One of the commenters on Pharyngula posted a link to this image and I found it amusing, being a Star Trek fan myself (but nearly as nerdy about it as Craig is). Ha!
(click to embiggen)
One of the commenters on Pharyngula posted a link to this image and I found it amusing, being a Star Trek fan myself (but nearly as nerdy about it as Craig is). Ha!
(click to embiggen)
I try to take note of the church signs I see in my area and usually see the generic notifications of sermon times or guest speakers. A few churches, however, always try to have clever sayings out front, which is much more entertaining for me. One in particular seems to have some very clever ones and sometimes even makes me smile or chuckle.
Most of the more clever church signs are harmless puns, but every now and then, one makes me narrow my eyes and raise an eyebrow.
I saw this one yesterday:
Remember the banana. When he left the bunch, he got skinned.
It’s a clever play on words, indeed, but its whimsy hides one of the more sinister sides of religious belief… using fear as a tool to coerce obedience. Stay with the church or you’ll be doomed.
Another church sign read:
Try Jesus. If you don’t like him, Satan will take you back.
Clever. It’s also somewhat cute if you block out the image of burning in a pit of Satan-created fire for not liking Jesus.
Christianity tends to preach all about a just, merciful God and loving, forgiving Jesus. God’s love is immeasurable and glorious. Jesus is your loving and understanding savior. You’ll be swept up into glorious Heaven where paradise awaits you and you’ll be able to walk hand-in-hand with Jesus in eternal bliss.
All you have to do is believe what they tell you to believe.
Of course, if you refuse to accept Jesus as your savior and refuse to worship God in the way that is demanded, you’re going to be punished for all eternity in unspeakably torturous ways with much wailing and gnashing of teeth, doomed to spend an infinite amount of time surrounded by hellfire and brimstone and subjected to incomprehensible pain and agony.
But to avoid that horror, all you have to do is believe what they tell you to believe…
…regardless of whether it’s true or not.
There are FOUR lights! *
(* geeky Star Trek:TNG reference)