No you won't. You will be dead and that will be it. Sadly, as there is no afterlife,
oh how you are in for an almighty shock my friend.....heheh.
No you won't. You will be dead and that will be it. Sadly, as there is no afterlife,
Originally Posted by DerbyGullFor you simpleton:
Question: "Why did the Prophet Elisha curse the “youths” for making fun of his baldness (2 Kings 2:23-24)?"
Answer: There are a few key issues we must understand in regards to this account of the youths cursing Elisha. The text reads, “From there Elisha went up to Bethel. As he was walking along the road, some youths came out of the town and jeered at him. ‘Go on up, you baldhead!’ they said. ‘Go on up, you baldhead!’ He turned around, looked at them and called down a curse on them in the name of the LORD. Then two bears came out of the woods and mauled forty-two of the youths.” It seems unbelievable that God would cause two bears to maul a group of children for making fun of a man for being bald.
First, the King James Version has done us a disservice by translated the term as “children.” The Hebrew word can refer to “children,” but rather more specifically means "young men." The NIV, quoted here, uses the word “youths.” Second, the fact that the bears mauled 42 of the youths indicates that there were more than 42 youths involved. This was not a small group of children making fun of a bald man. Rather, it was a large demonstration of young men who assembled for the purpose of mocking a prophet of God. Third, the mocking of “go on up you baldhead,” is more than making fun of baldness. The baldness of Elisha referred to here may be: 1) natural loss of hair; 2) a shaved head denoting his separation to the prophetic office; or more likely, 3) an epithet of scorn and contempt, Elijah not being literally bald. The phrase “go up” likely was a reference to Elijah, Elisha’s mentor, being taken up to Heaven earlier in 2 Kings chapter 2:11-12. These youths were sarcastically taunting and insulting the Lord’s prophet by telling him to repeat Elijah’s translation.
In summary, 2 Kings 2:23-24 is not an account of God mauling young children for making fun of a bald man. Rather, it is a record of an insulting demonstration against God’s prophet by a large group of young men. Because these young people of about 20 years of age or older (the same term is used of Solomon in 1 Kings 3:7) so despised the prophet of the Lord, Elisha called upon the Lord to deal with the rebels as He saw fit. The Lord’s punishment was the mauling of 42 of them by two female bears. The penalty was clearly justified, for to ridicule Elisha was to ridicule the Lord Himself. The seriousness of the crime was indicated by the seriousness of the punishment. The appalling judgment was God’s warning to all who would scorn the prophets of the Lord.
Why did the Prophet Elisha curse the “youths” for making fun of his baldness (2 Kings 2:23-24)?
Of course you could have looked that up yourself rather than try to look smart.
Merely skimming the surface atm.
<snip of a load of bolocks attempting to justify what is supposed to be a loving god sending bears to ruip people to pieces.>
oh how you are in for an almighty shock my friend.....heheh.
I don't think so somehow. The average life expectancy back then was only about 35, people would have children of their own by 20.First, the King James Version has done us a disservice by translated the term as “children.” The Hebrew word can refer to “children,” but rather more specifically means "young men." The NIV, quoted here, uses the word “youths.”
...
Because these young people of about 20 years of age or older (the same term is used of Solomon in 1 Kings 3:7)
So? The punishment hardly fits the crime. Many of us openly mock god and his followers now, but we go unpunished - maybe he realises we've got a point, and he's made a mess of the human race.Second, the fact that the bears mauled 42 of the youths indicates that there were more than 42 youths involved. This was not a small group of children making fun of a bald man. Rather, it was a large demonstration of young men who assembled for the purpose of mocking a prophet of God.
Straws and clutching.Third, the mocking of “go on up you baldhead,” is more than making fun of baldness. The baldness of Elisha referred to here may be: 1) natural loss of hair; 2) a shaved head denoting his separation to the prophetic office; or more likely, 3) an epithet of scorn and contempt, Elijah not being literally bald. The phrase “go up” likely was a reference to Elijah, Elisha’s mentor, being taken up to Heaven earlier in 2 Kings chapter 2:11-12. These youths were sarcastically taunting and insulting the Lord’s prophet by telling him to repeat Elijah’s translation.
You are mad and dangerous. I expect you believe that the god fearing Tony Blair and George Bush were right to order the slaughter of muslims too.The penalty was clearly justified, for to ridicule Elisha was to ridicule the Lord Himself. The seriousness of the crime was indicated by the seriousness of the punishment. The appalling judgment was God’s warning to all who would scorn the prophets of the Lord.
More xtian love and compassion on display here I see. If your imaginary friend does exist then you, by your reaction, have just damned yourself to join me haven't you. Shame he doesn't otherwise we could both laugh for ever in a fiery pit of hell for the terrible sins we have committed.
Just the sort of action I would expect from your 'loving' friend.
oh how you are in for an almighty shock my friend.....heheh.
Believe me mate, i'm planning on the God Delusion too, and someone on here mentioned another book on evolution also (I forget the name right now).
You may regard it as philosophical. However you can not change the fact that there is no contemporaneous evidence for jesus of any kind at all. Philosophise all you want, facts are what I tend to go for.
If a theory is stated as such and seems to provide evidence for its veracity then I tend to accept it until and unless other evidence is produced. Show me evidence for your god or you jesus and I will believe overnight - promise.
A good start would be the famously missing bunnies in the pre-cambrian layer,
Hmm. First of all, please calm down.
You do not know me or the experiences I have had yet you immediately dismiss them as dishonest and imaginery.
It seems quite obvious you are deeply entrenched in the physical world and that's fine.
I'm just not sure why a differing opinion to yours causes such an emotional reaction in you. Maybe you should explore that issue.
to me, it's possible there COULD be a God without the interfering middle-man
Really? Citations needed for this, I think. Religion played a huge part in the most recent European holocaust.
Don't confuse correlation with causation.
I have just done a quick google search, and found this:
Are Most Wars the Result of Religious Belief?
and
What About Atrocities That Have Been Done in the Name of Religion
I would highlight this is a site that appears to be in favour of religion, so obviously is going to put a spin on it that would favour their opinion (I suspect a science site would put their spin on things, naturally)
Looking at them it seems obvious that the atheistic wars total more deaths, but closer inspection raises questions, most importantly how are they defining religious wars (I'm sure it must be answered somewhere, maybe in the sources they site). But, for instance, world war two. I think of ww2 and think there are complex factors that caused that. You can't pin it down to one motivating factor. But, you also can't deny that 6 million people died because of their religion. Not their gender, not their jobs, not their nationality, not their political sway, but because they were jewish. They were killed on the instructions of Hitler. They don't appear to be included. (Those deaths were as a result of their religion. So even if Hitler wasn't a christian (he was) they should still be included, imo).
Or maybe not worshipping anything, and getting on with life, well apart from Gus worship obviosuly.Derbygull
Trying to google an answer, or waiting for another freak to help him out
And there's me thinking that the answers are in the Bible, clearly we should be worshipping Google.
i think this thread has a few separate subjects that are getting intermingled due to the thread title.
believing in a higher force / intelligence / energy does not make one religious.
having some sacredness in ones life does not mean one has to follow any dogma.
i know a sufi guy who spends time with some extremely wise people who have links to the school from Gurdjieff - but he slams much of "cultural islam."
i know a mystic from freemasonry who slams all religion.
i know a yogi in india who slams much of hinduism.
i know a rosicrucian who slams much of christianity.
i know a hermetic that knows some amazing things in the old testament but is not a christian.
it is not black and white, but the word 'god' triggers the conditioning from being a child in the western world and what that word relates to in the exoteric dogma.
sacred experiences, mystical experiences, spiritual experiences, leaps of faith, synchronicities - none can be labelled, they are each for the inner self.
Yes but England has never claimed to have 'God' on it's side. Bad acts by this country have never been made in the belief that we are doing a 'higher authority's' 'good' work.