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To: followerofchrist
I respectfully disagree, having been an atheist myself most of my life. If we are to bring people to Christ, we should care very much how unbelievers view us, and understand the bible.

View us, not advise us on what the bible means and what we should do. BTW, they view us as idiots.

248 posted on 04/25/2005 12:20:15 PM PDT by Protagoras (Christ is risen.)
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To: All
It's no wonder Muslim's have such a dim view of Christians. We fight among ourselves about which way is the right way to believe.

A Muslim came to our church one evening to speak about his religion. The first thing he mentioned is that there is only one version of the Koran unlike the Bible. Yes, they have people that don't interpret the Koran correctly but Christians fight over who is right and going to heaven. It's no wonder they view us as infidels.
252 posted on 04/25/2005 12:27:19 PM PDT by BuckeyeOhio
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To: Protagoras

"View us, not advise us on what the bible means and what we should do. BTW, they view us as idiots."

I used to think the same, until I met Christians who were kind and non-judgemental. Non-believers don't view ALL Christians as idiots, just those who act high and mighty. If we follow Christ's example of humility, we are respected by non-believers.
For instance, an intellectual atheist friend of mine, who generally hated Christians had an experience that changed his way of thinking while travelling across the state. He was in a rollover accident. The second person on the scene was a Christian man who took him (and his dog) home and let him spend the night. The next morning he drove my friend to the train depot an hour away. The car was a total loss. The Christian man then kept and cared for his dog for several days, until he returned with his other car to pick up the dog. That one Christian man brought my friend closer to God by representing Christ well in his actions. I notice he now contrasts "good" vs. "bad" Christians, when before he though we were all hypocritical freaks. That is the first step for an unbeliever in accepting Christ, and like it or not, unbelievers formulate their opinions of Christianity by the words and deeds of Christians. So when the Atheist gentleman starts commenting on how we should treat each other and on scripture, I take it differently than other Christians, because I was once there myself, as is my Atheist friend. General interest is a good thing, even if that interest manifests itself with negative comments. When representing Christ to Atheists, you have a better chance of doing it well if there's no malice against them, even if they are prejudiced against you. Instead of getting mad at one who asks "who created God" a better way of dealing with it is to say "who created the components need for a "big bang?" I don't think evolution is illogical (it's quite simply the study of God's ways), but the "big bang" doesn't ring in my ears, and it wouldn't resonate with Atheists if they actually asked "who created the components that set off the big bang?


356 posted on 04/25/2005 3:06:07 PM PDT by followerofchrist
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