Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Maybe. I don't want you to waste your time and effort explaining things to me that I don't really care about very much. If those beliefs help you and others, then that is good enough. I have different beliefs now that help me....
Does that clear it up?
Xalith, none of my business, but are you a Jehovah's Witness?
Just wondering.... uh, no? *blinks* I don't know why you'd ask me That.
Just wondering.
I hope you weren't offended.
It's the way you worded your post ...No, no, not offended... just... confused as to the sudden, specific question.
Most people don't address the Holy Spirit that way: leaving the article "the" off.You have to turn your back on Holy Spirit and tell someone else that the same works were done by Satan.
It's the way you worded your post ...Most people don't address the Holy Spirit that way: leaving the article "the" off.
That is, most don't address "Holy Spirit" as if that's His name.
Which, of course, it is.
Isaiah 57:15a For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy;
The one exception I've routinely encountered are ... if my memory serves me correctly ... the Jehovah's Witnesses.
I like your way of thinking.But I can understand if my way of looking at it is... uncommon.
No, God is clear in scripture that there is only one real God and other gods are false gods. God certainly isn't going to be causing new false gods to be created in people's imaginations.
Is that really clear? When the pharaoh's sorcerers did their serpent-staff showdown with Moses, the text seems to indicate that Egyptian gods are real but simply not as powerful as YHWH.
That's easy to explain: Demons have power too. What most people don't realize, is that these false gods are inspired by Satan and his demons to lead people astray away from the real God, because Satan's aim is to make sure as many people end up in Hell as possible. Satan's goals are, quite simply, to destroy everything God built, if he were actually capable of such a thing (he isn't). The magician in Egypt who threw his staff down that became the serpent was one of these people who worshipped these false idols and was given power by the demon(s) that inspired these false idols.
However, Aaron's staff snake devoured the Magician's, because quite simply... demons have supernatural power... but they can never override the power of the Creator, the Maker of All Things, God Himself.
This is a good demonstration as to why God condemns witchcraft, sorcery, etc. These are real things, but they are all demonic. Anybody who practices witchcraft or sorcery (or tries to), whether they know it or not, is consorting with demons and possibly Satan himself.
What you are saying is not only completely made up, but it's not even supported in the Bible.
It isn't?
False gods are lies.
Who does the Bible say is the inventor and father of all lies?
2+2 = ...
Now if you're talking about the demon doing supernatural junk, look up the story of the woman who had the spirit of divination in Acts. That was a demon spirit giving supernatural power to a slave woman.
Is that really clear? When the pharaoh's sorcerers did their serpent-staff showdown with Moses, the text seems to indicate that Egyptian gods are real but simply not as powerful as YHWH.
No, they weren't real and if you knew much about the bible you would know God is clear that false gods are just that, false.
It's not the task of scientific investigation to find God, but to explain what we see using natural processes alone. If natural processes can't be found to explain something, the conclusion isn't that God is responsible but that we just don't understand enough about natural processes. That's just how scientific investigation works....The problem is that science can never find God's tracks...
It's not the task of scientific investigation to find God, but to explain what we see using natural processes alone. If natural processes can't be found to explain something, the conclusion isn't that God is responsible but that we just don't understand enough about natural processes. That's just how scientific investigation works.
Some people do turn to God because scientific investigation comes up short. One famous example is atheist Antony Flew, who turned to deism because of the inability of scientific investigation to explain the origin of living things.
We should be able to know the personality of God and find His tracks - just like we know the personality of deer and find their tracks.
I suspect I asked this question before in a different form, because I wonder about it a lot. Sometimes I like to imagine a benevolent God that I can talk to and so forth. I tell myself that maybe the Judeo Christian God is fiction, but my more generic chameleon-like God might actually exist.
The problem is that science can never find God's tracks. I ask myself if there is some inherent aspect of God that makes it impossible for Him to leave tracks. I ask myself if God can actually do anything meaningful without leaving tracks. Then there is the imaginary friend possibility. Imaginary friends serve a purpose and leave tracks in the real world even though they exist only in a human's imagination. I suppose the imaginary friend God that exists in human imaginations leaves tracks. Is it possible that God is real, but He restricts Himself to our imaginations? In other words, there is a real God that inspires humans to create imaginary friend Gods in their minds that then interact with the world? Could science tell if there was a real God behind these imaginary friend Gods?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?