What exactly do I deserve?You would deserve it, you phony piece of shit.
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What exactly do I deserve?You would deserve it, you phony piece of shit.
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
You mean from the practitioners of polytheism, right?
The story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
That sounds an awful lot like a belief in creation, religion and God to me.
Chosen for what?"We’ve been seeing that term “particularism” quite often this month. At its root, it refers to the core Jewish belief that the Creator of the Universe also has a special and unique relationship with His chosen people." -Mosaic Magazine
Q1 - How could a universal God have a chosen people? If God has a chosen people, He isn't universal. If universal, can't have a chosen people because He stands in a different relationship to some, i.e., is a different kind of God.
Q2 - How is chosen-people-ism different from white supremacy?
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
And if I do and still have the same observation, then what?That sounds an awful lot like a belief in creation, religion and God to me.
Watch it again.
You've got to be one of the stupidest people on earth.How could only people who believe a Jewish rabbi is g-d be the only people to get into heaven?"We’ve been seeing that term “particularism” quite often this month. At its root, it refers to the core Jewish belief that the Creator of the Universe also has a special and unique relationship with His chosen people." -Mosaic Magazine
Q1 - How could a universal God have a chosen people? If God has a chosen people, He isn't universal. If universal, can't have a chosen people because He stands in a different relationship to some, i.e., is a different kind of God.
Q2 - How is chosen-people-ism different from white supremacy?
God made the statement, not the Children of Israel.If the sacred texts were divinely inspired, then it is not the people's "talent for communication." Nevertheless, merely claiming specialness renders the God from whom it is claimed non-universal, i.e., not the Creator of the universe. To believe otherwise is supremacist.The Torah is abundantly clear that being God's "Chosen People" is not the basis of special favors or immunity from the consequences on their actions. They were punished time after time, even at times directly by g-d, which clearly demonstrates that there is no great benefit to being the Chosen People.
God chose the Jews to be the vehicle by which the divine message is conveyed to mankind, through the Torah.
If they were chosen because of their "supremacy," it was merely their demonstrated talent for communication, which continues to this day. Unfortunately, many if not most of the remaining "sons of Abraham" have forgotten the Message that they were commissioned to convey.
She's talking about Jesus and Christians.You've got to be one of the stupidest people on earth.How could only people who believe a Jewish rabbi is g-d be the only people to get into heaven?"We’ve been seeing that term “particularism” quite often this month. At its root, it refers to the core Jewish belief that the Creator of the Universe also has a special and unique relationship with His chosen people." -Mosaic Magazine
Q1 - How could a universal God have a chosen people? If God has a chosen people, He isn't universal. If universal, can't have a chosen people because He stands in a different relationship to some, i.e., is a different kind of God.
Q2 - How is chosen-people-ism different from white supremacy?
Show me where the Rabbi is God.
Show me where Tanach states that only Jews have an afterlife.
Provide a quote from Tanach.Why would any universal God demand what is, frankly, xenophobia from just one tribe (and the enslavement or genocide of all the others?) It is the opposite of a universal God. It is a tribal god and a particularly blood-thirsty one.According to scripture and Jewish tradition, God wished to have a people who placed themselves apart from others to live by a more austere code than other nations. The rest of us could live by a more relaxed code of our own choosing. God wasn't abandoning either group.At its root, it refers to the core Jewish belief that the Creator of the Universe also has a special and unique relationship with His chosen people."
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
You mean from the practitioners of polytheism, right?
Yes.. They split off from the north coast Canaanites and initially worshipped Baal, El and Ashtoreh. Monotheism didn't happen overnight like some lightening strike.. That's why you have references to the Nephilim in Genesis.
And what does that have to do with anything?The story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
There was NO Ur of the Chaldeans in Abraham's time. He was from Urfa near Haran.
Ur of the ChaldeansThe story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
There was NO Ur of the Chaldeans in Abraham's time. He was from Urfa near Haran.
Who knows?So then you think it's just a coincidence that the universe popped into existence being hardwired to produce intelligence
I'm going to put you in the it's just a coincidence camp.
Did you know that if the electron and proton were not exactly opposite in charge the universe could have been created exactly as it was but it would be impossible for life or intelligence to arise?
Now you are a physics guru. Ding you have no bounds.
Of course I have limits but I think this might be more chemistry related than physics but it would certainly impact physics. Because all the matter in the universe would be charged. Everything would either be positively charged or negatively charged. Since like charges repel one another, all the matter in the universe would repel all the other matter, and so the universe would expand, just as it is but it wouldn't do anything else. Even a slight difference in electric charge would be enough to overwhelm the forces of gravitation that bring matter together. There would be no planets, no stars, no galaxies -- and, worst of all, no you.
So are the electrical charges of electrons and protons just a coincidence too?
Creation is not important to me. It seems seems to be very important to you. It's as though your whole belief system is reliant on this dogma. You are like a dog with a bone.
Clearly it's not important to you. It seems that you would just as soon sweep it under the rug.
I think the answers to the origin questions are extremely important. Ancient man did too. That's why the Hebrews passed down their answers orally from generation to generation for thousands of years.
Personally I think the universe being created from nothing freaks the shit out of atheists.
So tell me about your out of body experience. Were you just BS'ing? Or did it actually happen?
Not exactly.. They borrowed myths from the old civilizations around them like Sumer, Egypt and the Canaanite pantheon.. Even Dilmun has thousands of clay tablets older than Genesis.
You mean from the practitioners of polytheism, right?
Yes.. They split off from the north coast Canaanites and initially worshipped Baal, El and Ashtoreh. Monotheism didn't happen overnight like some lightening strike.. That's why you have references to the Nephilim in Genesis.
My point is that it did happen and that there is a vast difference in monotheism and polytheism when it comes to God's involvement in the affairs of nature and man. A distinction which seems to be lost on you.
Not sure she does but she needs to contact the BBC and tell them what they publish is inaccurateUr of the ChaldeansThe story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
There was NO Ur of the Chaldeans in Abraham's time. He was from Urfa near Haran.
Do you know what this means?
She gets her facts from FuckTheJews.orgNot sure she does but she needs to contact the BBC and tell them what they publish is inaccurateUr of the ChaldeansThe story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
There was NO Ur of the Chaldeans in Abraham's time. He was from Urfa near Haran.
Do you know what this means?
Ur of the ChaldeansThe story of Abraham and his descendents is found in the book of Genesis. We first meet him in Genesis chapter 11, although at this stage his name is Abram. There is very little biographical detail about him apart from the fact that he was a shepherd and came from Ur in Mesopotamia - modern day Iraq - after which he and his family moved, with his father Terah, to Haran.
This is a polytheistic age, an age when people believed in and worshipped many gods. Yet within this atmosphere, Abram answers the call of God and it is because of this that he accepts and realises the reality of there being only one true God.
In the Jewish tradition called Midrash (a Hebrew word which means 'interpretation' and relates to the way readings or biblical verses are understood), there are a number of stories about Abraham smashing his father's idols when he realises that there can be only one God of heaven and earth. It doesn't matter whether the stories are true or not. They acknowledge that Abraham was the first person to recognise and worship the one God. And so, monotheism was born.
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Abraham
Abraham is regarded by Jews as the first Patriarch of the Jewish people. This article examines his life, times and significance.www.bbc.co.uk
There was NO Ur of the Chaldeans in Abraham's time. He was from Urfa near Haran.
Do you know what this means?