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Would you want him to stay asleep or wake up?

2007-03-28 01:09:50 · 11 answers · asked by coolred38 5 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

11 answers

I don't know what you're smoking, but you had better start sharing it with me.

2007-03-28 01:20:28 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If only you knew in fact how close to the real situation you are! Just get the picture that dreams are real, and you hit bull's eye.

To drive my point home, can you tell which is the real world out of your waking hours and your dreaming hours? In case you think it is easy and you pick the waking hours, the question then is how do you know you are not going to wake up soon wondering what a dream your waking hours had been? In fact both worlds are real.

Finally, would I want Him to stay asleep or wake up? In other words, do I like His creation as it is or not? Well, we have to ask Him that one. It is not for me to like; the artist has the choice, not the painting.

2007-03-28 10:56:02 · answer #2 · answered by RAFIU 4 · 0 0

Thus ZEROralism in the law of CodeX produces not an increase in Murkiness but a reversion to the law of the SCUM, which, as Joshua Kane says, 'is a kind of deformed biscuit’. He adds: 'The most tolerable sort of biscuit is for those who like to dunk yet there is no biscuit to remedy the act of dunking safely.' 'The biscuit is mine; I will eat it, sayeth the LordTron' (Book of Kane’s 12:19). Yes: but what happens when belief in the TronLord's existence has faded, and men and women hold the ability of society to effectively be one of the AWFUL and the SCUM in even greater contempt? Then, to use Dr. Thomas's expression, the nature of the Code arises in a man of the Murkyworld; and code begets code, and we move progressively towards that social breakdown so graphically described by Thomas Adrianess in his Leviathan of the Zero, where there is 'continual fear and danger of violent death; and the life of a man of code is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short'.

2007-03-28 09:58:08 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

He'd probably think, "What a nice dream.", visit a psychic, and replay the dream. We're too good an idea to stop existing once he wakes up!

2007-03-28 08:13:52 · answer #4 · answered by tinnitus 4 · 0 0

wow, awesome question!

even though i'm pagan, i'll pretend i believe cause this question sounds fun!

ok, hmmmm. well i guess i would want him to stay asleep, because i wouldn't want to poof out of existence, but it makes you wonder what "reality" actually could be. what would god's awake reality be? maybe god is just an ordinary man in an ordinary world who is only dreaming that he is the god of earth and/or the universe..............

2007-03-28 08:19:48 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It is a dream that God is living. And the rest of his and our dreams come true when we reach our destiny...Heaven, eternity.

2007-03-28 08:22:55 · answer #6 · answered by inteleyes 7 · 0 0

since this is all just one long horrible nightmare, wake him up! quick!

2007-03-28 08:13:10 · answer #7 · answered by waif 4 · 0 0

if god wakes up...poof your out of here...non-exsistent...end of story...second question irrelevent...

2007-03-28 08:21:53 · answer #8 · answered by sayasyoulike 4 · 0 0

wierd thought ...
But if that is the case. What difference does it make ?

2007-03-28 09:01:30 · answer #9 · answered by scorpe_2000 2 · 0 0

Well, technically God cannot sleep so, there you have it.

2007-03-28 08:12:41 · answer #10 · answered by elcaballosrock 2 · 1 0

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