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> What do you have to lose by beliving in God? > > If He is real you go to heaven. > If He's not nothing happen's. > > So tell me atheist's, why not believe in God Almighty?
The Jewish/Christian God is more about being the Devil.
I am not about to worship the Devil.
> What do you have to lose by beliving in God? > > If He is real you go to heaven. > If He's not nothing happen's. > > So tell me atheist's, why not believe in God Almighty?
I believe in God. I’m unwilling to subscribe to Bronze Age fairy tales pirated from the Babylonians.
Anon replied with this 3 days ago, 8 minutes later, 7 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,375,173
(Citing a deleted or non-existent reply.)
This would be the same God that has Catholic Priests raping children. Some other random Priest forgives the rapist in total, for a free pass to heaven.
> What do you have to lose by beliving in God? > > If He is real you go to heaven. > If He's not nothing happen's. > > So tell me atheist's, why not believe in God Almighty?
I no like atheist’s. I belive in God Almighty becauze He convay deep intellechual benafits.
Anonymous G replied with this 3 days ago, 6 minutes later, 7 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,375,176
@previous (H)
Your God Almighty is at peak brilliance when giving little children cancer.
Adults as well. All those starving people in Gaza keep on praying yet your God Almighty must be just too occupied with jerking off.
Belief in deity definitely does improve your chances, but only by a tiny amount considering the contradictions within and between faiths, so even if there is a One True Religion the chance of choosing it is pretty much negligible. So even ignoring the fact that many faiths require more than mere belief, even the minuscule mental effort of deciding to believe in a deity is likely to exceed the actual benefit. Sure, the potential gain is effectively infinite, but the whole concept of expected value doesn't really work with outcomes of arbitrarily high value and arbitrarily small probability (see the St. Petersburg paradox). The problem with Pascal's Wager is that it treats belief as a binary choice that makes you guaranteed to win if winning is possible at all.