ANSWERS: 13
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Umm, according to the Bible story, he did. (Other scholars point out that many people of that era carried food with them as a rule, and that this might have helped feed the "multitude." Just in case one wants a more scientific basis about how this could have happened.)
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What? You want him to do it AGAIN?
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Jesus himself is hurting because of the economy. He overextended himself by buying a lot of houses in Florida and Arizona. It is not true that Jesus hates the hot climate. Right now, He can't even feed himself, let alone the 2 Billion people who are hungry and poor. Jesus is not even in the list of rich people on Forbes anymore. Besides, investors stopped investing in His Ponzi scheme in Nigeria. His sons and the Apostles will turn him in soon. To make matters worse, His wife divorced Him and took Him to the cleaners.
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The diatary needs of people have changed since Biblical times, some can only eat certain kinds of bread or drink a certain type of wine. Not all men were created equal by his daddy and not all can eat and that drink that shit Jesus gets at Wal Mart
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probably cause its fiction. like star wars and harry potter if your waitin for any of these 3 people to say you your gonna be disappointed in your afterlife.
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Jesus said that WE would do greater things than He did. The question should be, "Why aren't WE feeding them?"
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Because he's dead lol. And that was a fairytale just like a lot of the other stories in the bible.
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Because he does not exist.
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Because if he existed, he died over 2000 years ago - common sense!
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Didn't you hear? He lost his job at GM and all his money was money was invested with Bernie Madoff. Whatever bread and wine he had left he needs to feed himself and forget his sorrows for the next 2,000 years or so
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Yeah you would think that it would be his top priority but in truth they only do that so that they can say the atheists don't do it so that people join religion. I guess it is very clever idoctrination method.
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The sad truth is that miracles require faith. Do people today have enough faith so that Jesus' disciples could multiple loaves and fishes? Our scientific knowledge has taken away our wonder.
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The suffering, from which death atlast resulted, rose partly from the constrained and fixed position of the body, and of the outstretched arms, which caused acute pain from every twitch or motion of the back, lacerated by the knot, and of the hands and feet, pierced by the nails. These latter were, moreover, dirven through parts where many sensitive nerves and sinews come together, and some of these were the wounds in both hands and feet, speedily set in, and erelong rose also in other places, where the circulation was checked by the tension of the parts. Intolerable thirst, and ever-increasing pain, resulted. The blood, which could no longer reach the extremities, rose to the head, swelled the veins and arteris in it unaturally, and caused the most agonizing tortures in the brain. As, besides, it could no longer move freely from the lungs, the heart grew more and more oppressed, and all the veins were distended. Had the wounds bled freely, it would have been a great relief, but there was very little lost. The weight of the body itself, resting on the wooden pin of the upright beam; the burning of the sun scorching the veins, and the hot wind, which dried up the moisture of the body, made each movement more terrible that that before. The numbness and the stiffness of the more distant muscles brought on painful convultions, and this numbness, slowly extending through two or three days, at last reached the vital parts, and released the sufferer by death. The Messiah would die from a broken, or ruptured heart. The fact that both blood and water flowed from His pierced side establishes this. The fortieth Psalm is a Messianic prophesy; and, in verse twelve, speaking of the troubles that would encompass Him, climaxing in His death, we are told, "Therefore my heart faitheth me." The sixty-ninth Psalm tells us the thoughts of Jesus on the cross, in which is a forecast of the cause of His death: "Reproach hath broken my heart; and I am full of heaviness: and I looked for some to take pity, but there was none; and for comforters, but I found none. They gave me also gall for my meat; and in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink." Psalm 69:20-21. The death of Christ immediatly followed a loud and piercing cry (Mat. 27:50). Usually, at the time of death, the voice is the first organ to fail. It grows weaker and fainter until it becomes inaudiable. The loud and piercing cry of Jesus indicated great physical strength, which could suddenly be terminated only by the rupture of the heart. "The cause now assigned for the death of Christ, namely, RUPTURE OF THE HEART FROM AGONY OF MIND, has been proved to be the result."--Dr. Williams Stroud. It was seperation from the Father that broke the heart of Christ and caused His death. He bore our sins, so that we might come back to God. But at Calvary the bearing of those sins brought a seperation that killed Him. It broke the heart of Christ. Our sins have seperated between us and our God-and Christ bore the seperation that we might return. A pastor was asked one time to go to this man's house that was a non-believer and just try and comfort him from the recent death of his son. When he got to his house and knocked on his door, the man opened, sobbing and asked him in an mournful tone, "why? why did God let my son die??" The pastor replied, "for the same reason He allowed His Son to die." foundthisone@yahoo.com
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