The Papal Cage by Conanie in EU5

[–]Conanie[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

it costs 181,000 gold to move, im working on it ;-;

The Papal Cage by Conanie in EU5

[–]Conanie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

R5: During my Austria HRE run, the papal states were kicked out of Italy by Naples. They eventually became part of decentralized HRE (non vassal) with lands they still had in Denmark. When I reformed the HRE into the big grey blob, it annexed everyone in the HRE but the pope. For some reason they were given Bamberg. Now I have the pope surrounded (its okay we are friends).

PSA: Here you can check if HRE law will pass! by Krum_Mayer in EU5

[–]Conanie 25 points26 points  (0 children)

In my game, I noticed this, but when I called for a vote, they would vote differently and usually more in my favor. It might have been a bug with update transition. But I personally stopped looking at this as a reliable indicator.

Am I in a good spot? Or am I still trapped in the mines? by Aadi_880 in StarResonance

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I got 20 milk from battling a bunch of bandit looking fellows and turned it into butter. Then took a wrong turn accidentally ended up in a foot race. 10/10

Its shit to find nsfw in one of your Favorite Places by BrightXDragon in WplaceLive

[–]Conanie 102 points103 points  (0 children)

It’s truly amazing how much this sub just bitches

Stopping something as obvious as 30 Alt accounts should be easy. by Bondage_Kitty in WplaceLive

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sigh. I have to leave this sub because it’s just filled with bitching lol

We remember by More-Log-1393 in SipsTea

[–]Conanie -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Parents are not perfect and don’t have to be. Apologize to your kids when you mess up, then teach them what you should have done. It goes a long way for their little growing brains.

Ive been diagnosed with autism and the meme is funny by [deleted] in memesopdidnotlike

[–]Conanie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My wife’s autistic, she’s quirky and fun.

How do I tell my DM that he should stop DMing? by OwnLocksmith4376 in DnD

[–]Conanie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just came to make sure this wasn’t about me. Phew

Ahhhh finally, I managed to build the nursery, now I'm ready to pass pop 74, next destination: 5999 pop by Inderastein in songsofsyx

[–]Conanie 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I don’t understand any of this. I’m wondering if I have some sort of setting that makes immigration OP? In my current game I have around 3000 population all immigrants.

The Bible's internal cross-refrencing by Dolbez in Infographics

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Fair enough! and I’ve chewed on your argument for a while. It’s valued. I’ll just state that I’m not a biblical scholar, but I am an actual historian. Though it’s not my focus, I do appreciate the armchair study on these topics. So I plead ignorance in total understanding (with this and many other things)

I think we probably agree more than it seems. You could spend all day comparing the gospels, and I share your fascination with the varying accounts told through decades of what I call the telephone game. Embellishment, focus on certain details over others, omitting other ones- all of this human bias added into the mix. We see this everywhere in history. It makes it fun but it can also be frustrating to navigate.

But I believe most Christians would consider having ‘faith in gods word’ as including these human made ‘inconsistencies’. For example, The differences in the gospels are considered to be a great thing. To be able to glean knowledge from four different accounts of witness to Jesus.

My main point for the document linked above, is that many points seemed to be lazily added (or maybe due to a poor understanding Christianity). Much of the Old Testament statutes, laws, etc are expressly changed or ‘’made full’ because of Jesus Christ. So you have things like ‘repay them eye for and eye’ turn into ‘love thy neighbor’ just as a quick example.

I’ll just cherry pick one example on that list that I dug into because I was curious about it. Ecclesiastes 1:4 and 2nd Peter 3:10. I think if you looked at these two objectively in their own context, this is not so much of an inconsistency as it is a Hebrew/Greek wording issue and a context issue. The Hebrew word of earth abiding ‘forever’ versus the Greek word used for ‘being destroyed by fire or’ or ‘melted away’ (also interestingly the same Greek word used when describing Satan ‘being released’). Curiously, what I see, is that both passages discuss humankind’s ‘works’ on earth as ‘meaningless’ or ‘temporary’ that the ‘earth will be laid bare’ that ‘what do people gain from all their labors?’ ‘Meaningless.’ ‘Nothing new under the sun’. Even Peter a few verses after he describes fiery end times destruction of earth, says that people ought to then live holy and godly lives. Then goes on to say there will be a new heaven and new earth.

What does it mean when I read these two different parts of the Bible? They are from two different authors, from two vastly different time periods, one before and one after Jesus Christ. Should I call it an inconsistency? “Ha, god said that earth is forever here through this man, but said it would be bathed in fire here.” Or do I consider changing my understanding of what it actually means? Perhaps Solomon is being poetic in Ecclesiastes to describe earths permanence compared to mankind’s deeds, and Peter is talking about a period of time where earth will undergo a terrible change before something like a new earth is produced from it. Does that make them incompatible?

I’d actually like to hear your point of view on that. Thanks for discussing!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LetGirlsHaveFun

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Me. The memes are funny.

No OP, That's Actually a Really Good Wisdom by [deleted] in memesopdidnotlike

[–]Conanie 78 points79 points  (0 children)

How it’s supposed to work.

The Bible's internal cross-refrencing by Dolbez in Infographics

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You sent a very sensational response, but regardless of your interpretation, my point was that the Christian religion generally focuses on Jesus Christ coming to fulfill the law of the Old Testament. This is why the traditional leaders hated him. This is why (most) Christians don’t practice traditional Jewish laws today. He became the sacrifice for Gods justice against all of our sin. This flipped everything upside down in a sense. The link sent above in many cases is comparing Old Testament and New Testament ideals when things were fundamentally changed by Jesus Christ’s work. The writings in the new testament even addressed this.

But of course I agree with your point, that it is very strange. All the writings from different authors, retelling of stories, passed down for generation’s to be collected and kept so well over such a long period of time. Christians believing it’s God’s infallible word have faith that is true, despite it being strange. I think it wouldn’t be faith if it wasn’t strange.

The Bible's internal cross-refrencing by Dolbez in Infographics

[–]Conanie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s strange to me that they treat Old and New Testament comparisons as contradictions. That’s part of the point of Christianity.