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Originally posted by WishForWings
God also said "Do not believe false prophets".
Or something along those lines.
Originally posted by dogsounds
Gah. I am truly glad to be an atheist...I fear I could not survive such daily mental opression were I saddled with the yoke of a religion. If man cannot figure out how to live a good and righteous life off his own bat, without an instruction book, then I guess we are pretty much doomed.
Originally posted by Manasseh
reply to post by Epsillion70
When Man transcends ego (resurrection), faith is not necessary as certainty of knowing is All That Is.
No offense meant
but you should read the bible.
Originally posted by rocksarerocks
reply to post by Manasseh
I type like this.
I make up things.
You will be sorry.
At sometime in the future.
A plane will crash.
I guarantee it.
I will not lie.
Wrong, the Bible says Jesus's coming for the rapture of the church will be at the time "No man knows the day or hour".
Originally posted by rawsom
I think the bible actually cares to mention that nobody knows any year, date, time or anything else for that matter about end of the world. It does say however that there are many who claim to know, but none do.
I think the bible is actually RIGHT about something this time, when it says that nobody cannot possibly know any point in time when end comes.
The bible also says that you are a false prophet if you say that you know.
So you
Better maybe
Shut up perhaps.
dot.
Originally posted by Manasseh
reply to post by Zepherian
The religious overtones?
The wrath of God is knocking at the door.
One only need to be completely arrogant to ignore the signs.
Mark my words, it is coming within your lifetime.
NASA hopes to launch Atlantis around Oct. 8 on the agency's fifth and final mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope. Even with the delays to date, shuttle workers still have several days of on-pad contingency time to handle unexpected problems.
But engineers preparing Hubble hardware for launch also fell behind because of Fay and unlike their shuttle colleagues, they do not have any on-pad contingency time left. As of late last week, the Hubble team was two to three days behind schedule, raising the prospect of a launch delay to Oct. 10 or 11, regardless of the rollout delay.
NASA plans to follow Atlantis' mission by launching the shuttle Endeavour around Nov. 10 on a space station assembly flight.