How The Universe Is Bigger Than You Think

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  • BiblicalAtheist
    BiblicalAtheist Members Posts: 15,668 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    AZTG wrote: »
    Yet here on earth, universal consciousness is still light years away.

    Humanity spends so much time exploring what's outside of being that the inside is neglected.

    There is a reason why space exploration is arduous. How the ? you worried about your neighbors when your house ain't even together?

    Why you think human beings is any more then what we have demonstrated that we are for thousands of years now?

    Looking inside is gonna change us?

    Human beings are what human beings are.

    Yes because for thousands of years we've done nothing but look outward. People past and present don't even realize there is an "inward" or that they aren't their "mind". Human beings are good and evil. ? created both and both we are. But we are suppose to choose good always, how often do practice that? People don't like to look inside hence why we're still doing the things we're doing with slow progress.

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    @the bolded

    He makes peace and creates evil.
  • DoUwant2go2Heaven
    DoUwant2go2Heaven Members Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    1. Hebrew words have various meanings.
    2. Do a word study of Isaiah 45:7
    3. Get the context.


    And most importantly get understanding from the Holy Spirit. Only He can teach you and make things plain to you. Amen.
  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    So this is going to be a religious debate?
  • TheGOAT
    TheGOAT Guests, Members, Writer, Content Producer Posts: 15,916 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 2017
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    So with the countless planets out there. It is certain life exists on planets other than earth.

    Does "? " and Jesus who was born on earth rule over those planets as well? Or do other planets have their own "? "?

    If they do... Do we need to convert then into christians?

    @DoUwant2go2Heaven
  • Beta
    Beta Members Posts: 65,596 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • Splackavelli
    Splackavelli Members Posts: 18,806 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I could've sworn we were talking about how big the universe is and not religion. once again let me state that the universe is flat there is no such thing as space.
  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  •  i ro ny
    i ro ny Members Posts: 8,459 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • DoUwant2go2Heaven
    DoUwant2go2Heaven Members Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Ajackson17 wrote: »
    So this is going to be a religious debate?

    No. It's a discussion about truth. Amen.
  • DoUwant2go2Heaven
    DoUwant2go2Heaven Members Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    TheGOAT wrote: »
    So with the countless planets out there. It is certain life exists on planets other than earth.

    Does "? " and Jesus who was born on earth rule over those planets as well? Or do other planets have their own "? "?

    If they do... Do we need to convert then into christians?

    @DoUwant2go2Heaven

    Life on other planets that have free will to choose between good and evil doesn't exist.

    Animal life is possible. But beings that have free will, Like humans and angels, do not exist in this universe.

    In other universes that ? may have created, of course they can exist!

    But not in this one because if they did that means that they would also be infected with sin and thus need a savior. And the Bible is clear, Christ died once and for all! He will never die again! Amen!
  • DoUwant2go2Heaven
    DoUwant2go2Heaven Members Posts: 10,425 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I could've sworn we were talking about how big the universe is and not religion. once again let me state that the universe is flat there is no such thing as space.

    How can we discus the enormity of the universe without speaking about the One who stretched out the north over the empty place, and hanged the earth upon nothing?
  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — A SpaceX Falcon rocket lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Monday (May 1) to boost a classified spy satellite into orbit for the U.S. military, then turned around and touched down at a nearby landing pad.

    It was the 34th mission for SpaceX, but its first flight for the Department of Defense, a customer long-pursued by company founder Elon Musk. The privately owned SpaceX once sued the Air Force over its exclusive launch services contract with United Launch Alliance (ULA), a partnership of Lockheed-Martin and Boeing.

    Monday's 7:15 a.m. EDT (1115 GMT) liftoff of a classified satellite for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) officially broke ULA's 10-year monopoly on launching U.S. military and national security satellites. [In Photos: SpaceX's First US Military Satellite Launch]

    NRO Launch Services Integrator contractor Ball Aerospace arranged for the Falcon 9 flight on behalf of the NRO, said agency spokeswoman Karen Furgerson.

    In addition to the NRO's business, SpaceX has won two Air Force contracts to launch Global Positioning System satellites in 2018 and 2019.

    For now, the military's business is a fraction of more than 70 missions, worth more than $10 billion, slated to fly on SpaceX rockets. But with up to 13 more military satellite launches open for competitive bidding in the next few years and ULA's lucrative sole-source contract due to end in 2019, SpaceX is angling to become a major launch service provider to the Department of Defense.

    At the request of the NRO, SpaceX cut off launch coverage 2 minutes and 48 seconds after liftoff, some 30 seconds after the booster’s first-stage separated from the upper-stage. At that time, the rocket's second-stage had fired up to carry the spy satellite into a low-Earth orbit , SpaceX’s launch license from the Federal Aviation Administration showed.

    The NRO declined to provide further details about the satellite or its orbit.

    SpaceX continued to broadcast the booster's return flight and touchdown at the company's nearby Landing Zone 1 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

    "And we have touchdown! The first stage has landed back at Landing Zone 1," SpaceX lead mechanical design engineer John Federspiel said during launch commentary. "Another good day for us at SpaceX. That is a beautiful sight to see."

    A month ago, SpaceX for the first time launched one of its previously flown rockets to send an SES communications satellite into orbit, a key step in Musk's quest to demonstrate reusability and slash launch costs.

    http://www.space.com/36666-spacex-launches-first-spy-satellite-nails-landing.html
  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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