No, just late to the game...and drinking. Baby hater.kalm wrote:Oh…dodge a deep philosophical rebuttal by making a joke.SeattleGriz wrote:
Sounds like you belong to a crappy religion, baby hater.
Nervous?
Padding my post count.

No, just late to the game...and drinking. Baby hater.kalm wrote:Oh…dodge a deep philosophical rebuttal by making a joke.SeattleGriz wrote:
Sounds like you belong to a crappy religion, baby hater.
Nervous?


It was a hypothetical, not a personal example. Freak show christians would be more likely to justify that.SeattleGriz wrote:No, just late to the game...and drinking. Baby hater.kalm wrote:
Oh…dodge a deep philosophical rebuttal by making a joke.
Nervous?
Padding my post count.

Pro abortion...Pwns wrote:I'll use pro-abortion logic here...
What business of yours is if someone chooses to faith heal their kid?
When life begins is subjective anyways so don't impose your beliefs on others!

Damn dude. I haven't been drinking that much! Hypothetically, you are a baby hater!kalm wrote:It was a hypothetical, not a personal example. Freak show christians would be more likely to justify that.SeattleGriz wrote:
No, just late to the game...and drinking. Baby hater.
Padding my post count.

Nah, just send them to the local Catholic Church.Cluck U wrote:Or, we could have some (those who go by dbackjon) people's, "heroes" just fvck those kids in the azz.dbackjon wrote:
Yes, and beatings. Don't forget, the Bible gives parents permission to kill their children:
If any man has a stubborn and rebellious son who will not obey his father or his mother, and when they chastise him, he will not even listen to them, then his father and mother shall seize him, and bring him out to the elders of his city at the gateway of his home town. And they shall say to the elders of his city, “This son of ours is stubborn and rebellious, he will not obey us, he is a glutton and a drunkard.” Then all the men of his city shall stone him to death; so you shall remove the evil from your midst, and all Israel shall hear of it and fear.
Read more: http://www.gotquestions.org/stone-rebel ... z3SmG6eA5C" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Why let a little child molestation get in the way of worshiping a gay role model, right, jon?

I love babies! I now have teenagers...SeattleGriz wrote:Damn dude. I haven't been drinking that much! Hypothetically, you are a baby hater!kalm wrote:
It was a hypothetical, not a personal example. Freak show christians would be more likely to justify that.
You know I am totally kidding on the baby hater part.

I got a huge 15 month old, super active \ inquisitive baby I would loan you. Bastige is the size of a 2 1/2 year old. Mom makes big babies.kalm wrote:I love babies! I now have teenagers...SeattleGriz wrote:
Damn dude. I haven't been drinking that much! Hypothetically, you are a baby hater!
You know I am totally kidding on the baby hater part.![]()

No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.houndawg wrote:Wrong. Faith healing is intentional neglect of sick child. The problem is that anybody that would believe in superstitious nonsense like faith healing is too stupid to realize that.


Thank you Super Hornet, for your post ties into mine.SuperHornet wrote:No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.houndawg wrote:Wrong. Faith healing is intentional neglect of sick child. The problem is that anybody that would believe in superstitious nonsense like faith healing is too stupid to realize that.
Faith healing is NOT the intentional neglect of ANYONE. Faith healing is a request that God intervene in the situation. The concept of neglect doesn't come in until those requesting God's move form the opinion that doctors have no business treating illness and injury. The problem is that you're conflating the two ideas.
A proper view of faith healing recognizes that a supernatural healing only ONE option out of many that God has available in directing the healing of a sick or injured person. A proper view ALSO recognizes that God guides the doctor's reason and skills to the correct diagnosis and treatment. Anyone who tries to use "faith" as an argument against medical art and science is unreasonably restricting the God they claim to support. And anyone who tries to whitewash any pro-supernatural view as this substandard view is ALSO wrong.
The point being that God can heal supernaturally AND He can also choose to heal through the knowledge and skill of a trained human doctor. From an orthodox Christian perspective, doctors ARE a valid resource, and should be utilized to the utmost. As a Christian, I know MANY doctors in many medical specialties, and they ALL do their jobs well. The presence of a few isolated quacks out there is NOT sufficient grounds to restrict God's ability to use a doctor who has integrity and skill to do the job to which s/he was called: healing sick and hurt people....

I totally agree with you..!!!Pwns wrote:I'll use pro-abortion logic here...
What business of yours is if someone chooses to faith heal their kid?
When life begins is subjective anyways so don't impose your beliefs on others!

Chizzang wrote:I totally agree with you..!!!Pwns wrote:I'll use pro-abortion logic here...
What business of yours is if someone chooses to faith heal their kid?
When life begins is subjective anyways so don't impose your beliefs on others!
The government should stay out of this in both cases
If somebody wants to "faith heal" their kid that is fine
If a woman wants to have an abortion instead of faith healing her child to death (also fine)



I suppose you believe in homeopathy too. Because hey, who needs critical thinking when you can just believe in magic instead?SuperHornet wrote:No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.houndawg wrote:Wrong. Faith healing is intentional neglect of sick child. The problem is that anybody that would believe in superstitious nonsense like faith healing is too stupid to realize that.
Faith healing is NOT the intentional neglect of ANYONE. Faith healing is a request that God intervene in the situation. The concept of neglect doesn't come in until those requesting God's move form the opinion that doctors have no business treating illness and injury. The problem is that you're conflating the two ideas.
A proper view of faith healing recognizes that a supernatural healing only ONE option out of many that God has available in directing the healing of a sick or injured person. A proper view ALSO recognizes that God guides the doctor's reason and skills to the correct diagnosis and treatment. Anyone who tries to use "faith" as an argument against medical art and science is unreasonably restricting the God they claim to support. And anyone who tries to whitewash any pro-supernatural view as this substandard view is ALSO wrong.
The point being that God can heal supernaturally AND He can also choose to heal through the knowledge and skill of a trained human doctor. From an orthodox Christian perspective, doctors ARE a valid resource, and should be utilized to the utmost. As a Christian, I know MANY doctors in many medical specialties, and they ALL do their jobs well. The presence of a few isolated quacks out there is NOT sufficient grounds to restrict God's ability to use a doctor who has integrity and skill to do the job to which s/he was called: healing sick and hurt people....

What does gay marriage have to do with this?Brock Landers wrote:I suppose you believe in homeopathy too. Because hey, who needs critical thinking when you can just believe in magic instead?



SuperHornet wrote:No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.houndawg wrote:Wrong. Faith healing is intentional neglect of sick child. The problem is that anybody that would believe in superstitious nonsense like faith healing is too stupid to realize that.
Faith healing is NOT the intentional neglect of ANYONE. Faith healing is a request that God intervene in the situation. The concept of neglect doesn't come in until those requesting God's move form the opinion that doctors have no business treating illness and injury. The problem is that you're conflating the two ideas.
A proper view of faith healing recognizes that a supernatural healing only ONE option out of many that God has available in directing the healing of a sick or injured person. A proper view ALSO recognizes that God guides the doctor's reason and skills to the correct diagnosis and treatment. Anyone who tries to use "faith" as an argument against medical art and science is unreasonably restricting the God they claim to support. And anyone who tries to whitewash any pro-supernatural view as this substandard view is ALSO wrong.
The point being that God can heal supernaturally AND He can also choose to heal through the knowledge and skill of a trained human doctor. From an orthodox Christian perspective, doctors ARE a valid resource, and should be utilized to the utmost. As a Christian, I know MANY doctors in many medical specialties, and they ALL do their jobs well. The presence of a few isolated quacks out there is NOT sufficient grounds to restrict God's ability to use a doctor who has integrity and skill to do the job to which s/he was called: healing sick and hurt people....

Take it easy on the paint chips, mmmk?SuperHornet wrote:No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.houndawg wrote:Wrong. Faith healing is intentional neglect of sick child. The problem is that anybody that would believe in superstitious nonsense like faith healing is too stupid to realize that.
Faith healing is NOT the intentional neglect of ANYONE. Faith healing is a request that God intervene in the situation. The concept of neglect doesn't come in until those requesting God's move form the opinion that doctors have no business treating illness and injury. The problem is that you're conflating the two ideas.
A proper view of faith healing recognizes that a supernatural healing only ONE option out of many that God has available in directing the healing of a sick or injured person. A proper view ALSO recognizes that God guides the doctor's reason and skills to the correct diagnosis and treatment. Anyone who tries to use "faith" as an argument against medical art and science is unreasonably restricting the God they claim to support. And anyone who tries to whitewash any pro-supernatural view as this substandard view is ALSO wrong.
The point being that God can heal supernaturally AND He can also choose to heal through the knowledge and skill of a trained human doctor. From an orthodox Christian perspective, doctors ARE a valid resource, and should be utilized to the utmost. As a Christian, I know MANY doctors in many medical specialties, and they ALL do their jobs well. The presence of a few isolated quacks out there is NOT sufficient grounds to restrict God's ability to use a doctor who has integrity and skill to do the job to which s/he was called: healing sick and hurt people....



If you say so, Eric....Grizalltheway wrote:Take it easy on the paint chips, mmmk?SuperHornet wrote:
No. A thousand times, no. You're jumping in too soon.
Faith healing is NOT the intentional neglect of ANYONE. Faith healing is a request that God intervene in the situation. The concept of neglect doesn't come in until those requesting God's move form the opinion that doctors have no business treating illness and injury. The problem is that you're conflating the two ideas.
A proper view of faith healing recognizes that a supernatural healing only ONE option out of many that God has available in directing the healing of a sick or injured person. A proper view ALSO recognizes that God guides the doctor's reason and skills to the correct diagnosis and treatment. Anyone who tries to use "faith" as an argument against medical art and science is unreasonably restricting the God they claim to support. And anyone who tries to whitewash any pro-supernatural view as this substandard view is ALSO wrong.
The point being that God can heal supernaturally AND He can also choose to heal through the knowledge and skill of a trained human doctor. From an orthodox Christian perspective, doctors ARE a valid resource, and should be utilized to the utmost. As a Christian, I know MANY doctors in many medical specialties, and they ALL do their jobs well. The presence of a few isolated quacks out there is NOT sufficient grounds to restrict God's ability to use a doctor who has integrity and skill to do the job to which s/he was called: healing sick and hurt people....


So parents get to decide what's abusive?JohnStOnge wrote:The thing is, it is important that we not accept the idea that government has ultimate say over decisions pertaining to the well being of children. We must defend the principle that, when government thinks one thing is best and parents think that some other thing is best, the parents' view rules.
If we don't do that, Pandora's box is open.

Wait a sec ClitzChizzang wrote:I totally agree with you..!!!Pwns wrote:I'll use pro-abortion logic here...
What business of yours is if someone chooses to faith heal their kid?
When life begins is subjective anyways so don't impose your beliefs on others!
The government should stay out of this in both cases
If somebody wants to "faith heal" their kid that is fine
If a woman wants to have an abortion instead of faith healing her child to death (also fine)

Mental prison (not murder)CID1990 wrote:Wait a sec ClitzChizzang wrote:
I totally agree with you..!!!
The government should stay out of this in both cases
If somebody wants to "faith heal" their kid that is fine
If a woman wants to have an abortion instead of faith healing her child to death (also fine)
Indoctrinating your kid as a Christian and teaching him about the bearded man in the sky is bad- akin to murder I think you once said
But allowing the bearded man in the sky to take away your kids cancer- that's ok?

I know I was just fvcking with you.Chizzang wrote:Mental prison (not murder)CID1990 wrote:
Wait a sec Clitz
Indoctrinating your kid as a Christian and teaching him about the bearded man in the sky is bad- akin to murder I think you once said
But allowing the bearded man in the sky to take away your kids cancer- that's ok?
Just because I think its stupid doesn't mean our glorious elected officials ought to be managing it
I would like our government out of the family management business all together