Anyway if we are going to listen to old legends like the Romford Pele then just as well bring
the Magic Man in to provide his take as well from a few weeks ago.
I can't find anything that demonstrates he held a «misguided belief in the bronze age voodoo of
the magic man in the sky.»
To answer the skeptics, no I didn't include gays, after all I em a Christian who believes in what
a Magic Man in the sky tells me and he said gays aren't cool.
They were just co-opted from pagan holidays and do not require worship in
magic man in the sky to have fun on those days.
If I see
a magic man in the sky, I attribute it to lack of sleep or someone dropping LSD in my morning coffee.
the magic man in the cloud is also not out to get you when you misbehave, let alone, he is also not a man.
As someone who was raised Catholic and is not Agnostic (Anti-Organized Religion) I have to say, I have never been happier now that my head isn't filled with delusions of
a magic man in the clouds out to get me if I misbehave.
If you start your «science» discussion saying your «science» was started by
a magic man in the sky, you are NOT a scientist.
Hi InlPol101 — I am a believer in
a magic man in the sky (actually not in the sky it's just traditional to look up sometimes in prayer).
«think hard about whether or not they actually believe in what is, in reality, an invisible
magic man in the sky.»
He said the group erected the sign in a high - traffic area in an effort to challenge drivers to «think hard about whether or not they actually believe in what is, in reality, an invisible
magic man in the sky.»
That and we have different opinions on just about everything else except for there not being
a magic man in the sky.
If you claim there is
a magic man in the sky that supernaturally surveils the earth, who asks parents to kill their children, who advocates for slavery, genocide and vengeance, the burden is on you.
Instead, we get attacks and immature name calling («
magic man in the sky»).
I'm sure that saying this would upset plenty of Twihards as well, but there's a truth to it that can not be denied, just as there is a truth to the idea that God has, and apparently still is, imagined as a «
magic man in the sky» by some believers.
I'm sure you are much smarter than Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, John Adams, John Payne, Ghandi, ML King Jr., Maimonides, etc., etc., etc., — all of whom believed in
a magic man in the sky.
I don't believe God is a «
magic man in the sky».
If
a magic man in the sky is all that's keeping believers from going bats ** t crazy, I say let him stay there.
Not to mention being politically incorrect for dumbing down my beliefs and faith as one who worships «an invisible
magic man in the sky.»
But then he goes on to say «He said the group erected the sign in a high - traffic area in an effort to challenge drivers to «think hard about whether or not they actually believe in what is, in reality, an invisible
magic man in the sky.»
Only a complete child would believe in such ridiculous things such as souls, angels, demons, and
a magic man in the sky.
Can anyone seriously believe
a Magic Man In The Sky allowed all this to happen without intervening?
Can we stop thinking the whole world is only 6,000 years old, There is
no magic man in the sky.
If she believes in
some magic man in the sky AND has time to go thru all that trouble making up those weird screen names, then I hope I never have the misfortune of ever meeting her.
Finally
your magic man in the sky belief calls into question your ability to make any rational choices whatsoever.
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.
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.
So if I make up a story of creation that's full of
magic men in the sky my fairytale is believable?
Not exact matches
In a New York Times op - ed, author and performer Mike Daisey, creator of the one -
man play The Agony and Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, wrote that Jobs's
magic has its costs.
In Game 5, Jackson noticed that
Magic Johnson was leaving his
man on defence, point guard John Paxson, to help guard Jordan.
Steve Wozniak, the co-founder of Apple, and Seth Rogen, the
man who plays Woz
in the upcoming film «Steve Jobs,» hung out together at The
Magic Castle, a membership club for magicians
in Los Angeles.
Shot
in the 1960s, «The
Magic Barrel» promoted a one -
man show of the same name developed by chemical giant DuPont for the American Petroleum Institute.
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.
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:
A big
magic fairy
man spoke a spell and then there was earth and light before stars and then a snake talked to a woman and then the big
magic fairy
man had to sacrifice himself to himself to appease himself by exploiting a loophole
in a plan he made himself because of an invisible disease (sin)
in an invisble body part (soul) so that he doesn't have to torture us forever
in the big fire pit he made even though he doesn't want anyone to ever go there but he just can't help himself.
Trite junk you find on the shelves of grocery stores, Walmarts, etc. as for faith... it makes sense... one has to have a vivid imagination to believe
in a
magic bearded
man in the sky and buddy Christ.
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.
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?
For example, I refer to the Judeo - Christian god as a sky fairy (although I think I like sky wizard better — it has the whole
magic old
man connotation to it) but I don't for example, say you believe
in any other god.
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'm not going to place my trust
in a grown
man posting as «
Magic Panties» on a blog dedicated to faith and belief.
No, the fundies have graduated to speaking
in tongues as their latest creep show religious proof of their
magic man.
``... [the] gulf between the Church and the scientific mind... widens with each generation, and modern means of diffusing knowledge by the press, radio, and film, have brought us now to such a pass that the Christian, and especially the Catholic, whose beliefs are enriched
in their religious manifestation by the ceremonies and practices of a most ancient past, finds himself considered the initiate of a recondite cult whose practices are not only unintelligible to
men around him, but savour to them of superstition and
magic.»
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.
Post-critical naivete is the ability to hear the Christmas stories once again as true stories, even though you're pretty sure that Jesus was born
in Nazareth and not
in Bethlehem, even as you're pretty sure that the
magic star and the wise
men themselves come from an exegesis of Isaiah 60, rather than reflecting historical memory.
I took it for granted they really happened that way, that there really was a
magic star, that the holy family really did journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, that Jesus really was born
in a stable and laid
in a manger, that wise
men came to visit, that angels sang to the shepherds
in the night sky.
Does this new finding prove an invisible, all powerful,
magic man who lives
in the sky had an evil talking snake tempt a woman, made from a rib, to disobey him, whereby he put a curse on all future humanity, then later changed his mind and decides to lift his curse by impregnating a human woman with himself and having himself tortured, killed, and raised from the dead, so that if you believe all that, you get to live forever
in heaven after you die, but if you don't, he will torture you forever
in hell?
Never mind all that data collected and analysis done by scientists over the last 300 years, I choose to believe
in a
magic invisible sky
man who created the Earth
in 6 days, one who keeps me under surveillance 24 hours a day 7 days a week from the time I'm born until the time I die because I'm just that important to him, a god who will convict me of thoughtcrime, even while I'm asleep, if I should ever doubt his existence.