Fanman wrote:Xris,
What idea that I was chosen? I never said that I was chosen, neither did Betmdj. Once again, you are creating strawmen... An event occured in my life that I choose to believe is divine intervention, that's all it is. Also, why are you asking questions that no one can answer? Who are you expecting to answer your questions?
I second this, just like Fanman, I never said I was chosen. It is simply that incidents like that make me reflect on their being divine intervention.
Maybe there was divine intervention for the other 199. It was time for them to move on.
-- Updated July 30th, 2012, 4:12 pm to add the following --
Xris wrote:So what happened to the divine intervention for the other 199? This idea that you and Fanman are some how chosen and millions have to continue to suffer and die is slightly naive. I have recently been hospitalised with severe stomach pains. Needing morphine on three occassions but suddenly my symptoms have mysteriously disappeared. Is it a miracle? If it was gods assistance why did he leave it for so long? What if the illness returns next week?
I do take this question seriously, BaruchSpinoza asked me something along these lines and he thought that my answer was not serious. The problem is that one would need to have an excellent understanding of how the divine intervention works to provide a convincing and satisfactory answer.
I tend to think based on my personal experience is that if one removes the stimulus the symptoms would dissapear. The symptoms could have been removed from simply moving to hospital from your house. If I take you to my Bipolar-I incident and extrapolate a little from there, the symptom was fear that I would not find work, once my colleague offered me work, that fear began to dissapear. The stimulus was removed. The reason that I feared I would not find work is that I have always been a very shy person who did very badly in job interviews. My previous job came to a natural end, my body worried, a true worry given my previous shyness, too much fear and the illness struck. So aware of this I have changed so I am no longer so shy, worked at inteview skills and the illness has not struck, and it will not strike again.
I am sorry to hear you need morphine, it must have been terribly painful. Identifying the stimulus is extremely important, which is sometimes very difficult and then remove it.
But going back to the divine intervention, that to me takes place, but in an extremely subtle manner.
Do whatever you do, do what a good man would do, and what is a good man?, I do not know, but at every point, every turn, do what a good man would do.
Jesús Antonio Bermúdez-Silva