Anonymous ID: 0c7053 Jan. 30, 2026, 1:04 p.m. No.24195924   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>24195729

It's not like some of the anon didn't try to warn you.

I remember hearing a coin dealer, in the 1980s, say 'If silver ever goes above $5/ounce

I'm dumping everything I have and getting out of the business.

 

do you know how much silver is out there? Lots and lots and lots and lots.

Anonymous ID: 0c7053 Jan. 30, 2026, 1:19 p.m. No.24196067   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6072

>>24195941

anon, look up the LIBOR and read what happened with them.

They were so corrupt that it was closed down.

and it's based in London.

Yes, they manipulate the prices.

I knew it in about 2007 or so.

Anonymous ID: 0c7053 Jan. 30, 2026, 1:29 p.m. No.24196128   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6136 >>6141

>>24196111

see:

>>24196106

Yes, it challanges you.

Yes, it presents troubled people who do sinful things.

Yes, it's not a book you can understand by glancing it over.

 

Be educated: actually read it.

Read commentary about it.

Ask the questions you have and find the answers to them.

Discover what The Bible is teaching.

 

but instead you shill the board and advertise your ignorance.

Anonymous ID: 0c7053 Jan. 30, 2026, 1:32 p.m. No.24196142   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6150 >>6172

your points:

  1. God told Abraham to murder his son

  2. God let Cain live after murdering his bro

  3. God let “Satan” be in charged

  4. God put good people here with evil

  5. God flooded and killed everyone

  6. Killed firstborns

  7. Plagued Egypt

  8. Sodom and Gemora

  9. Allowed Job to be fucked over

  10. Sent his son to be murdered

"

 

AI Overview

The points raised reflect actions or events in the Bible often debated regarding God's character and providence. These narratives, including

the test of Abraham, the protection of Cain, the allowance of evil/Satan, the Flood, plagues, Sodom, Job’s suffering, and the crucifixion of Jesus, are interpreted through theological lenses focusing on free will, justice, divine sovereignty, and the overarching plan of salvation.

 

1. Abraham/Isaac (Gen 22): God commanded Abraham to offer Isaac as a sacrifice, but stopped him before the act, providing a ram instead. This is interpreted as a severe test of faith, not a sanctioned murder.

2. Cain (Gen 4): God placed a mark on Cain, not to let him off, but to protect him from vigilante justice, allowing him to live with the consequences of his actions.

3. Satan's Authority: In theological terms, God allows Satan temporary influence (e.g., "prince of this world") within a framework of permitted evil, ultimately limited by divine sovereignty.

4. Good and Evil Together: Christian theology often addresses this through the concept of free will, where humans choose between good and evil, with the ultimate sorting happening later.

5. The Flood (Gen 6-9): Described as divine judgment against total human corruption and violence that filled the earth.

6 & 7. Plagues/Firstborns (Exodus): These are depicted as divine judgment against Egypt for enslaving Israel and resisting God, following the killing of Hebrew babies (Exod 1:22).

8. Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 19): Portrayed as divine destruction due to extreme, unrepentant wickedness and sexual violence.

9. Job: Allowed by God to be tested by Satan, leading to intense suffering, to demonstrate that true faith exists independent of comfort.

10. Jesus (The Crucifixion): Viewed in Christian theology as the voluntary sacrifice of God's Son to atone for human sin, not a murder, but a purposeful, redemptive death.

 

"

I put your points into Google AI. I haven't really reviewed it for accuracy but it does address your points and shows that you really don't understand, at all, anon.