning, allows us to get things done, allows us to keep moving. We decide to ignore certain facts and put emphasis on others, we build connections between unrelated things, we put our trust in things that don't have the ability to neither live up to expectations nor betray us.

Some call it mind over matter, some call it god, some call it the the fuzzy dice hanging from their mirror, some call it luck or fate, it's all the same. Whatever brings you order from the chaos.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 4:05 pm
by 000
manadren wrote: fuzzy dice
That's awesome. FROM NOW ON, YOUR GOD WILL BE KNOWN AS FUZZY DICE.

It's true tho.



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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 6:12 pm
by Bookworm
Stasi wrote: The God worshipped in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam is the God of Abraham, therefore, the same God.
If you saw someone on another forum with the screenname of Bookworm who works for the post office and lives in Minnesota, you might think it was me, but if you found out that that Bookworm didn't have any childeren, you would know that despite the similarities, it was not the same person. The God of Christianity has a Son named Jesus. The god of Judaism and Islam does not. In my opinion, that is not just a difference of belief about God, but is evidence of them worshipping a different god.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 6:35 pm
by manadren
Bookworm wrote:
Stasi wrote: The God worshipped in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam is the God of Abraham, therefore, the same God.
If you saw someone on another forum with the screenname of Bookworm who works for the post office and lives in Minnesota, you might think it was me, but if you found out that that Bookworm didn't have any childeren, you would know that despite the similarities, it was not the same person. The God of Christianity has a Son named Jesus. The god of Judaism and Islam does not. In my opinion, that is not just a difference of belief about God, but is evidence of them worshipping a different god.
I don't think you can really pull that metaphor in this case. They are the same god in that they trace their origins back to the same place, but the differences in the religions are so profound and incompatible, that you can't really lump them together and expect them to live peacefully. That's like saying that all people who speak french should understand spanish as well because they both derive from Latin. They have similar characteristics, but are by no means the same.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 9:11 pm
by Reaper
Bookworm wrote:
Stasi wrote: The God worshipped in Christianity, Judaism, and Islam is the God of Abraham, therefore, the same God.
If you saw someone on another forum with the screenname of Bookworm who works for the post office and lives in Minnesota, you might think it was me, but if you found out that that Bookworm didn't have any childeren, you would know that despite the similarities, it was not the same person. The God of Christianity has a Son named Jesus. The god of Judaism and Islam does not. In my opinion, that is not just a difference of belief about God, but is evidence of them worshipping a different god.
Uhhh, in Judaism it is the same God. Christians worship God and Jesus, the Son of God. The Jews worship God, and not Jesus, becuase they don't believe that He (Jesus) is the Messiah.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 9:53 pm
by Red Squirrel
Also, allah, as in the muslum god, has really weird worshiping demands. That's what all the north, south, east, west bowing at every 4 hours is all about.

What gets confusing though is the word allah means God in their language, so that's why it's mistaken as the Christian God.

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Posted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 11:03 pm
by 000
Jesus was a Jew. As a matter of fact, the King of the Jews. Jews and Christians worship the same God. The Jews just thought Jesus was a fake.
Muslims also worship the same God. Jesus is even mentioned in the Quran, he is seen as a prophet. Muhammad is the main prophet in their book.
Is it that frightening to know how closely related these 3 religions are? It seems that the most so called religious people on this site are the first to denounce any relation. Hatred is breeding. That's what most wars are fought over. Religion. More people have died in the name of God than for any other reason. Seems like a waste to me. Don't worry, be happy. :)

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Posted: Mon Jul 11, 2005 1:30 am
by Bookworm
manadren wrote: They are the same god in that they trace their origins back to the same place, but the differences in the religions are so profound and incompatible,
That is exactly my point. The fact that they trace things back to some compatible point has no bearing on the present day, because presently the beliefs that they hold about God are so incompatible that they cannot be worshipping the same God,

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