The reality is that a powerful angel is much less gullible then any human. The offer comes to most of people at intervals ranging from several a year to hundreds a day.
In legend, angels are more powerful and less gullible than humans, and how often these supposed offers come depends on who is telling the tales.
Any drug user had the following offers
– Try a new drug just once, and everything will be better.
– Try some drug just one last time.
Once again I ask: Where are you getting this stuff?
“The tales” being the key words here…
Exactly. For instance, we supposedly have a hyper-smart Satan that we couldn’t possibly outmaneuver…but is too stupid to read the script(The Bible) and know how the story is going to end.
Angel Samuel known by many other names talks to me hundreds of times a day. He/she talks to every person from hundreds of times a day to a few times a year. Humans accept some of Samuel’s offers and reject others.
An archangel knows all of Talmud and millions of books humans have never heard of. But Samuel has no free choice.
Yeah.
Okay.
You may not think that it is the voice of angel Samuel, but every addict has some voice constantly telling them to give in to wrong decisions.
Might there be the smallest chance that others do not hear the same voices you do?
Every addict does hear these voices – I am addicted to reading Social Media, and I have 12,000 posts on many forums. Alcoholism and drugs are much worse.
Again - getting back on topic - how does *any *temporary pleasure - make forever, nonstop, infinite, un-ending suffering worth it?
How much experience do you have with addiction (besides Internet addiction) and addicts?
I am curious because you keep bringing this back to heroin or other addictive drugs, and you say that all addicts have the voices whispering to them.
Talking and reading Social Media. Fortunately, I have never been an alcoholic or a drug user.
I’m struggling a bit to understand the drugs hijack in the middle of a thread about soul selling.
But if there’s some yokel dumb enough to give me money for something imaginary I’m glad to take his money. In fact I almost consider it my duty as part of his education into a reality-based worldview.
It’d be mean to pick on a fool like that by seeking him/her out. That would be unethical; like kicking a dog for no reason. But if they approach me, their soul-buying money is all mine and rightly so.
If they believe in souls, clearly they don’t have my best interests at heart by offering to buy mine. So it seems only right to return the favor by not having their best interests in mind as I sell.
That’s quite a gamble - we’re talking eternal, never-ending suffering.
To me, it would be the same thing as saying “Would you be willing to suffer eternal torment being tickled by balrogs and never getting to visit Wrigley’s Pleasure Planet if I give you this bag of diamonds?”
Give me the diamonds-I’ll take my chances.
Cite?
I would sell my soul for a Klondike Bar