Satan

I feel like people unjustly blame the devil for every single thing that goes wrong I mean sometimes there's no doubt that the devil is responsible but other times I feel like people use the devil as a scapegoat to cope with their problems.
 

dwcannan

Active Member
satans a punk had people my dads ex was a witch and she did witch craft on me and i had some fucked up shit happen to me and my house insanly real dreams with demons and shit waking up with glass all over my room and scratch marks shits not funny or nothin to fuck with and best belive the devil controls that shit
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
satans a punk had people my dads ex was a witch and she did witch craft on me and i had some fucked up shit happen to me and my house insanly real dreams with demons and shit waking up with glass all over my room and scratch marks shits not funny or nothin to fuck with and best belive the devil controls that shit
Really? That's pretty crazy (not you, but the situation) dude. Did your dad know about the witch craft?
 

bud nugbong

Well-Known Member
what i never understood was, if satan is this bad guy why would he tourture bad people in hell? wouldnt he offer them some beer and say nice job bieng a dick your whole life. punishing bad people is kindof being on gods side isnt it? kindof off topic and no i dont belive in religion, but i always wondered about that.
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
what i never understood was, if satan is this bad guy why would he tourture bad people in hell? wouldnt he offer them some beer and say nice job bieng a dick your whole life. punishing bad people is kindof being on gods side isnt it? kindof off topic and no i dont belive in religion, but i always wondered about that.
No god wants us to be with him. He doesn't punish us but we reject heaven by "sinning" so yeah that's that. I'm not sure if the devil tortures anyone because him himself is the one tortured most of all.
 

CountGlochula

Active Member
Whoah.... How do you know this?
Kill Women Who Are Not Virgins On Their Wedding Night

But if this charge is true (that she wasn't a virgin on her wedding night), and evidence of the girls virginity is not found, they shall bring the girl to the entrance of her fathers house and there her townsman shall stone her to death, because she committed a crime against Israel by her unchasteness in her father's house. Thus shall you purge the evil from your midst. (Deuteronomy 22:20-21 NAB)
 

CountGlochula

Active Member
Kill Sons of Sinners

Make ready to slaughter his sons for the guilt of their fathers; Lest they rise and posses the earth, and fill the breadth of the world with tyrants. (Isaiah 14:21 NAB)
 

CountGlochula

Active Member
More Rape and Baby Killing

Anyone who is captured will be run through with a sword. Their little children will be dashed to death right before their eyes. Their homes will be sacked and their wives raped by the attacking hordes. For I will stir up the Medes against Babylon, and no amount of silver or gold will buy them off. The attacking armies will shoot down the young people with arrows. They will have no mercy on helpless babies and will show no compassion for the children. (Isaiah 13:15-18 NLT)
 

Monterello

Active Member
Ive lived in a haunted house befor. Growls in my ear at night along with footsteps and scratching my skin. Its all extra demential not spiritial or extraterrestrial...its quantum physics bitch
 

Dislexicmidget2021

Well-Known Member
Satan,just an image humankind uses to identify evil universaly,there is no actual 'Satan' but there is evil and alot of it.Man is to blame for the evil that goes on the world not some figure made by religion.
 

eye exaggerate

Well-Known Member
...if literal interpretation is the order of the day then shall we pool all of the 'if so' scenarios that constitute non-belief and toss them out?

"A proof is sufficient evidence or argument for the truth of a proposition.
The concept arises in a variety of areas, with both the nature of the evidence or justification and the criteria for sufficiency being area-dependent. In the area of oral and written communication such as conversation, dialog, rhetoric, etc., a proof is a persuasive perlocutionary speech act, which demonstrates the truth of a proposition. In any area of mathematics defined by its assumptions or axioms, a proof is an argument establishing a theorem of that area via accepted rules of inference starting from those axioms and other previously established theorems. The subject of logic, in particular proof theory, formalizes and studies the notion of formal proof. In the areas of epistemology and theology, the notion of justification plays approximately the role of proof, while in jurisprudence the corresponding term is evidence, with burden of proof as a concept common to both philosophy and law.
In most areas, evidence is drawn from experience of the world around us, with science obtaining its evidence from nature, law obtaining its evidence from witnesses and forensic investigation, and so on. A notable exception is mathematics, whose evidence is drawn from a mathematical world begun with postulates and further developed and enriched by theorems proved earlier.
As with evidence itself, the criteria for sufficiency of evidence are also strongly area-dependent, usually with no absolute threshold of sufficiency at which evidence becomes proof. The same evidence that may convince one jury may not persuade another. Formal proof provides the main exception, where the criteria for proofhood are ironclad and it is impermissible to defend any step in the reasoning as "obvious"; for a well-formed formula to qualify as part of a formal proof, it must be the result of applying a rule of the deductive apparatus of some formal system to the previous well-formed formulae in the proof sequence.
Proofs have been presented since antiquity. Aristotle used the observation that patterns of nature never display the machine-like uniformity of determinism as proof that chance is an inherent part of nature. On the other hand, Thomas Aquinas used the observation of the existence of rich patterns in nature as proof that nature is not ruled by chance. Augustine of Hippo provides a good case study in early uses of informal proofs in theology. He argued that given the assumption that Christ had risen, there is resurrection of the dead and he provided further arguments to prove that the death of Jesus was for the salvation of man.
Proofs need not be verbal. Before Galileo, people took the apparent motion of the Sun across the sky as proof that the Sun went round the Earth. Suitably incriminating evidence left at the scene of a crime may serve as proof of the identity of the perpetrator. Conversely, a verbal entity need not assert a proposition to constitute a proof of that proposition. For example, a signature constitutes direct proof of authorship; less directly, handwriting analysis may be submitted as proof of authorship of a document. Privileged information in a document can serve as proof that the document's author had access to that information; such access might in turn establish the location of the author at certain time, which might then provide the author with an alibi."
 
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