Atheists,(people who don't believe in a God.)?
#1. How do you go day by day living knowing one day you'll die and you'll have nothing to look forward to, just be dead?
#2. What do you believe will happen to you when your dead? Will that just be it?
#3. Do you really think our ancestors were monkeys? (explain why?)
#4. Explain- Evolution? how did apes evolve?
#5. Are you afraid that you were born in this world to die alone example: you lived a beautiful life in which you built over the years from learning new things helping others out, struggles, having beautiful children building a life for you and your family but then all of what you built was for nothing because once you die that's the end of your life.
#6. Do you believe there are aliens?
#7. Do you believe there's ghosts?
#8. Do you believe that there is some type of God out there? (Why? Why not?)
#9. Why are you an Atheist? Why do you NOT believe in God? Why would you reject God ?
matt.clerke
Heres what I don't get:
So that's seven days AFTER the end of a period? Is a woman unclean during her period AND during those seven days? If so, that's a bit longer than a week... Some women will end up spending almost half of their fertile life being unclean!
Oh wow, kinda off topic for this thread.... Maybe we should go to a christian forum to ask this sort of thing?
Aug 6, 2012
Suzanne Olson-Hyde
Thanks Archy - I was concerned - It's the Native American women who had the right idea - no shame no sin to be expunged - revered, thought to be more powerful, and would call on the women, for insight, advice and guidance. Not Jews, xians or muslims.
@matt - when a xian comes onto this site - there are questions I really like to ask - this is just one of them. It just makes them look sillier by the minute.
Aug 7, 2012
archaeopteryx
Interesting story that I KNOW you will appreciate about Native American women. I stayed for aa couple of weeks some years ago with a couple I'd earlier gone to college with, who were at that time, teaching school of the Navajo Indian Reservation in Tuba City, Arizona, in the N.E. corner. We would watch as we saw Navajo families go to town to shop at the grocery store. The husband and kids would ride inside the truck, while the wife would ride alone in the back.
I thought, "How misogynistic!" until my friend explained a few things to me. The truck was his, and he had a right to do anything with it he pleased. However the home and the groceries and everything else were hers, and she could feed him, or not, or she could let him stay inside her house tonight or she didn't have to. That gave me a whole new perspective.
Aug 7, 2012