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The devil AKA Satan.

Do you believe in the devil?

Many fundamentalist Christians would obviously say "yes" with the sage and knowing comment that the greatest trick of the devil is to convince us that he doesn't exist.

Myself, I think his greatest trick is to convince us that he he does.....which doesn't really make sense I know, but is rather funny when you think about it.

The Dharma, Buddhism, does have its own version of the "lord of darkness", Mara. Mara often acts as someone who would seek to convince us that "enlightenment/salvation" can never be ours.

Once, on a Buddhist forum, another poster spoke of his own outlook. He only believed in bodhisattvas, surrounding us, "enlightenment beings" who have renounced the joys of nirvana in order to share our sufferings, making them their own, aiding and supporting. Angels in a sense I suppose. I saw his outlook as life giving. I still do.

I don't think we need believe in fairies to reap the benefits. A "bodhisattva" can be in the smile of a child, an act of a stranger. Tangible. Real. Lifegiving.

No poll here I'm not interested in any vote. Truth is not democratic.
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People have never went crazy over stuff they didn't believe in. Only stuff they thought was real. So I get what you're saying.
I have also heard the saying that the devil wrote the Bible to trick people into believing in him.
Diotrephes · 70-79, M
@canusernamebemyusername The Bible as an unified book was written in the late 680s-early 690s A.D. by a committee of story tellers, writers, and artists based in England. They produced three master copies in Latin, each weighing about 75 pounds. One copy still exists. There is no earlier complete legitimate Bible of any kind on this planet.

There were bits and pieces of ragged scrolls floating around but they were not the Bible, with all of the stories in them.

Uthman had formed a committee around 640 A.D. to write the Koran. Since the Christians didn't have their fairy tale in a book they had to come up with one as a propaganda tool. As the Muslims were storming around the Mediterranean they needed a safe place to produce their book so they decided on England. They raised a couple thousand cows for the vellum to write on and they assembled the committee and got busy. That is why the stories flow seamlessly from one to another in a linear manner. They were all written at the same time.
@Diotrephes Ha ha! Talk about "fairy tales". Did we all live happily ever after?

😀
Diotrephes · 70-79, M
@Tariki As it says in 1 Timothy 4:7 (TLB) = "Don’t waste time arguing over foolish ideas and silly myths and legends. Spend your time and energy in the exercise of keeping spiritually fit."

What are the biblical stories except silly myths and legends?