Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all,
Vanilla are planning an update to the site on April 24th (next Wednesday). It is a major PHP8 update which is expected to boost performance across the site. The site will be down from 7pm and it is expected to take about an hour to complete. We appreciate your patience during the update.
Thanks all.

Do you believe in God?

Options
1356736

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 38,247 ✭✭✭✭Guy:Incognito


    The whole thing about the Christian God is that you're not meant to know what hes up to or why.

    That's convenient....


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,893 ✭✭✭Canis Lupus


    The whole thing about the Christian God is that you're not meant to know what hes up to or why.

    Only when something bad happens because no one can explain why a loving god gives a child bone cancer.


  • Registered Users Posts: 311 ✭✭chooey


    I really hope there is. I would love to think I’d meet my mam again. Still not sure though.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,934 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    Woke Hogan wrote: »
    I do respect that many people are desperate for comfort as they come close to death but ultimately there's no reason in my view to believe in god.

    He said, eating children’s cereal out of his neck beard and drinking an energy drink and sofa masturbating himself into unconsciousness.

    How do you know that atheists are as you describe above. If you don’t believe in the gods, you’re an atheist. Just by definition, whether you identify as atheist or not. No need for all the imaginary derogatory stuff.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,491 ✭✭✭Montage of Feck


    eviltwin wrote: »
    No. Its illogical that a god could exist when terrible things happen to innocent people. If that's what God is I want no part of it.

    Maybe God just doesn't give a **** or follows a non interventionist policy.

    🙈🙉🙊



  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 7,055 ✭✭✭JohnnyFlash


    He said, eating children’s cereal out of his neck beard and drinking an energy drink and soda masturbating himself into unconsciousness.

    How do you know that atheists are as you describe above. If you don’t believe in the gods, you’re an atheist. Just by definition, whether you identify as atheist or not. No need for all the imaginary derogatory stuff.

    There’s an impression that a lot of online atheist sorts probably look a bit like this:

    66-BC28-B8-C91-B-4-ADE-8-C4-D-3-CC48-DF143-A2.jpg
    2013 wrx 0 60


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,505 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    The whole thing about the Christian God is that you're not meant to know what hes up to or why.

    Only when something bad happens because no one can explain why a loving god gives a child bone cancer.

    Something about free will, the kid obviously chose to contact the disease


  • Registered Users Posts: 38,247 ✭✭✭✭Guy:Incognito


    Maybe God just doesn't give a **** or follows a non interventionist policy.

    What's so great about such a **** and why should people spend their lives following them?

    Also, why is such a non interventionist policy seen as evil when its rich people not using their money to improve the lives of the poor?


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,505 ✭✭✭✭Mad_maxx


    eviltwin wrote: »
    No. Its illogical that a god could exist when terrible things happen to innocent people. If that's what God is I want no part of it.

    Maybe God just doesn't give a **** or follows a non interventionist policy.

    Then stop expecting credit if Ireland win the world Cup or I pass my driving test


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,881 ✭✭✭Lewis_Benson


    No.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 675 ✭✭✭Dampsquid


    I don't believe in God, not since i was 15/16 i'd say - a little bit like santa, even when i knew he wasn't real, i still wanted to believe for a while.

    I don't have much respect for intelligent people who still believe, it amazes me that some top scientists, especially America's would still have a strong faith. We have a strong theory for how life started on the earth.

    Adults spending 1 hour a week in a church worshiping a God, unbelievable - for all the crap in the world and they still think someone who has created this should be worshiped? I know people who bless themselves as they drive past a church, taking hands of wheel and risking themselves or someone else if something unexpected happened - crazy.

    If you respect people who are religious, would you still respect someone who worships the sun or the moon?


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,802 ✭✭✭✭suicide_circus


    Fry is a stupid person’s idea of a clever person.

    having listened to his autobiographies (plural) on audiobook, he'd be the first to agree with you.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Squall Leonhart


    Up until my late teens I had a stronger belief in God than most of my peers.

    Then somehow somewhere by 20 it had totally fallen apart and flipped on its head. I was a vehement denier of the possibility. My attitude became arrogant and disrespectful, I couldn't understand how intelligent people believed in the bullsh<i>i</i>t. I scoffed at devout people smug in my new found knowledge that God was for fools.

    Nothing in particular happened to lead me to that switch in belief.

    Now in my 30s that view has softened and I'm a little embarrassed about the militant views I had as a new atheist in my early 20s. I still do not believe in God, but more open to the possibility of something, yet totally unconvinced.

    I still absolutely disagree with organised religion, and religion in general. For me the fact that the geography of your birth largely dictates your religion renders it moot. Born in Saudi Arabia? 99% chance you're Muslim. Born in China? 75% chance you're non religious. Born in Phoenician times? You probably worship Baal. It's too arbitrary.

    However, I respect the beliefs of many and have adopted a live and let live view.

    Most Irish who identify as Catholic are "cultural Catholics" rather than practicing. I do take issue with this. If you do not believe in any of the philosophies or ethos of your club, how can you still claim membership?

    This business of "I don't believe in God, but got married in a church and baptised my children" bothers me. If we all keep doing these things, secular options for those who want them will not be available, because of a false positive high number of catholics in the country. To those who believe in it, more power to them, and why wouldn't they partake in all rituals and ceremonies and involve their families in same?

    I do not like the arguments trotted out about paedophiles and genocides and atrocities as a "if there is a god, then why...", because its a bit of a nonsense. There could conceivably be a creator without there being a "manager". Many men bring a child into the world and have no involvement in the child's life. People in an organisation can do terrible things but it's not really in my opinion a valid reason to dismiss the whole organisation. I know many good priests, honest good men who don't deserve to wear the wrongs of others as their own, yet they do because of some ignorant people's approach.

    It's a complicated business! I don't believe in God, but part of me wishes I still did, that I never lost faith.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    wrote:
    Pot, kettle?

    I don't personally believe in god, take no issue with those that do believe in god and do believe that religion enriches the lives of many people. I do take issue with those that those that try to impose their religious beliefs on me or my family and will kick back when this happens.

    I wish we could have a ban on everybody who tries to impose their commercial and political interests/the now all-pervasive god of incessant consumerism on us - an imposition which is infinitely more prevalent in 2019 than anything a religious institution is imposing upon us.


    Bar a few genuine radicals of the Jimmy Gralton variety, Irish people don't have a good record for speaking up against wrongdoing in their day; they're fine with focusing on wrongdoing once it's in the past, though. Will it take 50 or so years for people to realise the wide range of environmental destruction which consumerism and its incessant invention of all sorts of "needs" is creating?


  • Registered Users Posts: 33,014 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    Dunno how you can believe in God, but not an afterlife? What does He do with all the dead souls (if souls even exist, but if not; then the question is: what is the relationship between God and the soul? After dead?)

    I believe in a higher form of consciousness, but in the idea that it's more energy and pure emotion without physical form and certainly not in the "God" that is depicted in the Bible (or probably Koran)

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Registered Users Posts: 23,656 ✭✭✭✭One eyed Jack


    I think I believe in God, but not in religion, while also thinking an afterlife doesn't exist.


    Gonna switch your post round a bit TC to address this point first, and then the second. Religion isn’t something one does or doesn’t believe in. It’s a shared ideology like any other shared ideology you can think of among people. I believe in God, but that doesn’t mean I blindly support a lot of the shìte that some people think also goes along with that belief. I don’t share their ideas any more than the idea that some people point fingers and say if you’re truly Catholic you’re supposed to do this, this and this, and you’re supposed to believe this, this and this.

    They’re drawing correlations between their beliefs and a belief in God, and using that as the basis to attempt to condemn others who don’t share their perspective. That’s why you observe that there are some people who say terrible things and commit terrible acts in furtherance of what they believe. Some people use an ideology to portray themselves as morally superior to everyone else, while condemning others and committing heinous actions against other people. It doesn’t mean the ideology itself is either good or bad, it simply means it can go either way, and it’s people who decide to use an ideology to further their own aims within that shared ideology.

    It’s the fundamental basis of identity politics, be it feminism, transgenderism, etc. The idea that every feminist or every person who is transgender should behave a certain way or share all of the beliefs of a particular ideology is just as silly as expecting that all people who are religious should behave a certain way or share all the beliefs of a particular ideology. It’s as fundamentally flawed as ideas about patriarchy or bogeymen like the white Christian male, Islamic fundamentalist suicide bombers, environmentalists, traps and purple haired loons. Such correlations are generally referred to as guilt by association, and very often the same people who are quick to point out that correlation is not causation, are often the same type of person who uses the guilt by association fallacy in making their argument against an ideology, which leads me on to the next point -

    The church have been responsible for the most heinous crimes against individuals since the state got independence. And suicide bombers are mostly influenced by religion to carry out what they do.


    This is bollocks, frankly. Individuals are responsible for their own attitudes and behaviours towards other people. The Church isn’t responsible for any crimes, it’s the small number of individuals within the Church who are responsible for committing the most heinous crimes against individuals since the State got independence. Suicide bombers too are a minority within their religion (you’re using the guilt by association fallacy I mentioned earlier), and I could just as easily use the same argument to pose the question - how many people’s lives are destroyed when someone chooses to take their own life? How much suffering is caused? You’ll find that there is a strong correlation between people who are of the belief that there should be no stigma attached to the idea of a person choosing to take their own life, and the people who attempt to condemn other people who they see as wanting to make people suffer.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Is there such a thing as an atheist who gambles on ("plays") the lottery? Given that the odds of winning Euromillions, for instance, are 1 in 140 million, how would an atheist rationalise buying Euromillions tickets?

    Is there some irrational hope in some extremely unlikely happy ending there?


  • Registered Users Posts: 675 ✭✭✭Dampsquid


    Is there such a thing as an atheist who gambles on ("plays") the lottery? Given that the odds of winning Euromillions, for instance, are 1 in 140 million, how would an atheist rationalise buying Euromillions tickets?

    Is there some irrational hope in some extremely unlikely happy ending there?

    Do you pray to god to let you win?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Squall Leonhart


    Is there such a thing as an atheist who gambles on ("plays") the lottery? Given that the odds of winning Euromillions, for instance, are 1 in 140 million, how would an atheist rationalise buying Euromillions tickets?

    Is there some irrational hope in some extremely unlikely happy ending there?

    Not a valid comparison. Nobody has ever proven there to be a god, or afterlife etc.

    People routinely win the lotto, its demonstrably possible.


  • Registered Users Posts: 33,014 ✭✭✭✭Princess Consuela Bananahammock


    Dampsquid wrote: »
    Do you pray to god to let you win?

    "Yes, Mrs. Rosenstien, but I can't give you the win unless you buy a ticket!"

    Everything I don't like is either woke or fascist - possibly both - pick one.



  • Advertisement
  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Dampsquid wrote: »
    Do you pray to god to let you win?

    Not a very rational response there, ironically.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,934 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    There’s an impression that a lot of online atheist sorts probably look a bit like this:

    I get the stereotype. It’s just funny that the poster took the p1ss out of other atheists, and then said they don’t actually believe in the gods (atheist).

    Same picture could be used for the anti feminist, INCEL types on boards.ie. Switch the poster for Jordan Peterson and put a PUA book on the shelf. But that would also be an unfair stereotype.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Not a valid comparison. Nobody has ever proven there to be a god, or afterlife etc.

    People routinely win the lotto, its demonstrably possible.

    Yes, 1 in 140,000,000 (that's million) are the odds. Just try and envisage that. There's a 1 in 10 million chance of an airplane part falling from the sky and hitting you or of your being struck by lightning, yet most people wouldn't expect it to happen to them.

    Buying a ticket for something you have a 1 in 140 million chance of winning is on the same level of irrationality as is believing in a higher power. The same need for hope in some idealistic better future is present in both processes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,747 ✭✭✭fisgon


    nthclare wrote: »

    But telling people they're delusional and blaming the lay members of the church on all the scandal etc

    It all goes back to different times, no fckin way would the hierarchy in the church get away with their lust for power sex and greed nowadays...

    It's all about timing and the fear factor...

    Of course the lay members of the church are partly responsible for the crimes of the church - they not only let them happen, they actively took part in a lot of the nightmare. This simply blaming the big bad "hierarchy" is an abdication of responsibility.

    If you sit in a Catholic church for mass, you are giving support to an institution that has done unforgiveable things.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,962 ✭✭✭✭dark crystal


    I believe in God. I also believe the fundamentals of all organised religions is to treat others with kindness, empathy and respect including yourself. Many people don't have God or any God in their lives in these times and society isn't better for it.

    Which religion practices this?

    Certainly not Catholicism! Babies born into the world are automatically stained with original sin. Sex is seen as dirty. Children were seen as sexual playthings for many of those chosen to preach the word of the Catholic God. Many of the Brides of Christ enslaved them, sold them or murdered them. Homosexuality is viewed as a sin (then you must ask why God created them 'that way' in his infinite wisdom?).

    How about Islam? Men and women, although supposedly created equal are most certainly not treated equally. Women are forbidden from revealing the face given to them by their God lest she tempt a man into raping her. Under Sharia Law, punishments include whipping, amputations and stoning to death. 'Fatwa's', in essence death sentences, are handed down to those who dare to question or defame Allah. We won't even get into those who bomb, hijack airplanes etc. in his name.

    Ok, Judaism is pretty tame though, right? Like, besides the whole cutting of the male genitalia thing. Thought sex abuse was confined to those practicing Catholicism? Think again: https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/bjwd8w/the-ultra-orthodox-jewish-communitys-sex-abuse-crisis-has-finally-reached-a-tipping-point. Where was their God when the Nazi's slaughtered 6 million of them? Why wasn't their saviour there to help them?

    They're just the main ones...I won't even get into the eastern religions, but if you wish to delve into the problems of child and female rape in India, there's a plethora cases to choose from. Here's one such story about a Hindu gang: https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/people/article/3010554/gujarat-riots-they-raped-me-butchered-my-child-because-we-were

    These people had God in their lives and you still think society was better for them? I'd actually argue less believers in organised religion would benefit the world enormously.

    If your moral compass is directed solely by the belief in whatever God you subscribe to, you are on the road to living a life of dogmatic belief and devoid of free thinking, how is this beneficial to society in any way?


    *Non obese, clean shaven woman speaking btw...*


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,747 ✭✭✭fisgon


    I haven't believed in a god for 20 years. My life is much better for having let go of the superstition, delusion, ignorance and pointless guilt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,794 ✭✭✭Squall Leonhart


    Yes, 1 in 140,000,000 (that's million) are the odds. Just try and envisage that. There's a 1 in 10 million chance of an airplane part falling from the sky and hitting you or of your being struck by lightning, yet most people wouldn't expect it to happen to them.

    Buying a ticket for something you have a 1 in 140 million chance of winning is on the same level of irrationality as is believing in a higher power. The same need for hope in a better future is present in both processes.

    Look, I'm not disagreeing with you that the odds are astronomical. Most people who do the lotto don't expect to win either.

    But, winning the lottery, however unlikely, is factually possible, happens most weeks for someone. The same certainty cannot be applied to the existence of an afterlife or God.


  • Registered Users Posts: 794 ✭✭✭moonage


    Are living things the result of blind, dumb forces or of an intelligent universe?

    Obviously, the latter.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,934 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    moonage wrote: »
    Are living things the result of blind, dumb forces or of an intelligent universe?

    Obviously, the latter.

    It’s not obviously he latter.

    But if it was the latter, and life needs an intelligent universe to create it, doesn’t the intelligent universe “obviously” need an intelligent creator and doesn’t that creator obviously need a creator? And so on and so on?

    What does an “intelligent universe” even mean anyway?


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 2,443 ✭✭✭jobeenfitz


    I'm going to check Paddy Power. Com. That'll give me a good indication.


Advertisement