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Misconceptions about gods and the Bible

Saying that there is no proof of gods, or even that proof is necessary is silly. It means you don't understand the word god. It's like a Creationist saying there's no such thing as evolution because they think evolution means an ape changed into a human.

The only thing that makes a god a god is worship/veneration.

It isn't that everything is a god, it's that anything can be a god. It's like love. Anything can be loved. That doesn't mean it can't be differentiated from anything else. Anything can be worshipped. Something becomes a god when, like the Oxford definition, it is given supreme importance.

Christians, Jews and Muslims are not the only theists.

A god doesn't have to literally exist to be a deity or god. Like the example also given by definition. A personification of fate. Luck. Is a god. Nor does the one who's god something is have to believe it literally exists. It's existence is not necessarily significant.

A god doesn't have to be supernatural or a creator. More often than not a god doesn't fall into that category.

Using God with uppercase G only signifies the specific god above all others within a specific reference. It doesn't necessarily mean the God of the Bible.

The God of the Bible wasn't thought to be omni-anything. Not omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent etc. That nonsense comes from theology.

The soul, to early Bible believers, was the life of any breathing creature. Not some part of us that is immortal.

Spirit means invisible active force. Anything you can't see but you can see the results of. Breath, wind, compelled mental inclination, genetic, traditional, cultural, or social influences, Spirit being are highly advanced people we can't see unless they reveal themselves to us.

The Bible doesn't teach that all good people go to heaven or all bad people go to hell. Hell, in the Bible, is the grave. God is there in a sense, because he watches over it. Everyone goes to hell. Jesus, for example, went to hell.

Jesus isn't physically returning, he finished what he had to do the first time.

Other teachings adopted by later apostate theology are the trinity, the cross, rapture, Christmas and Easter.

There's probably a dozen things that don't come to mind but that's a start.
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RedBaron · M
Why does your post refer only to Christian ideas and symbols?
BibleData · M
@RedBaron [quote]Why does your post refer only to Christian ideas and symbols?[/quote]

They don't.
RedBaron · M
@BibleData No? What do you call Jesus, the trinity, the cross, the rapture, Christmas, and Easter?
BibleData · M
@RedBaron What do I call Jesus? Uh, Jesus.

Greek philosophy began to influence Jewish thinking after Alexander the Great in 332 BCE. Then later Christians through Constantine the Great in 325 CE. The immortal soul is ancient mythology adopted by Greek philosophers and then by Christians through the influence of Socrates. Not a Bible teaching. The cross comes from Constantine, Christmas comes from Saturnalia, not popular with Christians until 1840 when Dickens wrote Christmas Carol, Easter from Astarte (Ishtar), hell from Dante and Milton. the Rapture from John Darby.

None of it was taught in the Bible. All of it, except for the rapture, comes from Babylonian teachings. The Greeks adopted it and then the Jews and Christians.
RedBaron · M
@BibleData Come on. Jesus is Christian divinity. The resurrection myth and all.
BibleData · M
@RedBaron [quote]Come on. Jesus is Christian divinity.[/quote]

That doesn't mean what you think. Moses is Jewish/Christian divinity as well. The judges of Israel. All men who the Bible calls gods.
RedBaron · M
@BibleData But all of Christian dogma and theology is based on Jesus, Mary, and the immaculate conception and resurrection myths. A foundation of sand IMO.