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Hanzo_The_Ninja t1_j2qa4cr wrote

> Who will these temporary things matter to when the universe is dead and empty?

> > 2000 years ago in the city of Pompeii a parent had love for their child, a man gave a beggar bread, and two lovers shared an embrace. And absolutely none of it matters to you or me, or anyone alive today, but it mattered to them and that was enough for them.

> > > This example only matters at all to anyone because we're here to be aware of it.

I pity you.

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_Zirath_ OP t1_j2qb6ns wrote

Ok, feel free to pity me, but I think you're missing the point: I am happily a theist. I don't believe the world is meaningless, purposeless, etc personally. It is the naturalist that is pitiful, because when he is led to the conclusions of his worldview, he is left without hope, meaning, or purpose, except that which he can delude himself into having subjectively.

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Hanzo_The_Ninja t1_j2qcbdb wrote

This isn't a compelling monologue. All that you've convinced me of is that family, love, music, and everything else in your life is meaningless and hollow without the promise of permanence and righteousness. Honestly, you've turned me away from theism even more.

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_Zirath_ OP t1_j2qdjvv wrote

For one, it's not a monologue, as we've been having an exchange of words. Personally, my life is rich in meaning because it is rooted in the One who imbues meaning and creates with purpose. And I think the fact that you so clearly believe there is meaning to be had even when your worldview denies the objective reality of such things is a sign of naturalism's weakness. Your decision to turn away from or towards theism is entirely your own.

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Hanzo_The_Ninja t1_j2qe2z1 wrote

lol How childish do you have to be to take offense to the very idea of personal meaning, to need your meaning to be universal?

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