29 Aug '15 02:55>
As Draco said - all men are evil.
Originally posted by finneganWhat you don't seem to understand is that what the pagans worshipped were really idols and not gods at all. 😏
Although it is a supposedly monotheistic religion, Christianity has an entire zoo of supernatural entities in continuous conflict with each other and continually intruding into the workings of this planet. It is quite a surprise that the Creation has managed to keep going against their continuous subversion. Christianity never even tried to exclude the p ...[text shortened]... t is apparently necessary to sign up to this mad parallel universe as a condition of membership.
Originally posted by RJHindsRead a little further and you'll discover that Noah wasn't so pure and innocent.
The evil was due to the fact that the Sons of God (the watching angels) saw that the daughters of humans were beautiful and they took all they pleased as wives and corrupted mankind to the point that they were thiking of evil things contrary to the will of God.
Only eight people were left unaffected by this corruption, and God had to save man at that time ...[text shortened]... a good line of descent for the Messiah to come.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watcher_(angel)
Originally posted by normbenignThis corruption was from the mixing of the sons of God (the watchers) with the daughters of men. It did not mean that Noah and his family were sinless.
[b]Only eight people were left unaffected by this corruption, [/b]
Originally posted by RJHindsI read this by chance this morning and thought of you.
Not really. Icons don't really bother me at all for I know they are not gods. 😏
Originally posted by finneganIt seems to me that all men have worshiped before some idol, representing their version of "God". You would likely make your idol "Science or Education", in the process setting yourself up as superior to those who revere other lesser gods, in your view.
I read this by chance this morning and thought of you.
"When e.g. we see a man kneel and pray before an idol, and the content is reprehensible from the point of view of reason, we can nevertheless cling to his feeling that is alive in his prayer, and can say that this feeling has the same value as that of the Christian who worships the semblance of t ...[text shortened]... objects are different; but the subjective feeling is one and the same." Hegel (Lectures 51)