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Unless you want me to believe everyone but me is old enough to have actually seen Alexander the Great, to know he was a real person.
In the end, is like beliving in the tooth fairy - I swear I saw one yesterday night, and you cannot disprove the "fact" I saw it.
This is all in the eye of the believers. Today's believers are no different from the times people still believed in, for example Jupiter and other Roman gods, and shaped by the society they grow into.
Chances are if I say I am the true child of god that people will think I am crazy or schizophrenic, but there are still some people that manage to get others to follow them even today... In the end, is all about the charisma and intelligence of the person prosetilyzing.
Read it objectively with an open mind, then you'll see how ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ insane it is.
Fun fact: in those days, it was widely believed the universe had always existed. But some idiot desert druggie decided the universe was actually created from an initial point and continued expanding.
Utter nonsense!
To each their own, I suppose.
Motion.
Things have to be put into motion in order to move.
Like it or not, there is a lot about our reality that is far beyond our comprehension or understanding. Personally I think Christianity and God contain the perfect explanations to explain those missing pieces and allow the jigsaw puzzle of life to be (mostly) completed.
That being said, I acknowledge that perhaps other religions could be correct as well. In fact, I could see all religions being valid and correct in different ways, since they have so much congruence among them despite cropping up in completely different parts of the world.
And I can emphasize with people who believe it is more to do with spirituality and energies. But even though I used to be one, I really cannot fathom the hardliner atheists saying there's literally nothing else to it. It just seems irrational to me.
That's craaaazy... You know, there are some things that after some interpretation are suprisingly close to our current knowledge written in Hindu "sacred" texts, but I don't see you becoming a Hinduist...
You know the concept of luck? We've got a saying that even a blind hen will find some grain.
I did say you need to read it objectively...