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The Four Big Bangs [Darleen Click]

Since we’ve been discussing “leaps of faith”, I thought this would be apropos to add to the mix. From former-atheist Frank Pastore:

3 Replies to “The Four Big Bangs [Darleen Click]”

  1. StrangernFiction says:

    Shall we say that the gospel story is the work of the imagination? My friend, such things are not imagined; and the doings of Socrates, which no one doubts, are less well attested than those of Jesus Christ. At best, you only put the difficulty from you; it would be still more incredible that several persons should have agreed together to invent such a book, than that there was one man who supplied its subject matter. The tone and morality of this story are not those of any Jewish authors, and the gospel indeed contains characters so great, so striking, so entirely inimitable, that their invention would be more astonishing than their hero. With all this the same gospel is full of incredible things, things repugnant to reason, things which no natural man can understand or accept. What can you do among so many contradictions? You can be modest and wary, my child; respect in silence what you can neither reject nor understand, and humble yourself in the sight of the Divine Being who alone knows the truth.

  2. cranky-d says:

    I’m not sure I agree with his assessment of the four big bangs, since a lack of evidence of transition states for animals moving from one specie to another is not an indictment of the theory of evolution (especially since evolution is in a sense an optimization, and one would assume that once local optima are reached, more examples of a stable specie would have existed over a longer period of time and therefore had a higher chance of leaving evidence of their existence behind), but some of what he’s saying is worth thinking about.

  3. bour3 says:

    I find little out there that is more wearisome than atheists explaining their intellectual journey. Tell us about how you realized you’re gay and how you came out to your parents. I’m sorry, did I say wearisome just now? I meant to say terribly interesting, do go on.

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