151. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #162313 by secondsoprano on April 16, 2008 at 2:49 pm
Bonzai became a Rabbi too.
152. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #161118 by secondsoprano on April 14, 2008 at 8:44 pm
Comment #160816 by navyjake95 on April 14, 2008 at 12:27 pm
It's been my experience (for 50 years), that people who behave like you did (in your article), do so because they're deeply afraid of Jesus.
153. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #161116 by secondsoprano on April 14, 2008 at 8:35 pm
So Steve, did your partner start calling you "Cobber" when he came back from Oz? :-)
Not in front of me, fortunately.
154. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #158652 by secondsoprano on April 10, 2008 at 9:24 pm
sign: a happy and well adjusted "homosexualist"
155. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #158644 by secondsoprano on April 10, 2008 at 9:13 pm
You Australian?
156. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #158641 by secondsoprano on April 10, 2008 at 9:10 pm
Maybe in that case Cartomancer would be happy to make you an honorary homosexualist, so you can still be in the athiest club.
Hmmm, I did go to an all boys boarding school....but I'm about 20 years too old for Cartomancer...
157. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #158615 by secondsoprano on April 10, 2008 at 8:26 pm
As it is, I can't be an athiest, apparently. You see, I'm fucking gorgeous, mate. Abso-fucking-lutely gorgeous :-D
158. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #158608 by secondsoprano on April 10, 2008 at 8:17 pm
Most often, these folks suffer from a defect -- a lisp, stuttering, homosexualism, being crippled, suffering from a crippling disease, having been abused by their dads, fat bodies and ugly faces, especially.
159. Beware the Believers
Comment #157977 by secondsoprano on April 9, 2008 at 11:25 pm
The reason is conjecture from professors the students look up too because of their high intellectual honors.
There isn't a lack of evidence, only a supression of evidence
160. German Church admits aiding Nazis
Comment #157880 by secondsoprano on April 9, 2008 at 4:53 pm
the cardinal said the conditions in which people had been forced to work in Catholic institutions - such as hospitals, homes and monastery gardens - had not been as bad as elsewhere
161. Commentary: Democrats finally getting religion on religion
Comment #157877 by secondsoprano on April 9, 2008 at 4:48 pm
If the Democratic Party is serious about fostering a relationship with the faith community
162. Richard Dawkins: 'Growth in creationist beliefs a problem for schools'
Comment #156574 by secondsoprano on April 7, 2008 at 10:58 pm
DasSquid
I don't even know if Kevin Rudd (our current Prime Minister) is even religious!
163. Anti-gay Okla. lawmaker attracts 1,000 backers
Comment #154881 by secondsoprano on April 3, 2008 at 10:08 pm
ya know (ponderingly) it's weird to think that a person who is supposed to represent you in government actually wants you to be erased like a person would want cancer to be erased from their body - how odd-
164. Anti-gay Okla. lawmaker attracts 1,000 backers
Comment #154871 by secondsoprano on April 3, 2008 at 9:38 pm
Studies show no society that has totally embraced homosexuality has lasted more than a few decades
165. Anti-gay Okla. lawmaker attracts 1,000 backers
Comment #154865 by secondsoprano on April 3, 2008 at 9:03 pm
Does that mean we will last slightly longer thanks to dip shits like the not so Rev Nile?
166. Anti-gay Okla. lawmaker attracts 1,000 backers
Comment #154758 by secondsoprano on April 3, 2008 at 5:03 pm
Sydney has held an annual Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras since 1978 (it started as a protest). It goes for a month and the highlight is the big street parade which attracts 300,000 to 400,00 spectators. (This silly cow only got 1000).
So according to her "research", Australia only has a short time left! What a twit!
167. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153693 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 8:54 pm
I'm just a tufted titmouse. I don't have the answers
168. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153685 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 8:32 pm
You said:
your analogy fails because we live in a society of agreed-upon rules. A man may not beat his wife in America because its against the laws that we as a country have laid down for ourselves. Can you appreciate the difference between that and laws decided for us by people who don't even live in our country?
… you seem to be denying that any international law should apply within domestic borders. My point is that this denial is contradictory to your expressed belief in universally applicable rights.
International law that isn't agreed upon by that nation! Ugh - why is this so hard to understand?
If an Islamic organization passed a law and then ordered the UK to follow it, what do you think would happen? You would *hopefully* tell them to jog on!
You either want us to use our military for the defense of human rights or you want us to stay out of everyone's business.
169. Vatican: Islam surpasses Roman Catholicism as world's largest religion
Comment #153675 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 7:51 pm
OT: who is the Frum you are waiting for?
My partner didn't want to be a called a stepmother, so my daughter calls her "frum" - combination of "mum" and "friend". I've never heard of "frum" - I thought we made it up!
170. Faith healing church parents charged over toddler's death
Comment #153647 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 6:13 pm
FF, I'm glad to say I agree with you wholeheartedly ... on this thread at least ;)
171. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153625 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 5:16 pm
What other countries want to do domestically is their own problem. I see no reason to sacrifice American lives and money to stop the domestic problems of others.
I believe in certain inalienable rights for all human beings but I would never advocate the use of force to tell others how to live. I decry human rights abuses in foreign countries but wouldn't use force to change them.
If a country be engages in something that amounts to "tyranny", why is the international community not entitled to object? Why should "domestic law" be an answer to a breach of internationally applicable human rights? And why should America be any exception?
"Object" all you want. How much as your "objection" accomplished in Africa, Asia and the Middle East?
172. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153617 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 4:57 pm
Do I care about persecution in other countries? Of course I do. I abhor tyranny anywhere but I don't think that we (America) have the responsibility to defend the entire world. I recognize the rights and laws of other countries (Hell, I live in England) but I will never agree to international law superseding American law.
173. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153586 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 3:49 pm
I care about one thing in this world - the preservation of the US Republic. Nothing else disturbs me in the least.
And you Americans wonder why so much of the world hates you.
I don't hate you ... but I find many of you very, very disturbing.
Sorry, but I didn't sign up to die in Africa to stop some useless civil war. What other countries want to do domestically is their own problem.
174. Vote on freedom of expression marks the end of Universal Human Rights
Comment #153532 by secondsoprano on April 1, 2008 at 2:36 pm
I care about one thing in this world - the preservation of the US Republic. Nothing else disturbs me in the least.
175. Wicked untruths from the Church
Comment #150983 by secondsoprano on March 27, 2008 at 11:21 pm
I don't understand your system in the UK. People vote for what they feel is best, no?
176. Lying for Jesus?
Comment #150980 by secondsoprano on March 27, 2008 at 10:28 pm
Evolution is big trouble
Reverend, did you watch documantary about beavers
177. Police: Girl Dies After Parents Pray for Healing Instead of Seeking Medical Help
Comment #150977 by secondsoprano on March 27, 2008 at 9:38 pm
The story of how insulin was discovered is an interesting one. No prayer was involved according to many accounts.
178. Police: Girl Dies After Parents Pray for Healing Instead of Seeking Medical Help
Comment #150418 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 9:36 pm
If the atheist movement as a whole can make a big enough fuss about this, ala have as many of the big guns make a fuss over this specific case (or any of the related cases pointed out by the fellows here) then we can turn this into the biggest PR fiasco for the Xians in America.
179. Police: Girl Dies After Parents Pray for Healing Instead of Seeking Medical Help
Comment #150398 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 8:41 pm
OK, now this one is seriously worrying. This woman is a trained nurse, and she failed to get medical attention for her child for something she KNEW was extremely serious.
http://www.americaslastdays.com/?page=amomstrials-christina
My older son Dmishion who is 10 was complaining all day that his stomach hurt. I was not really too concerned until he stopped playing and went and laid down on the couch, doubled over in pain. This was during UBBS on a Sunday night. At this point he was moaning so I began to ask him if he ate anything funny. He said no but that he had to go to the bathroom. After he came out he told me he passed a lot of blood. I went to check and it was a large amount of bright red blood. From my experience as a nurse I knew this was very bad. I have observed a lot of GI bleeds in patients that required blood transfusions and surgical correction etc. The first thing I had to do is say, well I know that is not good but it does not matter because God is able to fix it. Dmishion asked to pray so we did. We also put in a prayer request to Bill and He agreed with us that whatever the problem was God had already fixed it! By the end of the study the stomach pain was completely gone! No more bleeding! Praise God! The Lord is teaching me to trust Him for all things!
180. Police: Girl Dies After Parents Pray for Healing Instead of Seeking Medical Help
Comment #150395 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 8:36 pm
I have been spending far too much reading these wacko posts on that link.
I felt compelled to share Kathryn, my 7-year-old's, testimony of God in her life.
Her bedtime book is the Bible which I read to her. She does not understand it all but listens. She asked me tonight if she could share some miracles from the Lord.
She told me that when she went to bed last night she started getting a headache. She said in her own words, "I rebuked the headache in Jesus' Name."
For the first time in a long time, she did not get out of bed her usual 3-4 times for something trivial. She went right to sleep and was happy to tell me about what God did for her the next day. She said it never bothered her again.
She also said she prayed her remaining 5 fish would live as 7 had died the day before. All are alive and she was thrilled.
It is exciting to hear her words as she is using words in the correct way straight from the Word of God.
I need to explain that her "headache" at bedtime had become a habit. She liked to delay bed in any manner possible and for weeks had complained of sudden headaches only at bedtime. She would ask for an aspirin. I used to give in and give her one just so I could then rest but I knew it to be wrong. I told her she was relying on medicine instead of God.
Now the problem is gone as she figured out, by the grace of God, how to rebuke in Jesus' Name.
181. Expelled Overview
Comment #150223 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 3:30 pm
if you believe in evolution, you're a homosexual
182. Police: Girl Dies After Parents Pray for Healing Instead of Seeking Medical Help
Comment #150221 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 3:28 pm
Are we sure this is true? I dunno, it just has that "urban myth" feel to it.
But maybe that's just wishful thinking...
183. Gay scientists isolate Christian gene
Comment #150189 by secondsoprano on March 26, 2008 at 2:41 pm
An oldie but a goodie, I suspect.
I can't view the video (blocked at work) but from the comments I assume this is a classic CNNNN episode.
It was a brilliant series on ABC a few years ago - a spoof on CNN. Their slogan was "We report. You believe", and they produced statirical news reports including one on Christian scientists and the gay gene. (They also did one entitled "Gay Games scandal - 100m track too straight").
The CNNNN team are the same ones that brought you "The Chaser's War on Everything" with the fake Osama Bin Laden episode at APEC last year.
184. A Letter From Hell
Comment #148996 by secondsoprano on March 24, 2008 at 9:46 pm
I am a Christian woman who does witness to people around me.
It is actually talking about that if a person isn't listening to the major players and their message, they don't deserve to recieve the personal message of God from their friends.
This indicates communication is possible between Heaven and Hell.
Please, if you want to use the Bible 'against' Christians, do it right.
Comment #148950 by secondsoprano on March 24, 2008 at 6:10 pm
Most religions are smart enough to use spring as a metaphor for reincarnation. Birds sing, eggs hatch, buds burst into life and, if you like, God is love. Only a misanthrope would deny the stirring of springtime juices and not dream of resurrection. Can atheism and religion find some accommodation at Easter?
186. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #147127 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 9:44 pm
Seems Mercy Ministries are not the only ones peddling this crap.
Here is a story in today's Crikey (Australian on-line news) about one of Sydney's most prestigious schools
I watched anti-gay videos at my North Sydney school
Ex-student of Sydney Church of England Grammar School writes:
Anti-gay videos from an ex-gay American pastor are only used by fundamentalist Christian organisations in Australia, right? Not necessarily -- I remember watching them as a student at Shore School, or more correctly, Sydney Church of England Grammar School.
All week, The Sydney Morning Herald has been publishing feature stories exposing the extraordinary link between Gloria Jeans Coffees, the Pentecostal Hillsong Church and the dubious Mercy Ministries -- an organisation caught up in allegations of psychological torment through exorcisms, forced submission and isolation.
The SMH journalist at the centre of the investigation, Ruth Pollard, has revealed allegations from many young women who went to the ministry seeking help and came out tormented by the fundamentalist teachings and techniques.
It seems like another world, but yesterday's feature about the training videos had my jaw drop as it was revealed that Mercy Ministries used the same videos as a senior Divinity teacher at my school. He would, along with many of his religious colleagues, openly condemn homos-xual practice and show us the videos in class of Sy Rogers who proudly claims that "homos-xuality can be overcome".
At one stage, I remember the teacher speaking to us one lunch-time peddling the theory that the social acceptance of homos-xuality would eventually lead to a social acceptance of paedophilia.
I don't know whether the school, in the well heeled suburb of North Sydney uses the videos anymore, but they certainly did while I was in my formative teenage years in the mid 1990s, just ten years ago.
Would the parents of students at this elite private Anglican school believe that teachers were once using films like this to teach their wards about the evilness of homos-xuality and ways to suppress those urges?
It is easy to look upon such behaviour as character building and just part of the rough and tumble of an all-boys school which proudly defended its record in cricket, rugby and rowing. But for many others, especially those that came from the country, such messages from a respected master at the school would merely fan the existing intolerance towards gay or camp behaviour. I look back on it astonished that such material was used.
The school's history is steeped in the Anglican tradition, with the governing council consisting of the Archbishop of Sydney who is president as well as six clergymen and six laymen elected by the Sydney Diocesan Synod plus past students.
In 1991 the school 'reaffirmed' its aims of stating that a boys education should be with a "Christian perspective of the world in which they live".
It goes on to state that "regular Christian Studies teaching is undertaken by qualified lay teachers as well as the Chaplain and Assistant Chaplain. In this way, together with an emphasis on pastoral care for each boy, the School strives to develop personal integrity and sound moral character. Emphasis is given to awareness of the nature and needs of the outside community, as the idea of service is fundamental to the aims of a Christian School."
Never in their wildest dreams do I think that the people that wrote this charter would have imagined that some staff would use training videos that are also associated with an organisation as dubious as the Mercy Ministries.
To many, organisations like the Mercy Ministries might be a world away, but in reality it is just a step away from the mainstream - especially when organised religion is involved.
187. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #147098 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 7:43 pm
birth order seems to play some role in the expression of homosexuality.
188. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #147081 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 6:59 pm
208. Comment #147055 by Electric Monk on March 19, 2008 at 6:05 pm
Pathfinder:
"Homosexuality is abnormal, it rules out procreation"
- not anymore it doesn't
189. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #147080 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 6:57 pm
Genes that predispose a significant minority of men to homosexuality raise a Darwinian puzzle. If homosexual men rarely father children, homosexual genes should dwindle to the low frequency expected from recurrent random mutation, a frequency below one in a million. Even if Kinsey's estimate of one in ten is high, there can be no doubt that the abundance of homosexual men is too great to have stemmed from recurrent mutation alone.
190. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #146992 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 4:16 pm
189. Comment #146985 by Frankus1122 on March 19, 2008 at 4:07 pm
I am sure that he meant "homosexual sex" does not yield children. Meaning two men or two women.
That's what I meant.
I am sometimes dim but not that unintelligent.
191. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #146952 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 3:19 pm
Ooooohhhh you are being slippery.
I am sure that he meant "homosexual sex" does not yield children. Meaning two men or two women.
192. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #146944 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 3:12 pm
Mitchell - re "Love my life" - yes, I agree, that was a great movie!
193. God's cure for gays lost in sin
Comment #146912 by secondsoprano on March 19, 2008 at 2:41 pm
18. Comment #146590 by Pathfinder
Homosexuality is abnormal, it rules out procreation
It seems curious that homosexuality would continue to be present in a population when there does not seem to be any way homosexual genes (if there are such things) would be passed to the next genereation.
194. Fleabytes
Comment #146284 by secondsoprano on March 18, 2008 at 9:47 pm
I leave now. My task complete. I shall not return unless the Lord sends unto me another vision.
195. Fleabytes
Comment #146257 by secondsoprano on March 18, 2008 at 8:39 pm
How do sheep shaggers stack up? Only saying because there is a large landmass about 3 hours flight away from where I live who engage in the practice.
196. Fleabytes
Comment #146256 by secondsoprano on March 18, 2008 at 8:36 pm
Give up your nubile sheep and other farm animals.
Stop fondling all that lives and breathes.
Stop using stupefying drugs.
Follow the Lord and you'll know real mind transcendence!
Sell all your belongings, for the end time nears.
Leave your family, this is what Jesus has said.
Have no more than a hair-cloth to protect you.
Then await for the Lord to give you a vision. If the vision doesn't occur then it is due to you pathetic lack of faith. Fast and sleep in the elements until a vision is received.
197. Fleabytes
Comment #146243 by secondsoprano on March 18, 2008 at 8:05 pm
OK, clair, since no-one has taken up your kind offers, let me be the first.
Assume for a minute that you have convinced me.
What do I have to do now?
198. They prayed to cast Satan from my body
Comment #145647 by secondsoprano on March 17, 2008 at 9:44 pm
Thanks for the prompt Leon. I have added my comments to the feedback form on the link you provided, and I encourage others to do the same.
199. They prayed to cast Satan from my body
Comment #145621 by secondsoprano on March 17, 2008 at 7:55 pm
RE: 19. Comment #145420 by secondsoprano on March 17, 2008 at 2:57 pm
Crap, I accidentally click on the "offensive" link on your post. Please explain to Josh I did it accidentally. Sorry.
200. Fleabytes
Comment #145577 by secondsoprano on March 17, 2008 at 6:12 pm
casting into dubeity the IMPERISHIBBLE truth of our LORDS RESURRECTION