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Freedom to Believe, or Not
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No best answer has yet been selected by jomifl. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.//Freedom of speech is all very well, but it does not extend to shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theatre.//
Yet if someone should say, "There is no Hell", they should be summarily executed? If I should ever come across a burning theatre filled with the likes of you perhaps you would prefer that I pass it by without issuing so much as a whisper of warning.
It is a sad commentary on our times that religious suppression of free speech is once more on the rise.
Yet if someone should say, "There is no Hell", they should be summarily executed? If I should ever come across a burning theatre filled with the likes of you perhaps you would prefer that I pass it by without issuing so much as a whisper of warning.
It is a sad commentary on our times that religious suppression of free speech is once more on the rise.
Always sad to read about such cases, and to think that this kind of intolerance is on the increase in the 21st century.
Tho only glimmer of light comes from his support from some Christians who don't have a easy time in Indonesia either...
http:// www.huf fington ...src= sp&comm _ref=fa lse
Tho only glimmer of light comes from his support from some Christians who don't have a easy time in Indonesia either...
http://
//I thought ‘If God exists, why is there suffering? Why is there war, poverty, hell?’ Because, to me, God would not create this hell. My family would ask me my thoughts but I knew my answers would cause problems, so I kept quiet.”//
If you read-Acts 17:22, 23.
Consider how religious the Athenians were and how many idols they had, some of his listeners may have taken it as a compliment. Rather than attack their polytheism, The Athenians prized knowledge and logic. Still, they admitted that there was a god that was to them “unknown” It was only logical, then, that they should allow Paul to explain him to them. Nobody could find fault with that reasoning,
Well, what was this “unknown God” like? “The God” made the world and everything in it. No man would deny that the universe exists, that the plants and animals exist, that we humans exist. The power and intelligence, yes, wisdom, manifested in all of this pointed to its being the product of a wise and powerful Creator, rather than of chance. Actually, Paul’s line of reasoning is even more valid in our time. (Revelation 4:11)
If you read-Acts 17:22, 23.
Consider how religious the Athenians were and how many idols they had, some of his listeners may have taken it as a compliment. Rather than attack their polytheism, The Athenians prized knowledge and logic. Still, they admitted that there was a god that was to them “unknown” It was only logical, then, that they should allow Paul to explain him to them. Nobody could find fault with that reasoning,
Well, what was this “unknown God” like? “The God” made the world and everything in it. No man would deny that the universe exists, that the plants and animals exist, that we humans exist. The power and intelligence, yes, wisdom, manifested in all of this pointed to its being the product of a wise and powerful Creator, rather than of chance. Actually, Paul’s line of reasoning is even more valid in our time. (Revelation 4:11)
Jomifl@ No,If atheist is right, then the Bible is wrong. If the Bible, which teaches ‘You must not lie,’ is itself guilty of lying in regard to man’s origin, why should what it says about other matters be respected? Why believe that ‘you must not steal’ and that ‘you must not commit adultery’? Why believe its promises for life in a new world? Why believe its explanation about man’s present condition?
On the other hand, if the Bible is right about man’s origin, then atheist is wrong. There is then basis for considering the Bible’s statements trustworthy.
On the other hand, if the Bible is right about man’s origin, then atheist is wrong. There is then basis for considering the Bible’s statements trustworthy.
naomi; I am not defending anybody, let me paint you a scenario: It is Saturday evening, Tottenham Hotspur have just lost to Arsenal, a man walks into a large pub full of T.H. supporters, navigates deep into to room, stands on a chair, wraps an Arsenal flag round his neck and shouts "Tottenham Hotspur are crap!" Freedom of speech allows him to do it, but would you recommend it?
Khandro, I understand what you’re saying, but is it right to continue to pacify madmen? Instead of speaking out for freedom, the Archbishop of Canterbury and other prominent western figures did that when the Danish cartoons that caused such mayhem were published – and shame on them all.
//I fail to see what he hoped to gain from making such a public statement within that society.//
As with any major injustice that has ever been remedied, dissent has to begin somewhere – and I sincerely hope that before too long the civilised world will have the courage to openly oppose the mindless philosophy of these people and say ‘no’.
//I fail to see what he hoped to gain from making such a public statement within that society.//
As with any major injustice that has ever been remedied, dissent has to begin somewhere – and I sincerely hope that before too long the civilised world will have the courage to openly oppose the mindless philosophy of these people and say ‘no’.
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