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>I can't answer how God can do those things, and I'm glad to have a God who is greater than my capacity to comprehend.
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>If you are happy with that, then good for you.
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>I have not lost my sense of wonder and my eagerness to understand how the universe works. The "magic" answer for everything that I do not comprehend does not work for me.
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>I often think of His power when I'm out hunting, hiking, fishing or just observing the world around me.
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>Hunting? For food and survival or for sport? If for sport, shame on you. But I guess it's OK with your God because He put those critters out there for your enjoyment. I don't think I like that kind of god.
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If I am lucky enough to take an animal, he/she ends up on the dinner plate. I noticed you didn't say anything about fishing? They too end up on the plate. You see God made us omnivores.
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>There's nothing like watching the Perseid meteor showers in the Rockies in August from a mountaintop. How can a person not believe in God after seeing that?
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>There are many explanations for Nature that do not include a supreme creator. It could be? Yes. But so far the evidence does not support it.
I can't explain our creation, I simply happen to believe we were created because we're here! duh!*g*
John Harvey
Shelbynet.com
"I'm addicted to placebos. I could quit, but it wouldn't matter." Stephen Wright