This is sonething I've never seen in school books, ever. Unless they're novels (which are fiction).TheGasMaster438 (post: 1598806) wrote:I really need some prayers right now. I feel my faith isn't as strong as it could be. I feel like my head is being crammed with messages from school books and atheists saying that God is evil and only loves certain people. I know that God is good, more pure than any human could ever be. Please pray for me to gain the faith to trust in God and sort out the lies.
Also I want to ask this question if I may. As a Christian, is it mandatory for me to go out and preach God's word openly to absolutely everyone? I have this feeling that if I don't, then I will have failed God, but at the same time I don't have confidence in myself to defend God's word (again I feel like My faith is not as good as it should be) and that if I don't successfully defend God's word, then I will fail God anyways. I am scared senseless of failing God. May I also ask for a prayer to find an answer to this question?
TheGasMaster438 (post: 1598806) wrote:I really need some prayers right now. I feel my faith isn't as strong as it could be. I feel like my head is being crammed with messages from school books and atheists saying that God is evil and only loves certain people.
Xeno wrote:for a real atheist to just run around calling god evil makes no sense.
Atria35 (post: 1598835) wrote:This is sonething I've never seen in school books, ever. Unless they're novels (which are fiction).
Atria35 wrote:No. The Bible is very clear that people have different God-given gifts, and that not everyone shares the same gifts - some have the gift of teaching, some of evangelizing, some of healing, some of writing, and on and on and on.
No Christian *has* to go out and evangelize, because not everyone has a gift for it or a calling for it.... and those who proceed to do so anyway can do more harm than good.
Atria35 wrote:Defending the Bible is NOT what defines a Christian - it's believing Jesus died for your sins, and trying to follow Jesus' teachings. So volunteer at a homeless shelter. Love God. Love your neighbor.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1598846) wrote:Having doubts and disbeliefs about things is not the opposite of faith. It is an element of faith.
The more you dig into things like religious philosophy, the deeper your faith will mold. Think for yourself. Don't always assume what people tell you is true. This goes for people in school and people in church.
Nate (post: 1598911) wrote:I have a feeling he means that one of the arguments atheists make is that while God doesn't exist, if the God of Judaism/Christianity DID exist then he would be evil and therefore not someone to worship and praise.
Aside from that, unless it's a comparative religions class which is discussing how various religions view other religions, I can't imagine any educational book seriously saying God is evil.
Well, it's a valid question. A lot of terrible things happen to people with seemingly no intervention from God - one merely needs to look at the Holocaust or what Stalin did during the Cold War. You can't ignore the bad and only focus on the good. So, instead of taking these questions and stories as an attack on God, you should seriously consider these questions and try to find answers within the Bible and come to peace with that. It's not easy - many people lose their faith because of what happens to them in life - but those who make it through usually end up with even stronger faith.TheGasMaster438 (post: 1599037) wrote:It is a book of literature that I have to read, and it is very depressing even though it is fiction. It is all about death, and fake love, and lots of the stories seem to shout "where is your God in all this?"
If you don't know what you're debating or defending, then you'll lose quite easily. You should feel confident in the basics of your faith, by studying the Bible, going to study groups, and shoring up what you know.That is what I'm afraid will happen, that I will cause more harm than good because I don't have confidence in myself during debate
AdriTan (post: 1599147) wrote:As for defending the faith, you have to be careful. Debating things with Atheists or believers of other faiths only shows that you like to get in debates. You have to be polite. I'm praying for ya! ^.^
MrKrillz0r (post: 1599158) wrote:I'd recommend listening to Dr.Ravi Zacharias, R.C Sproul and Tim Keller if you want to know a bit more about how to defend your faith, they are great preachers and they are known for debating, defending and reaching out to atheists. I think you'll come to find that in the end atheism is not as logical and intelligent as they make it sound, but rather the opposite. (I did at least!)
Otaku Jordan (post: 1599168) wrote:AdriTan was saying that it makes it look like Christians like to get into debates, not atheists...
Xeno (post: 1599173) wrote:gg on not reading the last sentence in my post, or the overall message of the post in general OJ. I was using the two posts I quoted as a more general example, not making a direct reply to both. But hey, your moral superiority complex will probably ignore everything I have to say anyway, so whatever.
Xeno (post: 1599161) wrote:Yes, we atheists just run around screaming at everyone vocal range that their religion is wrong, and we just absolutely love to get into debates. There couldn't possibly be the chance that we'd like the opportunity to just not have religious faith and not have to deal with people telling us we're all going to hell for not believing in their sky-god.
This attitude around here that atheists need to be argued and debated with and that we're the enemy is kind of frustrating guys.
Clarifying a few things here.Xeno (post: 1599161) wrote:Yes, we atheists just run around screaming at everyone vocal range that their religion is wrong, and we just absolutely love to get into debates. There couldn't possibly be the chance that we'd like the opportunity to just not have religious faith and not have to deal with people telling us we're all going to hell for not believing in their sky-god.
This attitude around here that atheists need to be argued and debated with and that we're the enemy is kind of frustrating guys.
Xeno (post: 1599161) wrote:Yes, we atheists just run around screaming at everyone vocal range that their religion is wrong, and we just absolutely love to get into debates. There couldn't possibly be the chance that we'd like the opportunity to just not have religious faith and not have to deal with people telling us we're all going to hell for not believing in their sky-god.
This attitude around here that atheists need to be argued and debated with and that we're the enemy is kind of frustrating guys.
MrKrillz0r (post: 1599158) wrote:I'd recommend listening to Dr.Ravi Zacharias, R.C Sproul and Tim Keller if you want to know a bit more about how to defend your faith, they are great preachers and they are known for debating, defending and reaching out to atheists. I think you'll come to find that in the end atheism is not as logical and intelligent as they make it sound, but rather the opposite. (I did at least!) And I think you'll be able to learn a lot of other things by them as well. ^^
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1599280) wrote:I'm going to have to recommend the opposite. Listening to those people will only temporarily help. It'll make the problems seem to disappear. But if you further study religious philosophy, the arguments by Dr. Zacharias and company are very elementary. You can spend your time arguing against people who refer to Richard Dawkins or Christopher Hitchens or whatever, but the more you study religious philosophy, the more idiotic and uneducated people like Dawkins and Hitchens will sound. You'll be hard-pressed to find a vocal atheist who refers to individuals such as Marx, Freud, or Feuerbach. If you do, THEN you've come across an intellectual atheist.
I mean compare the questions:
Dawkins: "If God is good then why do bad things happen?"
Feuerbach: "What if 'God' was just a projection of the most positive qualities that humanity has?"
Question 1 is a joke. Question 2 I don't have a legitimate answer for.
So the key isn't to intellectually justify your faith, because if that's your goal you're missing the point of spirituality. The point is to accept it despite if its implausibility. That, to me, is faith.
So if you read all these stories on "where is God?", that's only an expression of the human condition and the suffering people go through. It's a question we all will go through and continue to go through. Some of time's best religious books contain chapters and chapters of argumentations against God. Pick up a book by Dostoevsky and you'll see just what I mean.
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