Taylor
Thankful
- Dec 23, 2018
- 476
No, I'm real, and it is due to my confidence in Christ, why I don't fear death.Troll it is
No, I'm real, and it is due to my confidence in Christ, why I don't fear death.Troll it is
It's the truth, laid out plain in front of you. To each their own, but Jesus laid down his life for you and endured unimaginable suffering out of extraordinary love and compassion for you. If you reject his free offering, you can look forward to eternal torment and separation from God.
Are you an asshole or do you really believe the shit you post? Quite honestly, you're the one that seems like a troll, condemning anyone that doesn't share your views and opinions. Go somewhere else and put people down, we're all suffering enough.I think I threw up in my mouth reading that. Are you a troll or do you really believe that shit?
Why are you getting down on this guy for believing in God?? Isn't this a place for everyone to share their differing opinions about life, death, suicide, etc. without getting criticized and ostracized for those opinions?? I think I might need to get off this forum......Accept Jesus... or go to Hell. That's a disturbing belief. Do you know why you believe that? Does it bother you at all? Did you ever question it? I honestly don't know how so many people ever came to blindly believing something like this. It sounds psychotic. It doesn't sound loving or just at all. That's by human standards. How could you ever believe God came up with this plan?
All that aside, the belief in an Eternal Hell also sounds fake.... Especially when you consider the fact that Judaism never had such a concept. They still don't. So why did Christians start teaching it? It actually wasn't taught for almost 500 years after Christ. The Catholic Church didn't start teaching the doctrine of an Eternal Hell until the 5th century. Wouldn't you think it'd be vital for all those people who lived before 500ad to know about Hell? I don't know why more people reject such an absurd belief. You honestly have to be a cold and calloused person to believe this sounds reasonable.
I agree as a Christian, but I'm also not gonna shove my opinions down anyone's throat. I think you're a nice guy and I hope you find everything in life (or death) that you're looking for, but just remember that Jesus loves everyone, including people that don't believe he exists.It's the truth, laid out plain in front of you. To each their own, but Jesus laid down his life for you and endured unimaginable suffering out of extraordinary love and compassion for you. If you reject his free offering, you can look forward to eternal torment and separation from God.
Agreed. But I for one am not gonna get my panties in a twist because someone has a different opinion than I do. Some people here need to settle tf down I think.Ruh roh Raggy I think a match has been lit in this thread
Why are you getting down on this guy for believing in God?? Isn't this a place for everyone to share their differing opinions about life, death, suicide, etc. without getting criticized and ostracized for those opinions?? I think I might need to get off this forum......
Yeah I guess feisty is the nice way to say it lol! I think everyone can get fired up talking about religion, whether they buy into it or not.I believe he did share his opinion. So did I. Because we can. Nobody said we had to agree. What's your point? You seem a little feisty today. lol
The answer to that is pretty simple actually, because although God is a loving and forgiving god, he is also a just god, and must uphold his duty. However, the last thing God wants is for you to go to Hell, so He manages to do both. I found a quick article that summarizes the general concept quite well with helpful analogies, here: https://www.bibleinoneyear.org/bioy/commentary/2784Accept Jesus... or go to Hell. That's a disturbing belief. Do you know why you believe that? Does it bother you at all? Did you ever question it? I honestly don't know how so many people ever came to blindly believing something like this. It sounds psychotic. It doesn't sound loving or just at all. That's by human standards. How could you ever believe God came up with this plan?
All that aside, the belief in an Eternal Hell also sounds fake.... Especially when you consider the fact that Judaism never had such a concept. They still don't. So why did Christians start teaching it? It actually wasn't taught for almost 500 years after Christ. The Catholic Church didn't start teaching the doctrine of an Eternal Hell until the 5th century. Wouldn't you think it'd be vital for all those people who lived before 500ad to know about Hell? I don't know why more people won't reject such an absurd belief. You honestly have to be a cold and calloused person to believe this sounds reasonable.
Aside from religion as well, I thought this was a very thought given interpretation of suicide, that parallels my exact same mindset on the topic identically. High five!I don't really care what religious views there are on suicide. Until a probe lands in the afterlife and takes rock samples it seems a pointless question to me.
I do though take issue with the notion of it being selfish or something to be punished over.
I did watch that video and understand his sentiments and earnest desire to help. I will not condemn him on that. The trite phrase though, Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. Is founded on a flawed premise, that problems are temporary. You only have to point at permanent maladies to undermine that premise. It is also not just limited to physical disease but mental disorders as well. The statistics on treatment resistance of mental illness is another thing you can point at.
I think it is less a question about selfishness. Instead more about pain and what can you do to mitigate that pain? If you can't do much and have exhausted the options that are meant to resolve that pain. Then it comes down to what you measure as an acceptable quality of life.
Being driven to suicide is also the equivalent of me setting you on fire beside a swimming pool that people happen to be playing in. The immediacy of seemingly inescapable pain will compel you to jump in that pool regardless of how disruptive it is to those people playing.
For the most part, the suicidal consider the feelings of those they will leave behind. For many, they willingly choose remaining on fire solely not to disrupt the people playing in the pool. At great expense to themselves. That demonstrates consideration of an intense nature. Which is the complete opposite of the definition of selfish. The selfish won't even ponder it or register it as a question in the first place.
Even seasoned marines break to pain eventually, with techniques more focused on delaying that inevitability whilst under torture, while they hold out hope for rescue. So what chance do average people have, who are being tortured by their own minds and bodies over a span of a lifetime? Who have exhausted avenues of escape and realised there is no rescue?
THANK YOU!!!!! I've been saying for years that pro-life assholes need to change their tagline about it being a "temporary problem." For most people, mental illness puts them at risk for self-destructive behavior, unsatisfying experiences with work, and problems with relationships spread over a lifetime that has to be medicated with life-threatening drugs. Exactly how is that temporary? Or even chronic physical pain, like people who live with excruciating back pain that can never be resolved? Ugh, it makes me sick just thinking about these trite, smug assumptions. There is a lot of research done on the fact that people who "think positive" all the time are delusional, and that slightly depressed people see the world for what it is. Now, morbidly depressed people are another story; they need treatment and may see the world more horribly.I don't really care what religious views there are on suicide. Until a probe lands in the afterlife and takes rock samples it seems a pointless question to me.
I do though take issue with the notion of it being selfish or something to be punished over.
I did watch that video and understand his sentiments and earnest desire to help. I will not condemn him on that. The trite phrase though, Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. Is founded on a flawed premise, that problems are temporary. You only have to point at permanent maladies to undermine that premise. It is also not just limited to physical disease but mental disorders as well. The statistics on treatment resistance of mental illness is another thing you can point at.
I think it is less a question about selfishness. Instead more about pain and what can you do to mitigate that pain? If you can't do much and have exhausted the options that are meant to resolve that pain. Then it comes down to what you measure as an acceptable quality of life.
Being driven to suicide is also the equivalent of me setting you on fire beside a swimming pool that people happen to be playing in. The immediacy of seemingly inescapable pain will compel you to jump in that pool regardless of how disruptive it is to those people playing.
For the most part, the suicidal consider the feelings of those they will leave behind. For many, they willingly choose remaining on fire solely not to disrupt the people playing in the pool. At great expense to themselves. That demonstrates consideration of an intense nature. Which is the complete opposite of the definition of selfish. The selfish won't even ponder it or register it as a question in the first place.
Even seasoned marines break to pain eventually, with techniques more focused on delaying that inevitability whilst under torture, while they hold out hope for rescue. So what chance do average people have, who are being tortured by their own minds and bodies over a span of a lifetime? Who have exhausted avenues of escape and realised there is no rescue?
I don't really care what religious views there are on suicide. Until a probe lands in the afterlife and takes rock samples it seems a pointless question to me.
I do though take issue with the notion of it being selfish or something to be punished over.
I did watch that video and understand his sentiments and earnest desire to help. I will not condemn him on that. The trite phrase though, Suicide is a permanent solution to a temporary problem. Is founded on a flawed premise, that problems are temporary. You only have to point at permanent maladies to undermine that premise. It is also not just limited to physical disease but mental disorders as well. The statistics on treatment resistance of mental illness is another thing you can point at.
I think it is less a question about selfishness. Instead more about pain and what can you do to mitigate that pain? If you can't do much and have exhausted the options that are meant to resolve that pain. Then it comes down to what you measure as an acceptable quality of life.
Being driven to suicide is also the equivalent of me setting you on fire beside a swimming pool that people happen to be playing in. The immediacy of seemingly inescapable pain will compel you to jump in that pool regardless of how disruptive it is to those people playing.
For the most part, the suicidal consider the feelings of those they will leave behind. For many, they willingly choose remaining on fire solely not to disrupt the people playing in the pool. At great expense to themselves. That demonstrates consideration of an intense nature. Which is the complete opposite of the definition of selfish. The selfish won't even ponder it or register it as a question in the first place.
Even seasoned marines break to pain eventually, with techniques more focused on delaying that inevitability whilst under torture, while they hold out hope for rescue. So what chance do average people have, who are being tortured by their own minds and bodies over a span of a lifetime? Who have exhausted avenues of escape and realised there is no rescue?
To be fair I think what he was trying to get across was that he just didn't like the idea of a God who would immediately get angry with you if you either never believed in him or just believed in something else even if you were a decent person all throughout your life or you're actually making an effort in bettering yourself, which I can understand.Why are you getting down on this guy for believing in God?? Isn't this a place for everyone to share their differing opinions about life, death, suicide, etc. without getting criticized and ostracized for those opinions?? I think I might need to get off this forum......
all i can say is there is no "god" a so-called beneficent being...who would allow the kind of suffering that this world has experienced....THANK YOU!!!!! I've been saying for years that pro-life assholes need to change their tagline about it being a "temporary problem." For most people, mental illness puts them at risk for self-destructive behavior, unsatisfying experiences with work, and problems with relationships spread over a lifetime that has to be medicated with life-threatening drugs. Exactly how is that temporary? Or even chronic physical pain, like people who live with excruciating back pain that can never be resolved? Ugh, it makes me sick just thinking about these trite, smug assumptions. There is a lot of research done on the fact that people who "think positive" all the time are delusional, and that slightly depressed people see the world for what it is. Now, morbidly depressed people are another story; they need treatment and may see the world more horribly.
This seems to be the general misconception most people have about God, from what I've noticed here on SS at least. God is a loving and merciful god, who certainly wouldn't become "angry" with you for not accepting Jesus, and proceed to send you to Hell himself, like some sort of personal vendetta against you lol. Hell is just the unfortunate destination for all of us as sinners, but thankfully we have a God that loves us so much, enough to sacrifice his own Son for us, in effort to save us. Refer back to my post here:To be fair I think what he was trying to get across was that he just didn't like the idea of a God who would immediately get angry with you if you either never believed in him or just believed in something else even if you were a decent person all throughout your life or you're actually making an effort in bettering yourself, which I can understand.
I also don't really have a horse in this race cause I'm not really religious but I'm not against the idea of religion either if it's honestly helping someone one in their life so if you want to ignore my post that's fine too I guess.
The answer to that is pretty simple actually, because although God is a loving and forgiving god, he is also a just god, and must uphold his duty. However, the last thing God wants is for you to go to Hell, so He manages to do both. I found a quick article that summarizes the general concept quite well with helpful analogies, here: https://www.bibleinoneyear.org/bioy/commentary/2784
But what about suicide? Is God loving enough to accept a suicide ?This seems to be the general misconception most people have about God, from what I've noticed here on SS at least. God is a loving and merciful god, who certainly wouldn't become "angry" with you for not accepting Jesus, and proceed to send you to Hell himself, like some sort of personal vendetta against you lol. Hell is just the unfortunate destination for all of us as sinners, but thankfully we have a God that loves us so much, enough to sacrifice his own Son for us, in effort to save us. Refer back to my post here:
Yes, God is the giver of abundant life and happiness, and everything good in life, and anything contrary to that we experience is the root of sin and the devil. God loves you so much that He gave his own Son for you, so that even if you die, (regardless if it was from suicide or not, it doesn't matter) you have the opportunity to be cleansed of your sins by believing in Him, and can crossover to life again. Check out my posts on this other thread here, (ignore the naysayers): https://sanctioned-suicide.net/threads/any-other-christians-here.14630/But what about suicide? Is God loving enough to accept a suicide ?
In some interview I have seen already this topic and priest said that even if you commited suicide in emotional rush, you will be accepted by God
But what about suicide? Is God loving enough to accept a suicide ?
In some interview I have seen already this topic and priest said that even if you commited suicide in emotional rush, you will be accepted by God
@Taylor, how did God sacrifice "his only son?" Did Christ cease to exist? Is God now without Christ?
Isn't it more accurate to say Christ was corporeal for 30ish years, but just as before corporeality, so Christ still is with God?
Hence, what's the sacrifice? Pretty words, but what sense can be made of them?
If you don't mind, can you explain your claim "the act of suicide, or any sin for that matter, could never separate you from his love." Doesn't the Christian tradition recognize unforgivable sins? There is a basis for that, by the way, in the synoptic gospels.
If God wanted to absolve people of their sins and open his kingdom to them, surely he could just...do that? Without forcing himself into a human body and tormenting himself? Just seems like an added, pointless step in the process, dressed up like a meaningful sacrifice.
God is not loving, just look around you. Hell is not loving, read the Bible it'll show you how evil that "God" is. And just to add who is he who decide how we should spend eternity, we have free will right? Anyone to keep you on fire for just not believing he exists is evil.God understands everyone, and everything. You are already loved, more than you can possibly imagine.
God is not loving, just look around you. Hell is not loving, read the Bible it'll show you how evil that "God" is. And just to add who is he who decide how we should spend eternity, we have free will right? Anyone to keep you on fire for just not believing he exists is evil.