The word “know” can carry a wide range of meanings. For example, a person Who had never met him might say: “Yes, I know David Cameron. He is the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.” On the other hand, another person who has, on numerous occasions, seen the Prime Minister might acknowledge: “No, I don’t know Mr. Cameron.”
I am reading this thread and cannot quite get my head round the fact that the OP was about knowing God, and now it seems to have gravitated towards Christmas, Santa Claus, the Watchtower Organisation and even to a little mudslinging.
Surely a person is entitled to his/her belief without having to state every time that he/she is a believer and have to battle...
Point is,we have empirical proof of Camerons existence. So ,your initial premise fails, nevermind the fact that it is really a better example of a poor grasp of grammar,as andy has already mentioned.
It's about goodlife's ego, he likes to think he has access to some truths that are hidden from the rest of us, but since we don't seem to realise that, he has to keep on telling us. At least whilst he he is cutting and pasting he isn't being a nuisance on street corners.
Did you know around the world, nearly two billion people celebrate Christmas while 200 million on Jan 7 but also millions choose not to celebrate Christmas. Why?
Because even Jews and agnostics and atheists zestfully mail them out . yes, Christmas cards.
The editor has listed this section as Religion & Spirituality.
But all I find here is mockery and ridicule.
I feel the editor should rename this section because you cannot get any serious answers, other than jokes, ridicule and nonsense.
I asked a serious question but all I have received is stupid remarks without any real meaning.
Goodlife, to avoid confusion, may I suggest you think about what you write? Your post at 18.20 says that millions choose not to celebrate Christmas because even Jews and agnostics and atheists zestfully mail Christmas Cards out. I can only conclude that those millions aren't too happy about that then.