It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: makemap
Now look at ME. Why is it constantly at war? Then you have to wonder why ME is head chopping Christians.
originally posted by: dfnj2015
originally posted by: makemap
Now look at ME. Why is it constantly at war? Then you have to wonder why ME is head chopping Christians.
Because the Israelis are the most belligerent people on the planet. The problem with the promised land is it was already occupied by a large population when the chosen people showed up. It's been nothing but war and conflict since.
originally posted by: Raggedyman
a reply to: makemap
Your concept of the word church needs a little polishing
A church is not a building
In Sri Lanka and Myanmar, two countries that are on the forefront of a radical religious-nationalist movement, Buddhists constitute overwhelming majorities of the population. Yet some Buddhists, especially those who subscribe to the purist Theravada strain of the faith, are increasingly convinced that they are under existential threat, particularly from an Islam struggling with its own violent fringe.
originally posted by: ElGoobero
everywhere islam goes, blood flows. pretty bad when even Buddhists take up arms against you
originally posted by: vethumanbeing
originally posted by: ElGoobero
everywhere islam goes, blood flows. pretty bad when even Buddhists take up arms against you
Belief systems are dangerous as they breed a dualistic thought pattern (my system is correct, yours is misguided and now [for some reason] I must kill you). All belief systems ARE FALSE as they blatently attempt to manipulate for personal gain; everyone is to blame for this idiosyncrasy that creates violence, fear and persecution. Gnostic awareness WINS against all belief system comers.
“The Kings . . . Committed Fornication With Her”
In the early 1800’s European merchants were smuggling large quantities of opium into China. In March 1839 Chinese officials tried to stop the illegal trade by seizing 20,000 chests of the drug from British merchants. This led to tension between Britain and China. As relations between the two countries deteriorated, some Protestant missionaries urged Britain to go to war, with statements such as the following:
“How these difficulties do rejoice my heart because I think the English government may be enraged, and God, in His power may break down the barriers which prevent the gospel of Christ from entering China.”—Henrietta Shuck, Southern Baptist missionary.
Finally, war broke out—the war that is today known as the Opium War. Missionaries wholeheartedly encouraged Britain with comments such as these:
“I am constrained to look back upon the present state of things not so much as an opium or an English affair, as the great design of Providence to make the wickedness of man subserve His purposes of mercy toward China in breaking through her wall of exclusion.”—Peter Parker, Congregationalist missionary.
Another Congregationalist missionary, Samuel W. Williams, added: “The hand of God is apparent in all that has transpired in a remarkable manner, and we doubt not that He who said He came to bring a sword upon the earth has come here and that for the speedy destruction of His enemies and the establishment of His own kingdom. He will overturn and overturn until He has established the Prince of Peace.”
Regarding the horrendous slaughter of Chinese nationals, missionary J. Lewis Shuck wrote: “I regard such scenes . . . as the direct instruments of the Lord in clearing away the rubbish which impedes the advancement of Divine Truth.”
Congregationalist missionary Elijah C. Bridgman added: “God has often made use of the strong arm of civil power to prepare the way for His kingdom . . . The agency in these great moments is human; the directing power divine. The high governor of all the nations has employed England to chastize and humble China.”—Quotations taken from “Ends and Means,” 1974, an essay by Stuart Creighton Miller published in The Missionary Enterprise in China and America (a Harvard Study edited by John K. Fairbank).
originally posted by: vethumanbeing
originally posted by: ElGoobero
everywhere islam goes, blood flows. pretty bad when even Buddhists take up arms against you
Belief systems are dangerous as they breed a dualistic thought pattern (my system is correct, yours is misguided and now [for some reason] I must kill you). All belief systems ARE FALSE as they blatently attempt to manipulate for personal gain; everyone is to blame for this idiosyncrasy that creates violence, fear and persecution. Gnostic awareness WINS against all belief system comers.