Is anyone else bothered when people who are spared severe damage or death/injury in a catastrophe will make public statements god spared them and their family? If I was one of their neighbors who’s home was destroyed by a tornado or whose relative died in a flood, I might feel obligated to go over and smack them. Especially when more often than not in small town America, they probably all go to the same church or at least are all of the same faith. I consider it the highth of hypocrisy to basically say that your god chose you over your neighbor or friend and if he spared you, you must have to believe that he purposely attacked and harmed those who were not spared. Is there any other explanation?
I see your headline as something that we all say to god. That is, if you believe in a god. "You died so I could live, god is good." This is the "great love" that god has for you even if he doesn't heal those sick children of cancer. To believe it makes you special.
Not even close! No god, no god killing himself so that bad things he created could be forgiven. I think you got lot on your way to the fairytale website.
@Barnie2years No, I'm an atheist who was once a believer. My remark is catering to some nonsense that believers think is true. I don't believe it for one minute.
I thought it was a well accepted fact that god will, evidently, manipulate the laws of physics just so some self-absorbed, ignorant person can boast how special they are while those around them are suffering. God also likes to manipulate most other facets of people's lives so that exams are passed, games won and promotions are won but has no interest in stopping war, curing disease or ending hunger. If he existed I'd probably hate god.
I hate him just in case He turns out to be real. It's like an insurance policy.
Sort of like Pascal's Wager, except that I don't want to have anything to do with Jehovah if he turns out to exist. I'd rather hang out with the demons.
I was deeply troubled when my (now ex-) wife credited our daughter's survival from a premature birth as a "miracle", in other words a divine intervention (not just a miracle of medicine, which I will happily say it was). If "God" chose my daughter to be one of the 10-15% of babies that survive being born at 21 weeks, then what did we do to earn that? And what did all the other parents do that they should suffer the heartbreak of losing a child? Wasn't it more rational to ascribe her survival to statistical chance, and the luck that at a critical moment when she went into cardiac arrest, we happened to actually be leaving the hospital after a checkup and I could rush straight back in and call for the emergency room team? Plus the fact that we live less than 30 miles away from one of the premier children's hospitals in our area? As much as anything, that began my journey from "agnostic with many doubts" to official atheist.
This kind of thinking among the religious is hardly confined to natural disasters or medical survival, either. Soldiers who are convinced they were saved by a "miracle" don't think that their comrades were therefore doomed by the same miracle. Athletes pray for something as petty as victory at sports- imagine a deity who isn't so busy running the universe that he, she, or it can be bothered to pick the winning team on Sunday and fudge the odds in their favor. It's a form of myopia- people unable to see beyond themselves.
I love Betty!
it's pretty chaotic out there. I do agree.
it's pretty chaotic out there. I do agree.
It is beyond irritating, and one of the reasons I questioned the existence of god from a young age.
It's the epitome of arrogance and self delusion in my opinion. What's the attitude here is it that god has a purpose for me that mine of those other people could fulfill, or is it that god wanted to send a message to me by killing a bunch of other people. It may be a way to deal with survivor guilt, but I still think it's conceit.
Another "favorite" of mine is when people rave about the steel beams in the shape of a cross found in the rubble of the World Trade Center. It's not because there were millions of crisscrossed beams in the building, right?
Religion is full of shit.
It would have been much harder for the steel beams of the building to have been left in the shape of an electric chair. This way god only deals with simple things.
A few months ago, I watched the news where a tornado hit an Oklahoma city, killing several people and the news anchor showed where a few bible pages were stuck on someone's car windshields and they made a big deal about how God exists. Well, we should fire Him because He is surely falling short on the job of protecting us. But christians were declaring God is good and this is a reminder that He is everywhere. Why would you be more special than your neighbor, did you pray more? Are you his favorite student...teacher's pet? This is insanity in it's cruelest form!
It's hard to rationalise the irrational. A building collapses during an earthquake and 500 people die, a horrible death, and three weeks later a baby is found alive in the rubble and it's heralded as a miracle from God. How? 500 die and one lives! I stopped trying to square that circle a long time ago.
I agree. And if god has a plan, then he MADE the earthquake happen and made sure that everyone who was supposed to die was inside the building (and didn't use their free will to go out to the store or something) and then guided each piece of rubble the the right spot to do the deed. And some god-forsaken person who was trapped in agonizing pain for hours or days before expiring, well, that's all part of the plan too, right? Ug.
You know what would really be impressive? If just before the building started to crumble, that one survivor was floated out of the building by the invisible hand of god and was found safely outside, levitating in mid air, after the earthquake was over.
@carlyhorton The notion that there is a guiding hand just doesn't stand up under the slightest scrutiny. Religion doesn't/can't resist critical thinking it's about subserviance and blind devotion and believers don't like to accept that.
Yes. I feel like people use god and religion as a way to not have to take any personal responsibility. Someone dies? God's will. Someone lives? God's plan. Someone is hurt? Never question god. It's all crap.
I like you! My mum had this kind of god he had a long white beard and sat on a cloud all day with a big book on his lap, on one side was Elsie (my mum) On the other side of the ledger was 'Rest of the world' if anyone tripped fell and broke their leg - my mother would say "See old Mrs Openshaw , she was bad to me and my God gave her what for! No wonder i ma agnostic!
No thats why when I learned of the Holocaust as a kid I theorized that no way a god would have let some people survive and all those others be exterminated. Any god -Jewish, Christian whatever.
Religion is full of such contradictions. Like why do the good die young, why do babies die, etc. The closed minded religious rationalize with statements like, "It's not for us to understand God's ways" or "God works in mysterious ways." In other words, don't ask tough questions, just accept what we say on blind faith.
Yeah, a woman I know had breast cancer and even though she swears that god can heal people through prayer, she went to a doctor who used nasty old science on her to get rid of the cancer. As soon as it was in remission she proclaims how good god is.
What about those poor folks who died of cance?
But didn't god GIVE her the cancer? Shouldn't she have seen it as a gift? Oh wait, it was a test. A test of her faith. And people who DIE of cancer have no faith. No, wait, that doesn't make sense. A test of the doctors - whose talents were gifts from god?
I think the entire idea of diseases made it hard for me to believe in a god. If there were a god with a plan for me and knew when I would die, why not just peacefully poof me out of existence. Why does he use horrible car crashes, drownings, murders, and diseases?
@carlyhorton Seems that God gets all of the credit and none of the blame. It's a pretty good gig if you can get it
They're just repeating what they've been trained to say; I doubt any of them believe it's anything other than random chance.
It's probably just their religious way of expressing gratitude for surviving.
Yes as there always going to be people who survive at million to one chance because there is a million who didn't. no one ever says what a fucking asshole God is for taking the majority but saving that million to one person. now the devil apparently doesn't exist who will they all blame now?
I agree with you. Its a bad scene. Like handicapped children, why??? A tornado kills a bunch of people.....random. Really, it is all in the mind. It sounds like "imaginary friends".....maybe some people just need to believe in something else. Myself, I do believe there is a "higher intelligence" that is watching me, or at least that I'm part of or just "inside". it all comes down to why are we here? What is the purpose of life? This question has been out there since the beginning.
It is annoying. They either can't or won't do any critical thinking to see their obvious hypocrisy
Thinking for oneself is scary..
Right on kido, did you ever see a jack nickelson movie called " the witches of Eastwick" jack had a great quote in the movie just about what you said,lol He said it in the church scene if you saw it you would laugh!
Saw the movie, but it was a long time ago, couldn’t tell you much about it.