- Joined
- 14 December 2010
- Posts
- 3,472
- Reactions
- 248
I will add a final thought to but those posts. They are worth a response.
GB:
So if I'm born into a Christian culture my Christian beliefs are invalid
And if I'm born into a non-Christian culture my Christian beliefs are invalid.
It doesn't really have anything to do with what we are born into does it?
God would obviously be outside of time and is all knowing and all powerful. If there was a God do you think he would sit there with the clock running with a call centre of people in heaven answering calls frantically and sending the most important ones through to him?
We take the words all knowing and all powerful so lightly! Think about that for a moment.
If anyone cares to genuinely explore evidence for the power of prayer, look up:
1) Azusa street revival
2) Smith Wigglesworth
You and others say that you don't believe that there is a God (any form of god), but my question is what evidence supports a self-existing universe?
1) Where there is a beginning there has to be a cause. There are zero examples of something coming from nothing.
2) There are zero examples of life coming from non-life
That is just to start off the discussion.
Think for one moment. The universe is not eternal. How can it come from nothing? This should be the end of the debate. There is not a way around this.
I could understand some poor villager in deepest, darkest Africa believing this cr@p...
The next bit is a beauty...it's not that I'm a charlatan it's that the poor sod with cancer doesn't believe.
Reminds me of when Uri Geller couldn't bend the spoon because it had been swapped without his knowing; "I don't feel strong tonight" was his reason.
If this witch doctor is an example of the "power of prayer", then religion is indeed crazy.
I wonder if the good doctor ever prescribed eye of newt, or toe of frog.
I could understand some poor villager in deepest, darkest Africa believing this cr@p...
The next bit is a beauty...it's not that I'm a charlatan it's that the poor sod with cancer doesn't believe.
Reminds me of when Uri Geller couldn't bend the spoon because it had been swapped without his knowing; "I don't feel strong tonight" was his reason.
If this witch doctor is an example of the "power of prayer", then religion is indeed crazy.
I wonder if the good doctor ever prescribed eye of newt, or toe of frog.
...The theories behind quantum physics can be as hard to understand and more importantly to beleive as what is written in the bibble.
Thanks Mclovin.
bunyip said:If anyone wants to be honest and realistic about the so-called ‘power of prayer’, they should ask themselves what response the Jews got when they asked God to save them from the Nazis.
The "power of prayer" is a case study in confirmation bias. Anything positive is attributed to God, anything else is just glossed over.
Exactly.
Steady soaking rain makes the countryside green and picturesque – praise be to God.
An earthquake or tsunami kills tens of thousands of people – you won’t hear anyone saying it was God who caused it.
A severe drought is currently devastating western Queensland, killing tens of thousands of animals and trees, causing valuable topsoil to blow away, and devastating family businesses to the extent that suicide rates have climbed dramatically in rural communities. Nobody is blaming God, or pointing out that he’s ignored prayers for rain. But when the rain comes, even if the coming wet season produces only ten or 20% of normal rainfall as happened last wet season in Queensland, causing the current drought, effusive praise will be heaped on God for answering the prayers for rain.
I remember being in a small country church about thirty years ago where the congregation was made up entirely of farmers and graziers. During a prayer session the minister asked the congregation if there was anything in particular they’d like him to pray for.
One man asked for prayers for his sister who was dying of cancer. A woman stood up and asked for prayers for rain to break the drought that was devastating the region. The minister responded with a heartfelt prayer to ‘Our lord in heaven, maker of all things’ etc etc.
Well the rain came a few days later, about 8 ml of it, or 32 points in the old scale. Now, anyone with farming or grazing experience will know that 8 ml of rain during a drought is worse than useless. It muddies the soil, making it harder for weak cattle and sheep to move around, and draining their limited energy. It puts a green shoot on the grass for a week or two, making the stock scour badly as the sudden burst of green feed hits their drought-affected digestive systems. This sudden onset of diahorreah causes them to dehydrate and lose even more weight and get even weaker. It takes a couple of weeks until their digestive systems have adjusted to the new rich feed, and by that time the small amount of moisture in the soil is gone, and the green pick on the grass has gone with it.
Another disadvantage of a tiny amount of rain during a drought is that it germinates a new crop of weeks on the cultivation, many of which have deep tap roots and are therefore able to survive and thrive on limited soil moisture. So the cash strapped farmers have to spend money dealing with the weeds either by cultivating or spraying, otherwise they go to seed and create problems for next years crop.
Anyway, suffice to say that 8 ml of rain during a drought is all disadvantage and no advantage, except maybe to put a bit of water in rainwater tanks.
Next week in church, the woman who had requested prayers for drought-breaking rain stood up during the service and thanked God for answering her prayer and sending us ‘that lovely rain’.
That same woman lost her 34 year old husband a couple of months later when he dropped dead from a heart attack. She was a very religious woman and I had on a number of occasions heard her thank God for our families, and keeping them all safe.
So you used to go to church and then when you tried to pray for stuff it didn't work?
I was born and raised in a Christian family, and I believed everything my parents, church ministers and Sunday school teachers told me about God and Jesus and prayer. But then as I started growing up and observing and thinking for myself, I saw no evidence to support what they’d taught me, and plenty of evidence that discredited their beliefs.
And GB – don’t even bother wasting your time giving me your views on all of this, regardless of how much you might feel you want to help me. I don’t even read those big long posts of yours, and I’m not looking for help. I’m a happy bloke with a fulfilling life, and I’m not searching for answers.
My view is simply that there may or may not be a supreme being – personally I don’t think there is – but it doesn’t really matter anyway. What’s important is that we’re in this life and we’re in this world, and for all its shortcomings it’s still a pretty good world that we can enjoy to the full if we look after ourselves and our health, look after each other, and take pleasure in simple things.
And that’s exactly what I do.
I offered my views because I thought you were grappling with understanding it all. Since I've looked into it all in great depth I thought I'd throw up what I'd learnt. I misinterpreted your position on all this and don't want to be a 'helper' as such.
Since you don't read my long posts, I'll just say that briefly that I did agree with the general sentiment that praying to God is not really going to help most people most of the time.
I offered my views because I thought you were grappling with understanding it all. Since I've looked into it all in great depth I thought I'd throw up what I'd learnt. I misinterpreted your position on all this and don't want to be a 'helper' as such.
Since you don't read my long posts, I'll just say that briefly that I did agree with the general sentiment that praying to God is not really going to help most people most of the time. But if someone did want to do it (not you, someone else), there have been people who have rigorously investigated the hows/whys and wherefores of prayer, including through the use of scientific experiments. And such material is worth reading.
... ?
You seemed to have missed the Study of the Therapeutic Effects of Intercessory Prayer.
The results found no differences in the complications of groups 1 and 3, which a rational scientist would expect. Unexpectedly, however, patients in group 2 actually had more complications during surgery...a psychosomatic result of knowing about the prayers, perhaps? "
Prayer is merely a placebo effect and one that can have negative consequences as this experiment showed. Many people have difficulty dealing with situations outside their control, particularly when it comes to life and death. People cope in different ways but some require the hope that there is a higher entity that would somehow take some time out giving children AIDS in Africa and cure their cancer.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?