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I will believe in God when I need sins forgiven. I am just too poor to be a sinner ATM.



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Galaki said:

I will believe in God when I need sins forgiven. I am just too poor to be a sinner ATM.


Go to Thailand - you can sin there for cheaper.



izaaz101 said:
Galaki said:

I will believe in God when I need sins forgiven. I am just too poor to be a sinner ATM.

Go to Thailand - you can sin there for cheaper.


I am not seeking sins, thought.

I treat others the same way I like to be treated. Respect and curtesy.



Galaki said:
izaaz101 said:
Galaki said:

I will believe in God when I need sins forgiven. I am just too poor to be a sinner ATM.

Go to Thailand - you can sin there for cheaper.


I am not seeking sins, thought.

I treat others the same way I like to be treated. Respect and curtesy.

Well then, consider me confuzzled.



Galaki said:

I will believe in God when I need sins forgiven. I am just too poor to be a sinner ATM.

And when you will be rich you'll just buy your way to salvation.



"I don't understand how someone could like Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, but not like Twilight!!!"

"Last book I read was Brokeback Mountain, I just don't have the patience for them unless it's softcore porn."

                                                                               (The Voice of a Generation and Seece)

"If you cant stand the sound of your own voice than dont become a singer !!!!!"

                                                                               (pizzahut451)

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sapphi_snake said:
mrstickball said:

JC could answer it a bit more exactly, but the answer is 'kinda'.

A missions trip primarily involves giving aid to people in a country that have a lack of it. For example, a lot of missions trips may be to help build an orphanage, or school, or take a group of doctors/nurses to a country that has a lack of medical care.

In addition to the aid, they try to share the message of Jesus with the people as well. Of course, they render aid/help regardless of belief, and will not discriminate against those that don't agree with them.

Most American churches support this kind of activity. The church I go to sponsors a local nurse to travel to Mozambique for 6 months out of the year to help with their medical care. They support 4 other missionaries, but that is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.

In other words it's all a conversion ploy to prey on the poor people of third world countries.


It's more than you're doing. I really doubt starving children care if they're handed a Bible and taught about Jesus Christ just so long as they get some fucking food to go along with it (or an education, medical care, etc etc etc).




Or check out my new webcomic: http://selfcentent.com/

rocketpig said:
sapphi_snake said:
mrstickball said:

JC could answer it a bit more exactly, but the answer is 'kinda'.

A missions trip primarily involves giving aid to people in a country that have a lack of it. For example, a lot of missions trips may be to help build an orphanage, or school, or take a group of doctors/nurses to a country that has a lack of medical care.

In addition to the aid, they try to share the message of Jesus with the people as well. Of course, they render aid/help regardless of belief, and will not discriminate against those that don't agree with them.

Most American churches support this kind of activity. The church I go to sponsors a local nurse to travel to Mozambique for 6 months out of the year to help with their medical care. They support 4 other missionaries, but that is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.

In other words it's all a conversion ploy to prey on the poor people of third world countries.


It's more than you're doing. I really doubt starving children care if they're handed a Bible and taught about Jesus Christ just so long as they get some fucking food to go along with it (or an education, medical care, etc etc etc).

They're not doing it for such great reasons, and they can't claim moral superiority for that.



"I don't understand how someone could like Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky, but not like Twilight!!!"

"Last book I read was Brokeback Mountain, I just don't have the patience for them unless it's softcore porn."

                                                                               (The Voice of a Generation and Seece)

"If you cant stand the sound of your own voice than dont become a singer !!!!!"

                                                                               (pizzahut451)

rocketpig said:
sapphi_snake said:
mrstickball said:

JC could answer it a bit more exactly, but the answer is 'kinda'.

A missions trip primarily involves giving aid to people in a country that have a lack of it. For example, a lot of missions trips may be to help build an orphanage, or school, or take a group of doctors/nurses to a country that has a lack of medical care.

In addition to the aid, they try to share the message of Jesus with the people as well. Of course, they render aid/help regardless of belief, and will not discriminate against those that don't agree with them.

Most American churches support this kind of activity. The church I go to sponsors a local nurse to travel to Mozambique for 6 months out of the year to help with their medical care. They support 4 other missionaries, but that is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.

In other words it's all a conversion ploy to prey on the poor people of third world countries.


It's more than you're doing. I really doubt starving children care if they're handed a Bible and taught about Jesus Christ just so long as they get some fucking food to go along with it (or an education, medical care, etc etc etc).

Thats the way I look at it.

As much as I want someone to know that Jesus loves them, and for them to know him in a personal way, it never has, nor ever will, get in the way of helping someone. I've helped out at church-based food pantries, homeless shelters, clothing centers, gathered items to give away to the needy, and helped cook food for the homeless/needy.

At times, do we tell them God loves them? Yes. The only way your going to have a problem with that is your someone like Sapphi that seems to think that any mention of religion needs to be abolished. It seems that America's 1st amendment shouldn't apply to him. Nevertheless, just like my freedom to say "Hey! Jesus loves you!", that same person can say "Hey! Fu*k Jesus!". He has the same rights I do. Situations like that have happened, and it doesn't stop a Christian from helping that person, or continuing to help others.



Back from the dead, I'm afraid.

sapphi_snake said:
rocketpig said:
sapphi_snake said:
mrstickball said:

JC could answer it a bit more exactly, but the answer is 'kinda'.

A missions trip primarily involves giving aid to people in a country that have a lack of it. For example, a lot of missions trips may be to help build an orphanage, or school, or take a group of doctors/nurses to a country that has a lack of medical care.

In addition to the aid, they try to share the message of Jesus with the people as well. Of course, they render aid/help regardless of belief, and will not discriminate against those that don't agree with them.

Most American churches support this kind of activity. The church I go to sponsors a local nurse to travel to Mozambique for 6 months out of the year to help with their medical care. They support 4 other missionaries, but that is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.

In other words it's all a conversion ploy to prey on the poor people of third world countries.


It's more than you're doing. I really doubt starving children care if they're handed a Bible and taught about Jesus Christ just so long as they get some fucking food to go along with it (or an education, medical care, etc etc etc).

They're not doing it for such great reasons, and they can't claim moral superiority for that.

The end result is that poor people are getting the aid they need. That's what matters.

My uncle sends $500/month to Kenya and makes a trip once or twice a year to a small village there. Because of him, about 30 Kenyan children are housed, educated, fed, receive medical care, and are safe from the various dangers that run rampant through that region. He's also Captain Christian and goes there to teach the children his faith in Christ. Do I agree with his religion? No, not at all.

On the other hand, it's his faith. His life is completely intertwined with the teachings of Christ. I doubt he could imagine a situation where it doesn't pervade his life so he brings that religion to those children. And exactly what is it that Christ teaches? Love, compassion, forgiveness, etc. How is that a bad thing? I don't agree with it personally but I'm not going to sit high-and-mighty in front of a computer and talk down his efforts to help children because he's out there doing it. I'm not. At the end of the day, those 30 kids are safe and educated because of his deeds. End of story.




Or check out my new webcomic: http://selfcentent.com/

sapphi_snake said:
rocketpig said:
sapphi_snake said:
mrstickball said:

JC could answer it a bit more exactly, but the answer is 'kinda'.

A missions trip primarily involves giving aid to people in a country that have a lack of it. For example, a lot of missions trips may be to help build an orphanage, or school, or take a group of doctors/nurses to a country that has a lack of medical care.

In addition to the aid, they try to share the message of Jesus with the people as well. Of course, they render aid/help regardless of belief, and will not discriminate against those that don't agree with them.

Most American churches support this kind of activity. The church I go to sponsors a local nurse to travel to Mozambique for 6 months out of the year to help with their medical care. They support 4 other missionaries, but that is the only one I can think of off the top of my head.

In other words it's all a conversion ploy to prey on the poor people of third world countries.


It's more than you're doing. I really doubt starving children care if they're handed a Bible and taught about Jesus Christ just so long as they get some fucking food to go along with it (or an education, medical care, etc etc etc).

They're not doing it for such great reasons, and they can't claim moral superiority for that.

Sapphi,

Given the fact you have nothing to do with Christianity, I don't understand how you can claim to know why we do it, then condemn us for it despite likely never being in a church (much less a protestant, ministry-focused church). Helping others is a deeply personal part of the Christian faith. You can condemn all you want, but the fact is, people like Joe are helping others while you are at home doing nothing. By your age, I was spending a day a week or more helping deliver tonnes of food to my local food pantry to help the poor. You can say that I did it because it was a ploy, but the fact is, people were getting fed. Comparatively, by your own admission, you've fed no one. You've clothed no one. You haven't helped the homeless. Even if my faith was false, I still made the world a better place than you did by helping distribute food to those that needed it.

I would suggest that before you condemn Christians for thier ploys, you get out there, do exactly what they are doing in terms of helping the poor, then come and tell us that we're being awful for mentioning Jesus to them. I think that you'll find out that when your helping the poor, you will share your worldview with them, because you want to help them get out of the situation they are in, and to help them out of poverty by whatever means neccessary.

But until you do that, I don't think you need to come in these threads, throw out your hate speech, and then expect everyone to be OK with you deriding their work.



Back from the dead, I'm afraid.