Message from @Leo (BillNyeLand)
Discord ID: 546893644049678348
<:GWslippyPeepoL:407618465508098049>
That’s also why there are volunteers in ISIS and in terrorist bombings
It goes both ways
One seeks to destroy whilst the other seeks to save
Christianity is in touch with basic, moral human principals or i could say vice versa
Sin nature is hard to fight
Being bad comes naturally
It’s instinct and second nature
Hypothetically if people just wrote it and there was no God, it has so many beneficial teachings and lessons that anybody can apply to their lives in any small way. And in any small way it would be beneficial.
We are born into sin so its inherit
Resisting temptation is way too hard
It takes maturity, determination, and self-control to overcome it. Hence why we need God because otherwise we'd just fall back into temptation.
It was never supposed to be easy
That's to say, on our own.
I’m not religious but neither am I sinful or depraved
I’m not even gay 😎
And there are horrible Christians as much as horrible Muslims or horrible atheists
Didn’t the Catholic Church have some sort of scandal?
@Leo (BillNyeLand) lol which one? hard to keep track these days
I’m the epitome of innocence
And @Techigami you can have morals without being religious
ahh that was rhetorical i see
It sort of was
I'm a Christian of simple faith, I believe in Christ and the Bible, so naturally I disagree with any denomination of Christianity as a whole.
So do I 😎
ditto
(but not for the same reasons)
Oh hey
The separating fact between morality and Christianity is that if you're a Christian you believe in Christ and so on and so forth. I was coming from a point that at the least there is no reason to disagree from a moral perspective.
Here’s some nighttime ponderings for you
Can god create a rock so heavy not even he could ever lift it?
No
Why not?
Because he holds all of creation in his hands
So he can do anything?
It simply can't be measured
(Is god omnipotent?)
i mean you could probably extend this to the cosmological argument no?
You need to think in terms of eternity