"klunk" (klunk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
) writes:
> "duke" <duckgumbo32@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
> news:077m04pne2t29njubt2a7g8e81e7gdtqjk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 15:57:59 -0700, Bob Officer <bobofficers@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 17:47:38 -0500, in alt.abortion, duke
>>><duckgumbo32@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>
>>>>On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 12:22:42 -0700, Bob Officer
<bobofficers@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>>>>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>On Fri, 18 Apr 2008 06:07:48 -0500, in alt.abortion, duke
>>>>><duckgumbo32@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>>On Thu, 17 Apr 2008 20:06:50 GMT, "klunk" <klunk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>>>>>>wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>No, they do not. You need to prove that a soul even exists.
Even
>>>>>>>>>your mythology states that a mythical soul does not enter the
body
>>>>>>>>>until the first breath, i.e. birth.
>>>>>>>> Now where would that be stated?
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Genesis 2:7
>>>>>>>And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
>>>>>>>into his
>>>>>>>nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Man lives from the moment of conception.
>>>>>
>>>>>not according to the bible, your own book of myths.
>>>>
>>>>From the moment of life.
>>>
>>>No, breath according to genesis... or is the bible full of
>>>contradictions.
>>
>> "Breathed life" into. Life starts at conception.
>
> nope... you still haven't addressed the difference between the life of a
> sperm and a blastocyst and the "transition" which sup****ts your
subjectively
> based conclusion... you did, however crop that question from your reply
when
> i posed it... your own buybull says "after" creation... not before and
not
> during...
>
>
>>>Who said from conception? the a pope.
>>>Who said 1st breath? god.
>>>Just who is in charge?
>>
>> God. He says that life starts at conception.
>
> nope... that's a lie and you know it...
>
>
>> duke, American-American
>> *****
>> "The Mass is the most perfect form of Prayer."
>> Pope Paul VI
>> *****
>
> mass is mind-control and prayer is the sick second-cousin to meditation
>
>
>
>
>
>


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