Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think this is a very immature imaging of God. God is not the big daddy in the sky. He is far more both wonderful and horrible than that.
Let's see you live as a 12 year old who suffered through poverty death, and then being torn apart from his family. I can already tell, from comparing these two posts, that this 12 year old boys is lightyears ahead of you in emotional maturity: not because of his beliefs but because of the quality of his reflection and introspection, and how badly you look in comparison, with your judgment, lack of compassion, and bad spelling. I hope for your sake that you're not a grown adult, because I'm embarrassed for you.
How much introspection is needed to come to a conclusion that God sucks because some bad things happen to you. Seems the opposite of "introspection" to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
My 12 year son doesn't really believe in God either. He was born into abject poverty with no clean water and little food. As a young child, he watched other children die and many left behind. He realized early on that the only reason he didn't meet the same fate is because his first mother turned him over to an adoption agency. His words, "if there was a God, he wouldn't let babies suffer and children lose their families". There's little I can say. I just listen.
I think this is a very immature imaging of God. God is not the big daddy in the sky. He is far more both wonderful and horrible than that.
Let's see you live as a 12 year old who suffered through poverty death, and then being torn apart from his family. I can already tell, from comparing these two posts, that this 12 year old boys is lightyears ahead of you in emotional maturity: not because of his beliefs but because of the quality of his reflection and introspection, and how badly you look in comparison, with your judgment, lack of compassion, and bad spelling. I hope for your sake that you're not a grown adult, because I'm embarrassed for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
My 12 year son doesn't really believe in God either. He was born into abject poverty with no clean water and little food. As a young child, he watched other children die and many left behind. He realized early on that the only reason he didn't meet the same fate is because his first mother turned him over to an adoption agency. His words, "if there was a God, he wouldn't let babies suffer and children lose their families". There's little I can say. I just listen.
I think this is a very immature imaging of God. God is not the big daddy in the sky. He is far more both wonderful and horrible than that.
Let's see you live as a 12 year old who suffered through poverty death, and then being torn apart from his family. I can already tell, from comparing these two posts, that this 12 year old boys is lightyears ahead of you in emotional maturity: not because of his beliefs but because of the quality of his reflection and introspection, and how badly you look in comparison, with your judgment, lack of compassion, and bad spelling. I hope for your sake that you're not a grown adult, because I'm embarrassed for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
My 12 year son doesn't really believe in God either. He was born into abject poverty with no clean water and little food. As a young child, he watched other children die and many left behind. He realized early on that the only reason he didn't meet the same fate is because his first mother turned him over to an adoption agency. His words, "if there was a God, he wouldn't let babies suffer and children lose their families". There's little I can say. I just listen.
I think this is a very immature imaging of God. God is not the big daddy in the sky. He is far more both wonderful and horrible than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
My 12 year son doesn't really believe in God either. He was born into abject poverty with no clean water and little food. As a young child, he watched other children die and many left behind. He realized early on that the only reason he didn't meet the same fate is because his first mother turned him over to an adoption agency. His words, "if there was a God, he wouldn't let babies suffer and children lose their families". There's little I can say. I just listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
My 12 year son doesn't really believe in God either. He was born into abject poverty with no clean water and little food. As a young child, he watched other children die and many left behind. He realized early on that the only reason he didn't meet the same fate is because his first mother turned him over to an adoption agency. His words, "if there was a God, he wouldn't let babies suffer and children lose their families". There's little I can say. I just listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound very angry.
+1
I feel really sorry for you, OP. God doesn't promise we won't tested, only that we won't be overcome. I've met genocide survivors who have a healthier mindset than you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can God allow the things that happen to children to happen? If I meet him I plan to karate kick him in the face many times. I have rage because of the suffering that takes place. It's taking place right now in Mexico, under the rubble. I hate Him.
Obviously, no loving god would allow children to die at school in an earthquake. Better and easier to believe that there is no god - that both the good and bad things that happen are a matter of chance.
Frankly, I'm not sure how you come to this conclusion. We all die, and whether we get 10 minutes on earth or 90 years, our lives are but a vapor, in the big scheme of things.
I don't see the connection. Are you saying that dying violently as a child is the same as dying peacefully as a 90 year old?
The Bible has an answer for this. Isaiah 57:1-2: "The righteous perish, and no one takes it to heart; the devout are taken away, and no one understands, that the righteous are taken away to be spared from evil. Those who walk uprightly enter into peace; they find rest as they lie in death."
There is a better place than this Earth, which has been corrupted by those who don't love the LORD, for those who do. The Bible says that all tears will be wiped away. This is where your hope should lie, and it lies in the birth, death and resurrection of Christ. God is able to take care of children who die in earthquakes, but we will all die. Where will you spend eternity?
One other things is certain: No one will be karate-kicking God in the face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can God allow the things that happen to children to happen? If I meet him I plan to karate kick him in the face many times. I have rage because of the suffering that takes place. It's taking place right now in Mexico, under the rubble. I hate Him.
Obviously, no loving god would allow children to die at school in an earthquake. Better and easier to believe that there is no god - that both the good and bad things that happen are a matter of chance.
Frankly, I'm not sure how you come to this conclusion. We all die, and whether we get 10 minutes on earth or 90 years, our lives are but a vapor, in the big scheme of things.
I don't see the connection. Are you saying that dying violently as a child is the same as dying peacefully as a 90 year old?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can God allow the things that happen to children to happen? If I meet him I plan to karate kick him in the face many times. I have rage because of the suffering that takes place. It's taking place right now in Mexico, under the rubble. I hate Him.
Obviously, no loving god would allow children to die at school in an earthquake. Better and easier to believe that there is no god - that both the good and bad things that happen are a matter of chance.
Frankly, I'm not sure how you come to this conclusion. We all die, and whether we get 10 minutes on earth or 90 years, our lives are but a vapor, in the big scheme of things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can God allow the things that happen to children to happen? If I meet him I plan to karate kick him in the face many times. I have rage because of the suffering that takes place. It's taking place right now in Mexico, under the rubble. I hate Him.
Obviously, no loving god would allow children to die at school in an earthquake. Better and easier to believe that there is no god - that both the good and bad things that happen are a matter of chance.
Anonymous wrote:How can God allow the things that happen to children to happen? If I meet him I plan to karate kick him in the face many times. I have rage because of the suffering that takes place. It's taking place right now in Mexico, under the rubble. I hate Him.