Obviously that would be ironic
2007-07-24 04:46:23
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Not only ironic but a-typical, which means that the return will be opposite of what people expect. (You will not see the kingdom coming with any noticable fanfare, no one will say, see, it is here or, see, it is there.) Was Jesus speaking of atheists when he said - you will be hated for my names sake?
Christians, in the name of Jesus, are slinging barbs and arrows at atheists, imagining they are doing a good work for their god. Wouldn't it be ironic if the Messiah were born in an atheist family and ended up being a woman? The return is a-typical. Kind of like the tranfiguration.
2007-07-24 05:03:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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He already has been ya Homer Simpson clone.
Don't ya get it? The promised Messiah for this current society and the world is the one who will bring peace and harmony, specifically to the jewish nation for a time. He will decieve many.
Then will he be revealed for the true evil he was destined for. The Anti-christ!
So yeah, he will definitely be born in an 'atheist family'
Dohh!
:-)
2007-07-24 04:55:24
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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It's too late.
The promised Messiah already came.
He fulfilled over 300 Jewish prophecies, and the odds of that happening by mere coincidence is a number so rediculously small, (1 in 2^300, or 2 times 2 times 2 ... three hundred times or 1 in 2.037e+90), that is 2 followed by 90 zeros, or 4.90909e-91, which is like 0.0000000 (91 zeros) 4909) - it's like - well - practically zero, or impossible!!!
The Scriptures tell us WHERE he is to be born, WHEN he is to be born, HOW he is to be born, what he would do, where he would live, etc, etc, etc.
To deny the facts about who Jesus was/is would be intellectual suicide!
2007-07-24 04:51:22
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answer #4
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answered by no1home2day 7
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I think you just defined irony. What if he were born to a liberal same sex couple from an embryo formed in a test tube with others that were used in stem cell research? He then goes on to win the Presidential nomination for the Democratic party and host a show on Air America. I could go on but you get the point...
2007-07-24 04:55:34
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answer #5
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answered by deusexmichael 3
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The Messiah would know who he was no matter what family he was born into.
The question is irrelevant, though, because the Messiah was born over 2000 years ago, to the House of David, and not to atheists.
2007-07-24 04:51:47
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Wouldn't it be even more ironic if the promised Messiah turned to atheism once (s)he saw the real truth?
2007-07-24 04:52:08
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The Messiah would surely develop whip-lash by age 5, from constantly turning the other cheek;--- because his parents would be slapping the hell out of him, for talking like one of those "peace freaks".
2007-07-24 05:00:42
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answer #8
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answered by big j 5
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The new parents would probably take the Messiah to a speech therapist, to find out why he keeps saying " Father, why hath thou forsaken me?''.
2007-07-24 05:13:09
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Ironic? He has already been born. Of which Religion are you speaking that he is to be born again?
2007-07-31 17:03:39
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answer #10
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answered by flannelpajamas1 4
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Not really ironic. I mean, the bible shows that Christ was not born in a christian family, doesn't it?
2007-07-24 04:58:37
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answer #11
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answered by Namlevram 5
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