jasoncran said:
I was questioning how Mr.Barbarian as a christian put evolution in to his faith.
I know. Didn't mean to barge in. ;)
Just wanted to make a few observations of my own.
jasoncran said:
Just because we cant test the soul doesnt meant it dont exist.
The point I was making was that -science- does not concern itself with things that cannot, by definition, be observed. Therefore, trying to think scientifically about the soul is pointless.
jasoncran said:
Define life? What makes us think? We do we have certain personalites? DNA doesnt explain it all.
DNA + Experience explains your personality. I'll be happy to elaborate if need be, but I'm not sure you'll like the conclusion.
jasoncran said:
I know a child who was comatose three days as his lungs filled with mud, after a car wreck. His parents were told that he would be a vegatable if he came out, yet he isnt. His parents prayed over him and beleived that the lord would heal other wise.
Medical flukes happen every day. That hardly proves that it was a miracle (unless you use the term to mean "highly unlikely event" instead of "divine intervention"). People survive because of flukes and people are killed because of flukes. Statistically it is bound to happen from time to time.
jasoncran said:
If you all you believe is the natural worlds then why help others after all is meaningless.
To quote Gandhi:
"You must become the change you want to see in the world".
jasoncran said:
If one does good works and knows that the earth and all life will die, then it doesnt make a difference in the long run
Well, a lot can happen in the, oh, 15-30 billion years (at least) until the universe extinguishes itself (the Universal Cold Death is the most popular idea at the moment from what I can gather). Who knows what humanity has become in that time. Predicting what the world will look like in 1000 years is impossible, not to mention 30.000.000 times that far into the future.
jasoncran said:
100 yrs from now who will remember us, unless we do something grandiose, no one.
Meh. I'm not terribly concerned with being remembered after I'm dead. I'm just glad that people remember me now. :D Anyway, fame sounds highly overrated.
jasoncran said:
The sun will in billions of yrs destroy the Earth.
Predicting what humans have become in that time is impossible, if we're even still around then (and are we still human?). Our species might have colonized thousands of solar systems by then for all we know. If anything, I'm sad that I won't be around to see what happens. I'm sure it would be immensely interesting.
jasoncran said:
I choose to believe that what is done for the Lord will last.
That is, of course, up to you.
jasoncran said:
The problem with that thinking is that there is arch of meaningless over all things, do good works to give you meaning,but the emptiness is still there.
Oh, I don't see my life as empty at all. I find myself in a world of amazing beauty that I am lucky enough to be able to sense and explore. I get to ponder a great many mysteries and I get to share that experience with people I care about. I find my life to be very fulfilling actually.
jasoncran said:
My wife has been sucidal what do you tell her when she feels that she has nothing to live for. Bi polar isnt curable,If her kids werent alive I or no man's philosophy could give her hope, but Jesus could. He keeps me going as war makes things seem to life melancholic. I can easily think and say cest la vie to those in Haiti. This is the emptiness that I struggle with, but the Lord reminds me that there's hope and that I dont have to block out the hurt, just let him heal yme and soften my heart.
I don't want to get too personal with this, and I certainly couldn't comment on your wife. I don't even know her. So instead I'll tell you what gives me hope.
The children I teach give me hope that the next generation will be smarter and better than we are. They are eager to learn, and to accept and tolerate each other on a level we never could. The world is getting smaller and that is a good thing. They will be better educated than we are, and they will hopefully know a world less filled with absolute answers. Absolute answers kill and make people complacent. Questions, on the other hand, broaden the mind and allows for understanding. And we could use a little more of that in the years to come.
And if I in any way can contribute to that future, that is a life well spent.