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HON 280 -- LECTURE NINE (Ptolemy to copernicus) THE
HON 280 -- LECTURE NINE (Ptolemy to copernicus) THE

... moving bodies, then God could have created those bodies without those tendencies. XIII. Now, around the 14th century, the new humanism sets in. What's that? A. Part of it is a rediscovery of Plato. Remember what we said about the how the theme of bouncing back and forth between Plato and Aristotle. ...
Genesis 9:1-19 - Ebenezer Baptist Church
Genesis 9:1-19 - Ebenezer Baptist Church

... The animal population would have increased faster than the human race. God put in animals a natural fear of humans. If it was not for this natural fear, animals would take over our homes and cities. God gave man authority over the animals. “Into your hand are they delivered.” “Every moving thing tha ...
Romans 11 Sermon 73
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... men. There are within any religious group those who have a heart for God, those who will walk in and by the Word instead of the rules of the organizations. I have attended many houses of worship. I have preached and worked hand in hand with members of many different denominations. But that did not m ...
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moralistic hypocrite

... How did you see God working in your life this week? (Romans 1:11, 12) BACKGROUND: Read Galatians 2:15-21, fn 2:21. “The Jew believed that everyone was destined for judgment except himself. It would not be any special goodness which kept him immune from the wrath of God, but simply the fact that he w ...
The Equation of the Cross - North Bloomfield Assembly of God
The Equation of the Cross - North Bloomfield Assembly of God

... seven spirits of God sent out into all the earth. 7 He came and took the scroll from the right hand of him who sat on the throne. 8 And when he had taken it, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb. Each ...
PaulGarrett-ElSentid..
PaulGarrett-ElSentid..

... blaspheme him.  Imagine that when Eve was going to eat the fruit God didn't let her.  He rotted the fruit.  He made her teeth close.  Would she have been free?  We made our free choice.  Gén_3:6 When the woman saw that the fruit of the tree was good for food and pleasing to the eye, and also d ...
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The One and Only - Peace Lutheran Church

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Divine Command Theory
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... Horn 1: Right actions are right because God commands them: This is the view that right actions are right simply because God says they are. Likewise, wrong actions are wrong simply because God says they are. Objections to Horn 1: 1. How does saying something is right MAKE it right? That seems weird. ...
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... Brethren, try to grasp the truth of this amazing statement. We have open, welcome access to God. When God created Adam upright in the garden man had access. But when Adam sinned we lost communion with God. That is how it would have remained were it not for God. Sinful man wants no access to the true ...
Mental Illiness and the Bible Meadows Conference
Mental Illiness and the Bible Meadows Conference

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Altar Calls - AG Web Services

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Inclusive Language - St. Andrew`s Presbyterian Church

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Carelinks Missionary Training Program

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Sermon Notes - Calvary Bible Church

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Secret to Bearing Fruit

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Misotheism

Misotheism is the ""hatred of God"" or ""hatred of the gods"" (from the Greek adjective μισόθεος ""hating the gods"", a compound of μῖσος ""hatred"" and θεός ""god""). In some varieties of polytheism, it was considered possible to inflict punishment on gods by ceasing to worship them. Thus, Hrafnkell, protagonist of the eponymous Icelandic saga set in the 10th century, as his temple to Freyr is burnt and he is enslaved states that ""I think it is folly to have faith in gods"", never performing another sacrifice, a position described in the sagas as goðlauss, ""godless"". Jacob Grimm in his Teutonic Mythology observes that:It is remarkable that Old Norse legend occasionally mentions certain men who, turning away in utter disgust and doubt from the heathen faith, placed their reliance on their own strength and virtue. Thus in the Sôlar lioð 17 we read of Vêbogi and Râdey á sjálf sig þau trûðu, ""in themselves they trusted"".In monotheism, the sentiment arises in the context of theodicy (the problem of evil, the Euthyphro dilemma). A famous literary expression of misotheistic sentiment is Goethe's Prometheus, composed in the 1770s.A related concept is dystheism (Greek δύσ θεος ""bad god""), the belief that a god is not wholly good, and is possibly evil. Trickster gods found in polytheistic belief systems often have a dystheistic nature. One example is Eshu, a trickster god from Yoruba mythology who deliberately fostered violence between groups of people for his own amusement, saying that ""causing strife is my greatest joy.""Some dualist interpretations of Christianity would conclude that demons are gods in those subsets of religions. In that context, misotheism is encouraged for one third of all deities but not the other two thirds. The concept of the Demiurge in some versions of ancient Gnosticism also often portrayed the Demiurge as a generally evil entity.Many polytheistic deities since prehistoric times have been assumed to be neither good nor evil (or to have both qualities). Thus dystheism is normally used in reference to the Judeo-Christian God. In conceptions of God as the summum bonum, the proposition of God not being wholly good would of course be a contradiction in terms.A historical proposition close to ""dystheism"" is the deus deceptor (dieu trompeur) of Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy, which has been interpreted by Protestant critics as the blasphemous proposition that God exhibits malevolent intent. But Kennington states that Descartes never declared his ""evil genius"" to be omnipotent, but merely no less powerful than he is deceitful, and thus not explicitly an equivalent to God, the singular omnipotent deity.
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