Sentences with phrase «believe in magic beings»

i wouldn't allow anyone who thinks like this to drive my car across town anymore than I would my 8 year old niece... thier level of reality is about the same... although i think I'd give it to the 8 year old because she doesn't believe in magic beings like I Dream of Genie popping around the universe controlling everything that goes on...
Nah, every believer in magic thinks that those who don't believe in their magic are prejudice against them — just ask Muslims, or Scientologists, or Mormons.
If there was ever a time to believe in magic it was now.

Not exact matches

«You may think magic is make - believe, but this little bean has scientists saying they've found the magic weight - loss cure for every body type,» Dr. Oz said of green - coffee extract on his show in 2012.
While I'm a super-optimistic person and believe that anything is truly possible, success in business is not magic or luck.
I believed with every fiber of my glittery, go - gettin» heart that my work ethic (15 - hour days / 7 days a week), along with my talent, skills, and personal magic, I could rip a path to accelerated success because also, this was A Leap of Faith and I was Living in My Divine Authenticity and that was worth some express lane juju points from Heaven,» St. Claire confesses.
Let's see... believe in our God or you will be tortured for eternity... Believe in our God even if science and the fossil record refute our conclusions... Believe in our God who can do anything, it doesn't matter what you come up with, he can do it and don't you dare call it magic or fantasy... but don't test him either, he's not a performing monkey who does tricks to convince us he's real, we just have to have faith, but he could do anything if chosbelieve in our God or you will be tortured for eternity... Believe in our God even if science and the fossil record refute our conclusions... Believe in our God who can do anything, it doesn't matter what you come up with, he can do it and don't you dare call it magic or fantasy... but don't test him either, he's not a performing monkey who does tricks to convince us he's real, we just have to have faith, but he could do anything if chosBelieve in our God even if science and the fossil record refute our conclusions... Believe in our God who can do anything, it doesn't matter what you come up with, he can do it and don't you dare call it magic or fantasy... but don't test him either, he's not a performing monkey who does tricks to convince us he's real, we just have to have faith, but he could do anything if chosBelieve in our God who can do anything, it doesn't matter what you come up with, he can do it and don't you dare call it magic or fantasy... but don't test him either, he's not a performing monkey who does tricks to convince us he's real, we just have to have faith, but he could do anything if chose to...
Obviously, today's followers of Paul et al's «magic - man» are also a bit on the odd side believing in all the Christian mumbo jumbo about bodies resurrecting, and exorcisms, and miracles, and «magic - man atonement, and infalliable, old, European, white men, and 24/7 body / blood sacrifices followed by consumption of said sacrifices.
@ jack3 no you have the right to believe what ever you want, but we might mock you for believing in something that has talking snakes, a story about the world flooding and being able to fit all the animals on the planet on one boat, that believes in magic, that believes a person lived in the belly of a whale, and that people coexisted with dinosaurs all without any actual proof.
Hey, if you can bring yourself to believe in a magic man in the sky and that people come back from the dead after three days, that particular flavor of Christianity isn't that much of a stretch.
If your broader point is that, unless evolutionists can answer every singly question thrown to them, you will resort to magic and believe in creator god, well, have fun, because there will always be unanswered questions.
There are no invisible 3 - in - 1 magic hypothetical «uncaused causes» who are having a sad day because some people don't believe in them.
Q. 4 It is only acceptable as an adult to believe childish Bronze Age mythology like talking snakes, the Red Sea splitting, water turning into wine by magic, mana falling from the sky, a man living in a whale's belly, a talking donkey, superhuman strength, a man rising from the dead and angels, ghosts, gods and demons in the field of:
We do not have rituals, we do not believe in supernatural beings, no magic, no miracles.
The problem is so many adults believing in magic.
The fact that someone can profess to believe in something as insane as an invisible magic man in the sky in the first place tells me their grasp on reality is tenuous to begin with, and probably shouldn't be the sort of person to be trusted with the means to wipe out our species.
THEY are the ones that claim to believe in talking animals and magic spells.
and if we believe in magic we would be witches or warlocks another religion you must have been confused..
They believe they have some magic and their prayer spells are not only magnanimous, but somehow will emotionally disarm their targets and shut down what they perceive as something unworthy in another individual, dishonoring their own spirit and feeding their own Pride.
Don't you think your magic man would know that you really are only «believing» in it because you are hedging your bets?
Obviously, today's followers / singers of Paul et al's «magic - man» are also a bit on the odd side believing in all the Christian mumbo jumbo about virgin births and bodies resurrecting, and exorcisms, and miracles, and «magic - man atonement, and infallible, old, European, white men, and 24/7 body / blood sacrifices followed by consumption of said sacrifices.
While we can and should continue to mature, I strongly suggest that those who continue to believe in imaginary beings and tribal myths based on books of magic / silliness written by desert dwellers hundreds of years ago have the furthest journey.
I wonder what will the religious wackos believe in the future... and the mighty prophet Tom Cruise climbed to the highest tower and defeated the evil Tethans that were holding his virgin wife Kate the tall one and his reign lasted for a hundred years as recorded in the fragments of the magic blue disks written by Sony the inscriber... or... Frodo the saviour..
Anybody who believes in angels flying into a backyard, wearing magic underwear and baptising the dead (including Hitler and Stalin), seer stones, golden plates and such nonsense from a con - artist named Joseph Smith is neither realistic nor stable and pragmatic enough to run a country.
Mormons are all lily white cultist racists who believe in multiple wives and magic underwear.
I read Harry Potter, does that mean I believe there's a magical school in Britain where little wizard kids go to learn magic?
It matters to scientists, but faith is more important to those who've been lead to believe they need to have «faith» in a certain magic story to be saved.
Let me get this straight: You believe that a couple of thousand years ago an invisible man in the sky impregnated a virgin girl in the middle east, had a half - god / half - man son who traveled around doing magic tricks, and then rose from the dead and is now constantly watching all of us to see if we'll get pie in the sky when we die?
Believe in any old magic, myth, fable or set of nonsensical gods you want and it's fine... believe in reality and you are out on your ear... The good of UBelieve in any old magic, myth, fable or set of nonsensical gods you want and it's fine... believe in reality and you are out on your ear... The good of Ubelieve in reality and you are out on your ear... The good of US of A.
Magical Accident Don't know about you kids but I quit believing in magic back when I found out ice cream cones were hollow.
Also willy nilly adding two groups belong together because you THINK they belong together is just the kind of irrational thinking that leads to believing in magic.
Believing in magical sky fairies is closer to magic than anything non religious folk deal in.
Do they believe in a magic man who is going to fall out of the sky and magically take away all the pain in the world?
I'm happy in my life; I didn't suddenly become happier when I stopped believing in a magic man.
I don't give a rats fart — as long as they aren't some fanatical wacko who thinks everyone should think exactly like they do, chant the same chants, and believe in the same magic powers.
Talking to people who believe in mythical and magic things is like trying to talk to a child.
I'm not thrilled with the idea of a Prez who believes in magic underwear.
I now believe it does a tremendous disservice to honorable people who are faithful believers to place on them the additional burden of guilt, shame and magnified suffering that comes from the kind of doctrine that promotes (sells) prayer as a magic talisman which will somehow change God's mind, alter physical circumstance, and fix intractable problems — if only the one praying has enough faith or asks in the right way or lives a holy enough life or professes Jesus enough or waits patiently or never gives up or any of a hundred different gotchas that can be called upon to justify the lack of an affirmative answer.
I'm not aware of any other supposed Protestant branch that believes in magic underwear that helps them survive car wrecks, fires, and natural disasters [1].
Lord Jesus, you who are as gentle as the human hear as fiery as the forces of nature, as intimate as life itself you in whom I can melt away and with whom I must have mastery and freedom: I love you as a world, as the world which has captivated my heart; — and it is you, now realize, that my brother - men, even those who do not believe, sense and seek throughout the magic immensities of the cosmos.
It is as much as to believe in magic, in the arbitrary conjunction of events.
But I guess when you believe in magic, anything is possible...
I believe in the power of the blood of Jesus but now this leaves me afraid to admit it, for I'm already pegged as superstitious and into magic — seems no different than the boogyman stories my once conservative church tried to lay on me, that my protection is in their oversight, that if I leave them my life would be destroyed, and more — we must be careful in our ernest seeking after truth that we don't become what we have despised and that we don't put on others our perspectives and understandings.
I believe in the truth of Astrology but now this leaves me afraid to admit it, for I'm already pegged as superstitious and into magic
So, it can help to elaborate, and as one who believes in the Bible and knowing many others who also believes in the Bible, the term «magic spell» isn't a part of a believer's commonly - used doctrinal vocabulary.
Any critical reader notices that this is the exact same behavior as someone who believes in magic chanting a spell.
Christians are free to get together and pretend some god is paying attention to them, monitoring their thoughts and deeds, allocating them after they die to heaven, hell, limbo, purgatory or whatever other magic never - never lands they believe in and paying attention to their $ ex lives, but it must stop at the point where it actually means anything.
here's your average christian morality: When a self - professed prophet named Edgar Whisenant predicted that the Rapture would occur in 1988, a couple I know responded by charging their Visa card to the limit with a trip to Disney World, believing the bank would be left with the bill once they had left the Magic Kingdom for God's kingdom.
When a self - professed prophet named Edgar Whisenant predicted that the Rapture would occur in 1988, a couple I know responded by charging their Visa card to the limit with a trip to Disney World, believing the bank would be left with the bill once they had left the Magic Kingdom for God's kingdom.
And I also believe in whats proveable, something your book of magic spells is not.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z