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User talk:Filll/Anti-creationism

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Filll, doesn't being anti-anything limit the neutrality with which you are capable of showing when editing articles? It tends to be very difficult to learn or support anything new, regardless of how correct it may or may not be, if you have already chosen not to accept anything other that that which you already believe. As a scientist myself, I have found that many times, creationists and Christians in general tend to be illogical and resistant to evident truths, but do not think that you are so above them that your bias in the area of Creationism does not carry alarming uncertainties about the rest of your posts. I encourage the editing and adding you do for wikipedia, but do take into account that everything you write or edit is read by others who wish to find only unbiased information. Thanks for any time you dedicated to reading this. Eoheomili (talk) 01:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Fair

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Filll, Thanks for being fair and unbiased at a editorial level on the YEC page. This comes from a Calvinist YEC, new-to-WP, maybe, if-you-believe-me ... Nukeh (talk) 04:56, 27 February 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Context

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It was sort of taken out of context... well not sort of. Notice the dots (...) after the quotes. For further reading visit this user page, and the beliefs section. Cheers, AmericanEagle 04:21, 24 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Some more great quotes I have picked from amongst the cherries

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"A man would have to be an idiot to write a book of laws for an apple-tree telling it to bear apples and not thorns, seeing that the apple-tree will do it naturally and far better than any laws or teaching can prescribe."

"The Jews are blood-relations of our Lord; if it were proper to boast of flesh and blood, the Jews belong more to Christ than we. I beg, therefore, my dear Papist, if you become tired of abusing me as a heretic, that you begin to revile me as a Jew."

"A Jew came to me at Wittenberg, and said: He was desirous to be baptized, and made a Christian, but that he would first go to Rome to see the chief head of Christendom. From this intention, myself, Philip Melancthon, and other divines, labored to dissuade him, fearing lest, when he witnessed the offences and knaveries at Rome, he might be scared from Christendom. But the Jew went to Rome, and when he had sufficiently seen the abominations acted there, he returned to us again, desiring to be baptized, and said: Now I will willingly worship the God of the Christians for he is a patient God. If he can endure such wickedness and vallany as is done at Rome, he can suffer and endure all the vices and knaveries of the world."

Wekn reven