So, to simply state one opinion constitutes hubris? No, I don't think so. To claim to have "God's knowledge," now there's hubris.
If you believe I'm full of hubris for admitting that I don't know what electricity is made of, then I guess that's a harmless enough belief.
If you believe I'm full of hubris for admitting that I don't know what electricity is made of, then I guess that's a harmless enough belief.
The context of your post was your opinion that had nothing to do with electricity and everything to do with somebodies personal religious faith and hubris. You don't like what they preceive as the teachings of God, so you in *your* certainty imply that they are an arogant self-ordained prophet.
I give this example: People who go to church on Sunday instead of reading a scientific journal during that same period of time have opted for God's knowlegde over man's knowledge. You think that is the hubris of self-ordained prophets -- I think that is an example of people with faith looking for the teachings and knowledge of God.
While I make no claim that you have an anti-religious bias, your statements do communicate an anti-religious bias regardless of their intent.