oh fuck there's a theology debate happening in this thread
don't mind me, continue my good blokes
oh fuck there's a theology debate happening in this thread
don't mind me, continue my good blokes
Basically, these two posts are WIFOM.
if there is a god, it was his autistic grandson who he let create the earth and humanity
more serious question, if we discover hostile alien life in the galaxy and there's a good chance it could annihilate us within a few generations - would your belief change in any way?
No, god wanted us to die.
god created our weak and fleshy bodies because he wanted the omnissiah to rise up from among us and create our true forms - a mixture of man and machine. unbound by life and death, we can explode into the galaxy and colonize anywhere we wish. 25,000 year long voyages will not be an issue. a perfect physical form while retaining the consciousness and the soul. long live the omnissiah (Elon Musk).
Among us?
Transhumanism gonna get ugly glad i was born before that shitshow
the penile enhancements alone will make any price worth paying
i'm sorry, that post was bad and I feel bad.
"The more I see, the more I don't want to see. That twisted hulk of flesh and metal... driven by the alien technology, can we still call that life? We have to keep moving forward with the project, but the thought of treading the same path as the aliens... is troubling. What if they were like us once? Are we just part of a continuing cycle? If this is a glimpse of our future, I want no part of it."
Maybe for you.
God doesn't have "wants" or "desires" - you can't reason about a superhuman entity using human logic and reasoning
I mean either god is omnipotent and created these hypothetical horrors that torture and devour their victims (in this example) or he's not omnipotent which pokes ever more holes in the fundamentals of Christianity even today
I find this by far the most plausible if we're talking about a potential creator, but I think such an entity would be so far removed from the main-stream Christian idea of god. It feels more lovecraftian than the human-centric idea of god I'm familiar with.
I know the Bible essentially agrees with what you're saying but I feel like the vast majority of people just choose to ignore that and imagine god as extremely humancentric. Especially the whole bit about how we are created in his image
And at this point I do firmly believe our Galaxy is probably filled with a large amount of hostile life,. it may not be intelligent, sentient, or capable of travelling through space, but I'm pretty confident hostile it would be
False. It pokes no holes in the fundamentals of Christianity
Notice how this guy responds 3 times to disagree with my post about God but doesn't disagree with my post about his penis.
I missed your post about my penis, and I think you're the most interesting person on the forum to talk about god with