General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Moon Shoes
The Young Turks
comments
Comments by "Moon Shoes" (@moonshoes11) on ""Death To Gays" Pastor Quits After Admitting To "Sins"" video.
Jesus also said: slaves, obey your earthly masters with all fear. Including the cruel ones.
2
@non-yajbusiness6503 Humanism offers the same or better, and doesn’t demand worshipping the god of slavery. Just something to think about.
2
If you don’t hold a belief that a god exists, you’re an atheist by definition. Of course, I respect whatever label you chose to use. However, Gnostic/ agnostic refer to knowledge. Whether you know a god exists. Theism/atheism refer to whether or not you believe. Even believers don’t know a god exists, and would be agnostic (again, still respecting whatever label they choose). Sounds like you’re an agnostic atheist. Peace and reason.
2
@non-yajbusiness6503 It is true there were cases of indentured servants who were released after six years. This applied to Hebrew males only. If you actually read your Bible, you couldn’t make such a claim that slaves were freed though. Hebrew males could be released from indentured servitude. Hebrew women, no…not released. They were slaves, for life. If these women had children, the children were slaves, for life. If they were not Hebrews, and purchased from the heathens around them… they were slaves, for life, and handed down as an inheritance because they were property. Reference Exodus 21, and Leviticus 25.
1
So says your own Imagination, unless you can demonstrate the “spirit of god”. Minding your own business seems to leave out the potential for helping others, or for voting for equality. Just a different perspective. Peace.
1
@non-yajbusiness6503 You left out slavery being part of the spirit of god too, right? And beating slaves. And suffering in Hell, right?
1
@stevestiffler9120 The ouija phenomenon is considered by the scientific community to be the result of the ideomotor response. Michael Faraday first described this effect in 1853, while investigating table-turning. Various studies have been conducted, recreating the effects of the ouija board in the lab and showing that, under laboratory conditions, the subjects were moving the planchette involuntarily. A 2012 study found that when answering yes or no questions, ouija use was significantly more accurate than guesswork, suggesting that it might draw on the unconscious mind. Skeptics have described ouija board users as 'operators'. Some critics have noted that the messages ostensibly spelled out by spirits were similar to whatever was going through the minds of the subjects. According to professor of neurology Terence Hines in his book Pseudoscience and the Paranormal (2003) Find blind people to test the ouija board with. Or blindfold people who don’t know which direction the board is facing. You’ll discover there is no merit to any supernatural claims.
1