[Magdalen] neat comparisons

Lee Lemmon lemmon.lee9 at gmail.com
Mon Oct 13 23:32:35 UTC 2014


for me, there is simply no way to figure out the omnipresent (that would
mean in all universes) so I take it on faith, in a manner not knowable to
me, whereever there is an is, God is present, and equally present.
Immediately the mind boggles, but Christianity as carefully taught we have
insisted that God and Jesus are one and at the same time, Jesus is son of
God and that Jesus is inside us and outside us and that somehow Jesus is
one with us as being a human person.  None of it is logical and yet I know
that these logical impossibilities are truly true.
clearly incomprehensible, but still, somehow, true.
hugs and blessings

On Mon, Oct 13, 2014 at 3:09 PM, Roland Orr <roland at orr55.org> wrote:

> BUT the nearest planet or star like Earth is a very long way away from
> Earth = x light years away!
> Roland
>
>
> On 13/10/2014 18:36, Cantor03--- via Magdalen wrote:
>
>>
>> In a message dated 10/13/2014 12:35:41 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
>> hangus at ctcn.net writes:
>>
>> I looked  at it. But 'Le *silence* eternel des ces espaces infinis
>> m'effraie.' To put  it mildly.>>>>
>>   Re:  Matters of space -
>>   It's a good thing that Star Trek TNG prepared us for alternate
>> universes.  I read some information awhile back about "black  holes".
>> It was suggested at some point in this information that there  might
>> well be alternate universes via these space phenomena since
>> black hole hypergravity trumps all, including time.
>>   It's getting harder with such space discoveries to fit any  terrestrial
>> religion
>> into all this, not excluding Judeo-Christianity.   At least it is  for me.
>>   Do others on list struggle with any of this?
>>     David Strang.
>>
>>
>


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