• Here is a link to the full explanation: https://rollitup.org/t/welcome-back-did-you-try-turning-it-off-and-on-again.1104810/

The Rapture: Snakeoil & Possibly an Attempt to Discredit/Demonize Christians

deprave

New Member
The rapture is the rare belief that the world will end and jesus will come back and save all his followers from it. The rapture first became popular some 50 years ago and has slight mentions dating back almost 150 years ago. In the bible there is no mention of the rapture, the bible says that Jesus will return to earth first. Critics also argue that the book of revelations is metaphorically speaking of ancient Rome.

The rapture is two things, first the rapture is a hoax to gain more followers by the preachers who preach it, secondly the rapture is an attempt to demonize and discredit Christianity.

There is a small cult group predicting the world will end tomorrow and they are dead wrong , I just want to clarify for everyone that this is not normal christian belief and its not even in the bible, the rapture is a recent phenomenon cooked up by cult members.
 

BendBrewer

Well-Known Member
Actually the Rapture bull shit goes back to the Baptist church in the mid 1800's. When it didn't happen when predicted, they claimed that Jesus actually did return but everyone just missed it. Those people now make up the Seventh-Day Adventist Church.

Everyone is free to have their own fairy tales I guess.

Oh and there's a new rule.

"NEW RULE: If you're a Christian who supports killing your enemies and torture, you have to come up with a new name for yourself."
 

ChubbySoap

Well-Known Member
this picture may seem unrelated but i find it has shocking similarities to the topic at hand...

birthday.jpg

i'm really medicated to the gills too...maybe i error...
D:
 

Sinsay

Well-Known Member
He believed that his teaching could lead people to heaven and yet he specifically instructed his disciples not to preach the Gospel to anyone but his own people, the Jews.
Jesus taught that the world would end within his own lifetime or very soon afterwards

I tell you the truth,this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened (Lk.21:25-33)

On another occasion he again told people

I tell you the truth,some who are standing here will not taste death before they see
the son of man coming in his kingdom (Matt. 16:2


That generation passed 2000 years ago His prophecies have Long been proved to be wrong


He was also heard to say

Do not go among the Gentiles or enter any town of the Samaritans Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel (Matt 10:5-6).

When a poor distressed woman came to Jesus begging for help he refused to help her simply because she was not Jewish. Teaching the Gospel to Canaanites was, he said, like taking food from children and throwing it to dogs.

Funny how I know your good book better then you aint I like to read
 

Sinsay

Well-Known Member
Jesus taught that the world would end within his own lifetime or very soon afterwards

I tell you the truth,this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened (Lk.21:25-33)

On another occasion he again told people

I tell you the truth,some who are standing here will not taste death before they see
the son of man coming in his kingdom (Matt. 16:2


That generation passed 2000 years ago His prophecies have Long been proved to be wrong

Funny how i know your book better then you aint it :D I like to read
 

That 5hit

Well-Known Member
all i know is
the rapture, sunds like a cool ass rook band
or even a killa ass weed strain

hey what strain you gorwing
the rapture,,, it makes your body feel like it floating
 

ginjawarrior

Well-Known Member
Rapture: Harold Camping issues new apocalypse date
Click to play




Harold Camping: "I'm not a genius, and I pray all the time for wisdom"

Continue reading the main story Related Stories



The evangelical broadcaster who left followers crestfallen by his failed prediction that last Saturday would be Judgement Day says he miscalculated.
Harold Camping said it had "dawned" on him that God would spare humanity "hell on Earth for five months" and the apocalypse would happen on 21 October.
Mr Camping said he felt "terrible" about his mistake.
But he said he could not give financial advice to those who spent their life savings in the belief the end was nigh
.
Mr Camping had predicted that on 21 May, true believers would be swept up to heaven while a giant earthquake would bring destruction for those left behind.
His independent ministry, Family Radio International, spent millions of dollars on broadcasts, billboards and campaign vehicles to publicise the prediction.
Some followers donated their life savings or simply gave away their worldly possessions as the day approached.
The predicted doomsday was publicised worldwide
Many expressed bewilderment and shock as the day came and went with no sign of the global cataclysm.
"I've been mocked and scoffed and cursed at," said Jeff Hopkins, a retired TV producer in New York state who spent some of his savings customising his car to showcase Mr Camping's warning.
"It's like getting slapped in the face."
'Not accurate' Mr Camping had not been seen since Saturday until he appeared on a show on his Open Forum radio show, broadcast from Oakland, California, on Monday to give a 90-minute sometimes rambling presentation that included a question-and-answer session with reporters.
He said that when his prediction had failed to materialise he felt so terrible that he took refuge in a motel with his wife.
He said sorry for not having the dates "worked out as accurately as I could have".
Over the weekend, he said, he had returned to the scripture and it had "dawned" on him that a "merciful and compassionate God" would spare humanity by compressing the apocalyptic destruction into a shorter time frame.
But he insisted 21 October had always been the end-point of his own chronology - or at least his own latest chronology, as a previous prophecy that the apocalypse would strike in 1994 also failed to come to pass.
Asked if he had any advice to offer those who had given away their material wealth in the belief the world was about to end, Mr Camping said they would cope.
"We just had a great recession. There's lots of people who lost their jobs, lots of people who lost their houses... and somehow they all survived," he said.
"We're not in the business of giving any financial advice," he added.

"We're in the business of telling people maybe there is someone you can talk to, and that's God."
isnt religon great?
 

euthanatos93420

Well-Known Member
We changed. The past is the past. You are either with him or you are against him. You can not have it both ways.
Right see, that is exactly the shit the fux with my head. Don't get me wrong. I consider myself a Christian. I also believe in evolution. I also believe in aliens that aren't aliens and I also don't believe in anything I haven't seen myself. Here's the kicker, I have no faith. I don't really need to. God speaks to me personally. Yet, I still need faith to believe that God is good/right because I doubt. I think Shiva 'approves' as the Aghori say the path is to judge all things equal. Hence Christ coming for the sinners.

If you're confused, then welcome to the party because we are too. See my post about CSL v Dante. The 'one side or the other' stuff sounds good until your side can't make up it's mind which side it's on.
 
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