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06-04-2006, 04:07 PM #1OPMember
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
SEARCH FOR THE LORD WITH YOUR WHOLE HEART AN U WILL FIND HIM
xsw2 Reviewed by xsw2 on . a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD SEARCH FOR THE LORD WITH YOUR WHOLE HEART AN U WILL FIND HIM Rating: 5
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06-04-2006, 04:41 PM #2Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
My impression from your other posts is that you were looking for women to "party" with.
Typical christer.
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06-04-2006, 05:38 PM #3Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
But there is a GOD...His name is "JunkYard"
Bow before my magnificence, or I will smite thee with, plagues, locusts, famine, and all of hells fury!
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06-04-2006, 05:46 PM #4Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Originally Posted by Breukelen advocaat
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06-04-2006, 06:12 PM #5Junior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Originally Posted by Breukelen advocaat
Is it right to assume; that just because an individual acknowledges that there is a God, that he walk in sinless perfection?..... very shortsighted.
Then ~ to criticize the individual due to his short comings, is to place yourself,
in the same status as the religious critics, judging others for their faults.
Both sides are desperately wrong.
Have I done this myself?... unfortunately.
Brad
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06-04-2006, 08:09 PM #6Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Originally Posted by xsw2
Originally Posted by braddog100
Fool \Fool\, n. [OE. fol, n. & adj., F. fol, fou, foolish, mad; a fool, prob. fr. L. follis a bellows, wind bag, an inflated ball; perh. akin to E. bellows. Cf. Folly, Follicle.]
1. One destitute of reason, or of the common powers of understanding; an idiot; a natural.
2. A person deficient in intellect; one who acts absurdly, or pursues a course contrary to the dictates of wisdom; one without judgment; a simpleton; a dolt.
Extol not riches, then, the toil of fools. --Milton.
Experience keeps a dear school, but fools will learn in no other. --Franklin.
3. (Script.) One who acts contrary to moral and religious wisdom; a wicked person
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
"The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works; There is none that doeth good."
~Psalms 14:1~
This is the type of thinking that is causing a significant percentage of the world's population to be mentally ill.
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06-04-2006, 10:57 PM #7Junior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
The allies when they took possesion of Berlin, found Nietzsches' material everywhere, I doubt if the world conciders the mindset of Germany at that time ~ well.
The fact that all have sinned is true. the point established to bring about the fact that we genuinely need his provision, from Christ.... thats all.
The fact also has been very well developed in M. scott Pecks book "People of the Lie" that when our need to be Ok is more important than the fact that we aren't, then we are truely mentally ill. His book, by the way is subtitled,
"a phsycological look at evil".
Just a note,.... just a note.
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06-04-2006, 11:22 PM #8Junior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Nietzsche ~ on his deathbed, uttered " Thou has conquered thou pale inpotent Christ"
He was a noted athiest, known for his own instability. Who is really sick here?
Unfortunately, many people misdirect their anger of religious hypocrites, toward God himself... truely unfortunate.
M. Scott Peck also addresses the hypocracy of some religious people in the book as well. A good read. you can also get it in audio book form.
best selling auther. NYtimes... etc. a shrink as well.
also, addresses the evil of the military, during his assighnment - as a shrink during vietman. I find him uniquely balanced.
Do some people misdirect their anger toward God?... ask your self this question.
Brad
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06-04-2006, 11:27 PM #9Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Originally Posted by braddog100
Then God said, â??Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb that yields seed, and the fruit tree that yields fruit according to its kind, whose seed is in itself, on the earthâ?; and it was so.
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06-04-2006, 11:45 PM #10Senior Member
a fool hath said in his heart there is no GOD
Originally Posted by braddog100
Freiderich Nietzsche was very ill for most of his adult life, some people believe that he had Syphills - which led to a breakdown when he got older. His writings have nothing to do with hatred, the Nazis, or anything else that he is blamed for - usually by people that have either never read him, or have an agenda linked to religion.
M. Scott Peck, on the other hand, was not even 1/1000 as intelligent of Nietzsche. Not that I care, but he was also an admitted total hypocrite, alcoholic, and philanderer.
http://books.guardian.co.uk/obituari...585171,00.html
Obituary
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
M Scott Peck
Pop psychiatrist who ignored his bestselling advice on adultery
Christopher Reed
Wednesday October 5, 2005
The Guardian
Psychiatrist M Scott Peck, who has died aged 69, made millions with his first book by advocating self-discipline, restraint, and responsibility - all qualities he openly acknowledged were notably lacking in himself. The Road Less Travelled was first published in 1978. It eventually spent 13 years on the New York Times bestseller list to create a paperback record, sold 10 million copies worldwide and was translated into more than 20 languages.
The opening words were: "Life is difficult." This was a pronouncement to which Peck could personally attest. He spent much of his life immersed in cheap gin, chain-smoking cigarettes and inhaling cannabis, and being persistently unfaithful to his wife, who eventually divorced him. He also went through estrangement with two of his three children.
Peck wrote openly of his adulterous affairs in another of his total of 15 books: In Search of Stones: A Pilgrimage of Faith, Reason and Discovery (1995), based on a visit to Britain to see ancient stone monuments. Never lacking in personal honesty, at least in print, he once said he had "the rare privilege of being able to give advice without having any responsibility".
Peck, whose personalised car number plate was THLOST, also spent much of his life seeking religious fulfilment (he was baptised a Christian at 43 after embracing Zen and then Sufism), and used this to explain his infidelities. "There was an element of quest in my extramarital romances," he wrote. "I was questing, through sexual romance, at least a brief visit to God's castle." Such visits, however brief, ceased when he became impotent, he disclosed.
The Road Less Travelled was written while Peck was running a successful private practice in Connecticut, but he received only $7,500 for publication after one publisher had dismissed it as "too Christ-y". Although a slow starter, its eventual massive success established Peck on the lecture circuit as well as confirming a valuable new genre for American publishers.
Peck was born in New York, the son of a lawyer who later became a judge. His education at the Phillips Exeter academy was unhappy and he later attacked its "Spartan, almost vicious adolescent culture". After psychological counselling, he moved to the Friends seminary, a Quaker school near Greenwich Village. There he read about Zen and became a Buddhist, but retained an ambition to write "the great American novel". After briefly attending Middlebury College, from where he was expelled for refusing the required officers' training classes, he entered Harvard thanks to his father's influence. He graduated in social relations and, despite his literary desires, began studying medicine at Columbia University before graduating from Case-Western Reserve University school of medicine in Ohio in 1963.
While at Columbia Peck met and married Lily Ho, a Chinese student from Singapore. This caused his father, who was half Jewish but always concealed it, to disown him (her parents disapproved, too). But he later relented and paid his son's tuition fees.
Then Peck joined the army because, he later said, he needed the regular pay to support his wife and a family; yet he also opposed the Vietnam war, then escalating. He rose to become assistant chief of psychiatry at the US surgeon general's office in Washington DC from 1970 to 1972, when he left the service with the rank of lieutentant colonel.
Years of private practice began and he incorporated case histories into the Road book and others. After its success he followed with another bestseller, People of the Lie: The Hope for Healing Human Evil (1983). It was well received by critics, but with reservations about "moral preachment". His books included two novels and one for children. Other non-fiction included The Different Drum (1987) and sequels to his first book, Further Along the Road Less Travelled (1993) and The Road Less Traveled and Beyond (1997). His last work was Glimpses of the Devil (2005), recounting his fascination with exorcism.
The success of his books was partly based on their mystical-spiritual content and although Peck always eschewed the idea of being a guru, there were cultish aspects to his popularity. Of this he said: "Half the time when people want to touch my robe, it feels incredibly icky - yuck! The rest of the time, it feels very good, honest, right."
He and Lily divorced in 2003 and he remarried last year. He is survived by his second wife, and his two daughters and one son by Lily.
· Morgan Scott Peck, author and psychiatrist, born May 22 1936; died September 25 2005
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