There is hope for America, after all. It may be just possible to mobilize people to stop the gay agenda. Amen.
1 posted on
02/18/2004 5:22:40 PM PST by
pinochet
To: pinochet
Now we need to get this *MAJORITY* to turn out for President Bush in *NOVEMBER*!
To: pinochet
Most Americans Believe Bible Stories of Moses, Noah are True Most, excluding those like me who have tried to build a boat.
3 posted on
02/18/2004 5:28:01 PM PST by
South40
(My vote helped defeat cruz bustamante; did yours?)
To: pinochet
"Most Americans Believe Bible Stories of Moses, Noah are True" Said Howard Dean:
Damned right I believe in the Bible stories. Especially the New Testament where Job is swallowed by Free Willie, and Moses saved the animals with the Ark of the Covenant, and Noah parted the Red Sea when he was on his way to receive the Ten Commandments."
4 posted on
02/18/2004 5:29:20 PM PST by
Enterprise
("Do you know who I am?")
To: pinochet
The majority of Americans also put on and remove their
belief as a matter of personal comfort. What good is beleif without action or as Paul said faith without works is dead.
5 posted on
02/18/2004 5:29:39 PM PST by
StonyBurk
To: pinochet
I wonder how many believe Sodom and Gomorrah ?
We are there now or dam close..
9 posted on
02/18/2004 5:32:45 PM PST by
The Mayor
("If you want to learn to love better, you should start with a friend who you hate."- Nikka - age 6)
To: pinochet
"Marriage is to be held in honor among all, and the marriage bed is to be undefiled; for fornicators and adulterers God will judge." - Hebrews 13:4
BTW, fornication is an old word that no one uses anymore. It means (any) sex outside of marriage. So, while many might believe the story of Noah, they don't really believe God means what He says. Neither did they during the days of Noah.
To: pinochet
11 posted on
02/18/2004 5:34:50 PM PST by
TomServo
("What a day. I invented Gainesburgers and I didn't even mean to!")
To: pinochet
Although most Americans believed the story of Noah and the flood word-for-word, a large majority rejected the suggestion that Jews bear the collective responsibility for the death of Jesus, the poll found. This is a false analogy, since the Gospels nowhere say that the Jews bear collective responsibility for the death of Jesus. The crowd may shout it, but a crowd is often wrong, and the Catholic Church has condemned that interpretation of collective guilt.
To: pinochet
Most Americans believe professional wrestling is real, too.
15 posted on
02/18/2004 5:40:22 PM PST by
Junior
(No animals were harmed in the making of this post)
To: pinochet
Yep
17 posted on
02/18/2004 5:42:46 PM PST by
SeeRushToldU_So
(I was winning the pool on the Super Bowl for 3.5 minutes.)
To: pinochet
"....a large majority rejected the suggestion that Jews bear the collective responsibility for the death of Jesus...."Americans are right on! The Romans killed Christ. Don't make it more complicated than it is.
20 posted on
02/18/2004 5:50:39 PM PST by
NetValue
(They're not Americans, they're democrats.)
To: pinochet
A couple of really good books about looking for Mt. Sinai where God gave Moses 10 commandments, and another about searching for Noah's ark are "Mountain of God" and "Lost Mountains of Noah" by Robert Cornuke. This guy is a real adventurer, who took a lot of risks looking for relics from biblical times.
To: pinochet
Although most Americans believed the story of Noah and the flood word-for-word, a large majority rejected the suggestion that Jews bear the collective responsibility for the death of JesusEvery person to whom God has given life is guilty of the death of Messiah - whether Jew or Gentile.
Thank you, Lord, for loving us enough to die for us all.
28 posted on
02/18/2004 6:29:12 PM PST by
mombonn
To: pinochet
Most Americans believe everything or some of what they see on their idiot boxes in the living room!
30 posted on
02/18/2004 6:35:11 PM PST by
Revolting cat!
("In the end, nothing explains anything!")
To: pinochet
You can believe Bible stories of Moses, Noah are true and still die and go to Hell. You can even believe in Jesus and die and go to hell. It's going to take allot more than believing something to save this country.
31 posted on
02/18/2004 6:38:47 PM PST by
jgrubbs
To: pinochet
Of course it's true!
The Judeo Christian God is not limited in what he can do as mere fallible mortals are.
37 posted on
02/18/2004 7:24:43 PM PST by
nmh
(Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
To: pinochet
The 10 commandments are laws based on human nature. When the commandments are disobeyed, the evil side of human nature takes over.
Take the worship of animals, environment, or land and sea for example. We end up with a group of fascists stealing land, and putting the life of fish over the lives of hundreds of people. If environmentalism was left unchecked, humans would be "thinned" for the sake of a forest rather than the other way around.
Adultery is obvious. It becomes a gender war, welfare, homosexuality, pedophilia, abortion, and every lust, fetish, or broken life imaginable.
For each broken commandment, there are consequences.
There are 10 simple rules , if followed, that would create peace among men. The evil side of mans nature finds them too much of a burden, and rejects them. Then man blames God, government, and each other for war, hate, division. They can't see their own failings. Especially since the 10 commandments are outlawed in public places. People might read them and learn something.
43 posted on
02/18/2004 9:10:20 PM PST by
concerned about politics
( Liberals are still stuck at the bottom of Maslow's Hierarchy)
To: pinochet
"What exactly do Americans believe in when it comes to the paranormal, the occult, and "out-of-this-world" experiences? The Gallup Poll recently updated its audit of Americans' beliefs in a variety of these types of phenomena. The results suggest a significant increase in belief in a number of these experiences over the past decade, including in particular such Halloween-related issues as haunted houses, ghosts and witches. Only one of the experiences tested has seen a drop in belief since 1990: devil possession. Overall, half or more of Americans believe in two of the issues: psychic or spiritual healing, and extrasensory perception (ESP), and a third or more believe in such things as haunted houses, possession by the devil, ghosts, telepathy, extraterrestrial beings having visited earth, and clairvoyance."
Gallup Poll - June 8, 2001
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