Re: Terrorism and Christianity
^ or, maybe not...
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
^ or, maybe not...
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
The conflict in Ireland is/was all about religion, though one where Christians were killing fellow Christians because they belonged to a different sect.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
good thread :k:
its surprising that the same band prances around in gs with -no religion is superior belief - and cant take it when they are at trial. you ask alot of questions in religion seminole how about some answers?
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
What's to say? There are violent people of every faith. But I personally do not want to get involved in any discussions with UNEDITED posts like these:
[quote]
Christianity is PURE EVIL
It won't survive for much longer as they have done such evil throughout time.
Islam has been instructed to destroy Christianity.
Usama bin Laden, Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi - they're the ones leading the fight against evil.
[/quote]
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
pick and choose , out of 5 pages thats the only message you choose. seminole you get brighter and brighter.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
christians have killed millions and millions over the past many centuries yet they claim to be civilized and peaceful.
. even now they are busy killing innocents in iraq, afghanistan and are supporting oppressive regeims in middle east, baltic states, asia etc. people can revolt in these countries but guess who will show up with guns, planes and troops to kill ythe revolt and people? yes christian soldiers who else. ![]()
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
^I guess you could make that two messages. The fact is that the comparisons to chrsitianity are weak. Incidents of terrorism by christian “groups” are isolated, with no common mantra or theme between various groups.
On the other hand, there is a deep vein of intolerance, resentment and paranoia toward jews and christains that has permeated all strains of Islam in all corners of the world. Anywhere muslims seem to live in significant numbers, they want to rule themselves and often claim that they are oppressed.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
or perhaps its always easier for you lot to see the flaws in muslims but you get uneasy looking at your own dark history. Tell me this when ever somebody brings the bloody history out you try and prove that he is no better than you. How mature is that?
I can safely say for Australia atleast that little or nothing is done in that regard infact even now the prime miniters suggests that aboriginal should wash the faces of their kids. Here is a church in red fern i think that is so bais towards the christian aboriginies even now and today. Trouble is not how many of christians are doing this trouble is what the masses of christian are not doing to stop the brethren. cheers.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
**Ninja rebels end armed struggle **
**A Congolese renegade priest Pastor Ntumi has announced his Ninja fighters will disarm and his group will become a legitimate political party. The Ninjas were founded from a militia group active in the civil wars of the late 1990s, originally loyal to former Prime Minister Bernard Kolelas. A peace deal was signed in 2003 but Ntumi’s fighters are still active in the country’s southern Pool region. Pastor Ntumi will spend 30 days touring Pool to talk to his fighters. **
The announcement was made by the committee which is monitoring the implementation of the 2003 peace deal. Michel Mampouya, from Mr Kolelas’ Congolese Movement for Democracy and Integral Development party, welcomed the decision. “If he transforms his armed resistance into a political fight, that can only be a good thing for the country,” he said. The former rebel chief is planning to put forward candidates to stand in the Pool region in legislative elections due later this year. Pool was once known as the “breadbasket of the Congo” but civil war has devastated the area.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
Christian Ninjas? very cool
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
I have heard about the Lord Resistance Army which wants to implement the 10 commandments strictly. They went around cutting people's nose, hands, arms, breasts etc. They used the bible to justify it. I read the quotes from the bible they used to justify cutting off ppl's body.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
I get Christians saying that the Lord of Islam is not the Lord of the Bible because the Lord of the Bible is peace and love.
Yet it was the Christian lord that crucified his own son brutally to save humans?
Everything that you read in the Quran was there in the Bible till “they” banned it. Order “Banned from the Bible” from the History channel, very interesting stuff. Almost everything from the Bible has been removed, and after the recent gay addition to the church, more will be removed. I guess God talks to Christians directly since they can add remove like if it was Windows.
Btw Thap, you forgot Christain Osama Bin Laden, Charles Manson.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
[quote]
Most of the Native Americans that were killed were killed by disease.
[/quote]
ahahahahahahahahahahaha lol let me show that to my apachio buddy see what he says.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
I am sure that Mohammed the Profit loves to see you all rip into Jesus and his followers. All men have made many pathetic decisions under the name of their God. That is the problem with most of history, people always think "God" is on their side. The bottom line is neither religion can claim that they have not made huge mistakes against mankind in the name of their religion. But, life ebs and flows, and it certainly seems to me that these Foolish Fundimental (and I really mean mental, like mentally insane) Muslims have reached a point in history, where they are the ones making the mistakes in the name of their God, we can't change the past, but we can change the present, so I suggest you all look in the mirrorr, put away the crazy unfounded America the Devil stories and concentrate on how you can make life better for yourselves, with out blaming others.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
It is spelled "Prophet".
Now as far as Jesus followers matter I can't say but when it comes to Jesus Mohammed the Prophet has made it clear for all Muslims that if we don't believe in his virgin birth, in his holy mother and her virginity, and in his return to deliver us from the Anti-Christ otherwise known as “Dajjal”, we can’t call ourselves Muslims.
Islam is the only "other" religion that recognizes Jesus and is the only "other" religion that states he shall return.
I assume we all know what his own people the Jews think of him and his mother.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
lexiconavenue bravo! what say you act upon your own advice?
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
Nice spelling huh? You would think that a person with a Masters in Business and a minor in English would know how to spell "prophet".** oops.**
Anyways,
What do you mean I should take my own advice? What have I done, sir?
The only thing I have done is outlined the truth.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
Christian terror at it again:
Venezuela has said the US will be guilty of double standards on terrorism if it does not extradite a Cuban exile wanted over the bombing of a plane.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said the man, Luis Posada Carriles, was “a self-confessed terrorist”.
He said the US had no choice but to send him back to Venezuela, where he escaped from jail two decades ago.
The world is watching," Mr Chavez added.
Re: Terrorism and Christianity
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050520/ap_on_re_eu/nireland_ira_killing
** IRA Said to Threaten Slain Man’s Family**
Members of the outlawed Irish Republican Army are threatening to attack a Belfast family that has been focusing international attention on the IRA’s killing of a Catholic man, sisters of the victim said Friday. The five sisters and fiancee of Robert McCartney, who was fatally stabbed and clubbed by IRA members outside a Belfast pub Jan. 30, have spent the past four months campaigning to bring his killers to justice. While the McCartney family’s efforts have won praise and support from the European Parliament and White House, back home in their hard-line neighborhood, witnesses to the attack have either been afraid or unwilling to give evidence to police. One of the sisters, Catherine McCartney, said Friday detectives had told the family of a threat from the IRA.
“This threat implies that (Irish) republican elements are going to take action against the McCartney family if they continue to discredit the (Sinn Fein-IRA) republican movement,” Catherine McCartney said. Earlier this month, police warned the McCartneys that “criminal elements” were threatening to burn down their homes, as well as a sandwich shop run by one of the sisters, because of their call for locals to help police with the murder investigation. “The language tends to be more sophisticated than the last threat,” Catherine McCartney said. She declined to provide more details. In Belfast, the IRA’s allied Sinn Fein party denied any involvement by IRA or its own members in threats. “We absolutely abhor any intimidation against the family,” it said in a statement. The case has highlighted the IRA’s power within working-class Catholic areas of Belfast. Traditionally, the IRA tries to kill anybody who testifies against the organization in court or tells police about IRA activities.
The women’s campaign put the IRA and Sinn Fein on the defensive. Initially they denied involvement, then the IRA announced it had expelled three members involved while Sinn Fein suspended or expelled about a dozen members. The IRA — which opposes any cooperation with police — also offered to shoot four people allegedly involved in the attack, an offer the McCartneys rejected. Ever since the McCartneys achieved their most high-profile success — a visit on St. Patrick’s Day to President Bush — they have faced increasing criticism and veiled threats back home. Sinn Fein has accused detectives of deliberately dragging out their investigation, because the failure to bring charges focuses criticism on the Sinn Fein-IRA movement. But Catherine McCartney said she was confident that police were doing everything they could. She said Sinn Fein and IRA witnesses to the attack on her brother had refused to provide meaningful statements of evidence. If the police ultimately failed to press any charges, she said, the family would sue 15 people who either attacked their brother or covered up evidence. The attack began in a downtown Belfast pub crowded with IRA and Sinn Fein members who had just returned from the 33rd annual commemoration of “Bloody Sunday” in Londonderry, Northern Ireland’s second-largest city, when British troops killed 13 Catholic protesters. IRA and Sinn Fein members allegedly swabbed up blood and other forensic evidence and confiscated a tape from a surveillance camera in the pub.