User talk:Csernica/Archive 3thanks for the clarifications . All the bestItaliotis 08:05, 21 September 2007 (UTC) ==May I ask you why you try to exlude The Schepulchre from the most holy places? It represents 1.5 billion christians. If you are not a christian please feel free to include the most holy place of your denomination or if you are atheist i don t think that really have to worry you what are considered to be most holy places for other religions. You sound silly and insulting by doing so. == —Preceding unsigned comment added by Italiotis (talk • contribs) 13:53, 20 September 2007 (UTC) SumoThanks for the comments and advice. We are all still relatively new and can use all the help we can get. AdminshipAre you an administrator? Would you like to be one? --Ryan TALK 22:03, 3 February 2007 (UTC) An award
Tiamut 10:24, 8 October 2006 (UTC) Middle-earth WikiProjectHello, Csernica/Archive 3! Thank you for your contributions to a Tolkien-related article. If you are interested, feel free to join WikiProject Middle-earth, a WikiProject focused on improving Tolkien-related articles in Wikipedia. We would be glad to have you join in the effort! Here're some good links and subpages related to the WikiProject.
If you have any questions or concerns, don't hesitate to ask on our talk page. Thank you for your contributions and have fun editing! —Mirlen 05:03, 20 October 2006 (UTC) GandalfYour comment on Gandalf's article made me laugh, but while you do have a point (looking from the POV of the good side, i.e. Gandalf), we could make the same case using the same logic with Melkor, who was dubbed Morgoth by Fëanor and the rest of the Elves. Morgoth was a variation of an insult, or rather a name that was purposely supposed to contain negative connotation, as is the case with one Gandalf's names, Láthspell. It's all a matter of perspective, but because Wikipedia is supposed to be in NPOV, I think it's legitimate case to have the name included. Also, if Gandalf was called "cranky old man" or "doody-head," (as you prefer :D) then we would not include it as one of his names because these are common insults not specialized to Gandalf. Láthspell, on the other hand, is a name given to Gandalf and him alone. —Mirlen 05:15, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
<deindent> Personally, I think Lathspell should be mentioned in some way. There is a liguistic point to be made there, but I can't think quite what it is at the moment. I'm sure Shippey or someone mentions it. Regarding names in general, consider Aragorn, where the "name" Longshanks is given. However, the Aragorn#Names_and_titles is missing the following (please move this to that talk page if you want, and apologies to TCC for continuing this conversation on your talk page): Envinyatar (the Renewer), Isildur's Heir/The Heir of Isildur, Elendil's Heir/The Heir of Elendil, Captain of the Host of the West, Thorongil, Stick-at-nought Strider, Ranger of the North, Lord Aragorn, Chieftain of the Dunedain of Arnor, King of the West, King Elessar, last of the Numenoreans, the latest King of the Elder Days, and finally, of the house of Valandil. Some of these are pedantic in the extreme, but if nothing else, these names illustrate Aragorn's history and lineage. Now the trouble is finding a source that makes something of all these names, otherwise it is just OR. Hmm. PS. I'm having difficulty following the above, as I think the conversation is taking place across talk pages. I'll bow out gracefully now! :-) Carcharoth 00:27, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
Saruman edit - thanks!Just spotted this. THe most disgusting piece of Tolkien OR I have ever seen. Thanks for removing it! :-) Carcharoth 21:17, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
MorgothIn case Mirlen and Carcharoth are both watching here, please take a look at
So you are the one who thinks the mountain giant information should be deleted, huh? I would really appreciate if you went ahead and took the stupid deletion warning off of my page. I created that and it should not be deleted. If you think I am seeing things, go read the Books again. I do admitt I screwed the title up I should not have put Mountain Giants, I should have written Stone Giants. But this information is all correct. I would site your stupid sources if I knew how, the minute I learn I shall, just to make you happy. Now, lets make me happy and get rid of the Deletion thingy. Tolkien ideed did write a book called Guide to Middle Earth, and this was my main source of information. It was cut from stores in the 80's but luckliy my father bought it before then, and passed it down to me. I have said it and I shall say it again All of this information it true, and anyways why do you care, it's not bothering you is it? I don't think so. I am not your friend, I am not your enemy, but you are turning me against you, I want my page to stay. My final notice is that if this page is deleted I WILL WRITE IT AGAIN! Literature Circles Image FixThanks, Csernica, for fixing my huge image that I was fighting to fix. You saved my day!! I've been working on that article for an assignment for a course and was cursing that I didn't know how to reduce the pix. size. I am grateful to you!! User:Deborahcox 02:10, 13 November 2006 (UTC) General groovinessJust want to tell you that you have excellent interests, good work! féerique 10:48, 14 November 2006 (UTC) Hey Csernica, sorry about what happened over the mountain giant page. Yes this is my new name, Samug the Mighty, pretty cool huh? Well from above I can see you are a Tolkien fanatic, just like me. Well, guess I'll catch you around, you can start a new talk with me if you like, you know, just to talk, well see you later ! a user conduct RFCHi. Wikipedia:Requests for comment/BZ(Bruno Zollinger) involves a user who got into a dispute with you on Talk:Miracle, in case you want to comment. ←Hob 06:25, 20 November 2006 (UTC) KontakionI just assumed that being such a short article any input would be handy, and i highly doubt myself or anyone would simply bludgen the post with every Kontakion they could find.... but hey, obviously you are more qualified to decide which ones should be open to the public through wikipedia.... —Preceding unsigned comment added by Tophatdan (talk • contribs) Nice (style,gallery) images edit. Thank you. Uriel8 19:56, 28 November 2006 (UTC) ---
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particular judgmentThanks for your help on Purgatory. I think that the particular judgment page might not represent Eastern Orthodox views very well, if you could give us a hand over there, too. Jonathan Tweet 03:14, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
Image copyright issuesThrough e-mail, Nasmith gave permission to use his images in August this year. (I hope it's not insufficient? So far permission's kept copies of Jenny Dolfen's and Anke Katrin Eißmann's art from being deleted.) I should have emphasized that; thanks. I've actually uploaded three other Nasmith images: I'll remove the whole Rolozo thing from their rationales and emphasize "permission given". From the Wikiproject talk page archive - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Middle-earth/archive5#New_Images (with added bolding)
Okay? If all of the art including Dolfen's and Eißmann's gets axed due to possibilities of free equivalents, we'll be stuck with adaptation images again, but that can't be helped. Surely art by known (at least in the field), and more importantly selling artists is better than that by some guy/girl? But appealing to emotion is invalid, I guess. Uthanc 12:10, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
SystematicYou may disagree with me about the the definition of mythology (and note that utterances by two Christian writers have no real bearing on this), but I must take exception to your statement that what I did was systematic. Wetman accused me of having systematically "methodically gone through articles included in the Category:Christian mythology removing them" - I did more or less systematically go through the category but I did not systematically remove the articles included - otherwise why are there articles left? Str1977 (smile back) 09:14, 15 December 2006 (UTC) TrinityCsernica, Why have you been reverting posts so many times on Trinity? I was troubled that you changed several of my additions without explaining why first or discussing them. I felt you were taking control for yourself something that should bbe shared between us. I have found revisions are a heavy handed approach best reserved for spam. ...Just_Nigel —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Just nigel (talk • contribs) 07:47, 17 December 2006 (UTC). Talk:Roman Catholic ChurchSounds good. I don't see how he/she can keep adding them. Slac speak up! 01:37, 21 December 2006 (UTC) First pope in Roman Catholic ChurchI'm surprised by your statement that Eastern Orthodox do not consider St. Peter to be the first Pope. This is not my reading of Bishop Ware's book on the Orthodox Church. Who do you say the Orthodox consider to be the first pope? -- Cat Whisperer 05:34, 1 January 2007 (UTC) The SanctuaryThanks for cleaning up the section on the sanctuary. I get a little too wordy. Concerning the Thronos; I wonder what is most common. While I have often seen synthronos behind the altar, in almost all cases the Thronos for the bishop was in the nave on the right side. Also, I think the relics contained within the altar are supposed to be specifically Martyr’s relics. Your comments? --Phiddipus 17:11, 2 January 2007 (UTC)
I guess it depends on the size of the church. I know among the Slavic churches there was a kind of competition to see who could build the biggest and most elaborate church, but Greeks, especially in Greece tend to have fairly small churches (with a few exceptions, of course). Consider St Gregory Palamas, his cathedral had enough room for only about 12 families. I have seen many churches so small that they have only one deacon’s door, or none at all. Still, I have seen churches with seating behind the altar for clergy. I suppose in larger churches there is a “high seat” for the bishop. I have seen a portable throne that is set to the right front of the altar for the bishop to use when ordaining priests. But for the most part, when the bishop sits it’s in the thronos outside the altar. The only other person I have ever seen use the thronos was the deacon if he is reading the gospel, and he stands. --Phiddipus 05:18, 4 January 2007 (UTC)
1/0Thank you for your concern and your appreciation Csernica for the article on 1/0. I have to ask you however, how does 1/0 not have to do with the article on 1/0? Do you mean I should create a disambiguation page to delineate between the comic and the number? If so, can you please help me in doing this instead of just deleting the article? I'm not that new but I still don' know all of the tricks of the trade. Thanks in advance. Sincerely, germanium It's better practice to ony revert once yourself, and let others do it as well, because of WP:3RR. CMummert 23:04, 4 January 2007 (UTC) Yeah, that guy was pretty persistent. And just when you had convinced me I should be more friendly to him in the future... CMummert 03:45, 9 January 2007 (UTC) Third opinionRobert Clarkson Clothier, quote or no quote. Use the history to see each one. Do you go to the Hungarian festival in New Brunswick? Enjoy you Xmass on Sunday. --Richard Arthur Norton (1958- ) 08:13, 6 January 2007 (UTC) You will have to come back and visit NJ. I just came back from Sacramento. SO quote box or no quote box in the article? Do you work on your family history too? Your Thoughts on the John Chrysostom Article?Hi,Csernica . I was wondering if you could look at the John Chrysostom and make or suggest improvements. Thanks. Majoreditor 02:28, 13 January 2007 (UTC) mnewmanqc 21:15, 26 January 2007 (UTC)==NJ Dialect== Great job! You seem uncertain about the house vowel. I'm not familiar with it, but it looks right, at least tentatively. mnewmanqc 13:31, 26 January 2007 (UTC)
LogosYou told me about my Image:GRAM_Logo.gif. I did put a copyright on it, I created it. I created the logo and copyrighted it as well as the other logos: Image:GRAM_Games_Logo.gif and Image:Rumor_Productions_Logo.gif I don't have a licsence for them, but they are my creations and I copyrghted them. Is that good enough? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ryan Keyes (talk • contribs) I revised the copyright tag. Is it okay now? It is a general copyright tag. --Ryan TALK 18:17, 11 February 2007 (UTC) Raccoon LinksI was sorry to see that you removed the link from the Raccoon page. I don't mean to quibble, but aren't MOST unofficial holidays invented by someone? And people do celebrate International Raccoon appreciation Day. But for peace-keeping sake, I'll leave the link off until it's been better documented or someone else adds it. Russia Moore 02:31, 2 February 2007 (UTC) ThanksThanks for the info on the signature. I'll keep those directions in mind. About the copyright thing, I changed it. I sit ok now? I do have the images on the User:Gram productions page. Thanks. --Ryan TALK 03:58, 2 February 2007 (UTC) Your WelcomeI viewed your talk archives and noticed their wasn't any tag on there that says it is an archive and do not edit. I put one on both of your archives. The text should look like this: {{talkarchive}} and the tag will look like this: --Ryan TALK 16:40, 3 February 2007 (UTC) Orphaned fair use image (Image:OCA-logo.png)Thanks for uploading Image:OCA-logo.png. The image description page currently specifies that the image is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, the image is currently orphaned, meaning that it is not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the image was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that images for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable under fair use (see our fair use policy). If you have uploaded other unlicensed media, please check whether they're used in any articles or not. You can find a list of 'image' pages you have edited by clicking on the "my contributions" link (it is located at the very top of any Wikipedia page when you are logged in), and then selecting "Image" from the dropdown box. Note that any fair use images not used in any articles will be deleted after seven days, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you. This is an automated message from BJBot 23:58, 3 February 2007 (UTC) RfA AdviceThanks for the advice. I probably don't want to put up with it, you're right. --Ryan TALK 00:44, 15 February 2007 (UTC) New Talk PageI have a new account on Wikimedia Commons. To visit my empty talk page, click here. --Ryan TALK 00:50, 15 February 2007 (UTC) Request for inputYour review of, and comments concerning, the section "Experiencing God" on the talk page of Christian mysticism would be appreciated. Thanks. --Midnite Critic 15:23, 7 March 2007 (UTC) Saint MosesThere are two: a Saint Moses who was a Christian era monk in Egypt I believe in the early days of monasticism, and Moses, THE Moses: as the Scriptures take for granted that he is in heaven, he would be a saint, even as older theology would have put him in Heaven only after the "Harrowing of Hell" and the emptying of the "Limbo of the Fathers" ...Western Christianity notes this but doesn't make much of it, while Byzantine Christians, I believe, are more apt to have icons and such on rare occasions of Old testament figures.HarvardOxon 23:14, 7 March 2007 (UTC) In fact, in the Catholic Church there is a recognition of "saints by tradition," whose honoring precedes the medieval, centralized, formal procedure of canonization -- The apostles, barnabas, and other Biblical figures, in addition to patrick, Augustine, Antony Abbas, Pachomius etc., were never formally canonized by the Pope.HarvardOxon 23:45, 7 March 2007 (UTC) Moses a saint?The Roman Martyrology includes the names of five persons called Moses. The most famous one, the one you are interested in at this moment, is mentioned on 4 September in the following terms (my unpolished translation): "The remembrance of Saint Moses (or holy Moses), the prophet, whom God chose to free the people oppressed in Egypt and lead them to the promised land, and to whom God revealed himself on Mount Sinai, saying: "I am who am" and gave him the Law to guide the life of the chosen people. This servant of God died, full of days, on Mount Nebo in the land of Moab within sight of the promised land." The Roman Martyrology seems to include all the Old Testament prophets, at least all the better known ones, and so not only those who have books named after them, but also Elijah and Elisha. Lima 05:17, 8 March 2007 (UTC) Possible renaming of Wikipedia:WikiProject SaintsIt has been suggested that the above named project be renamed Wikipedia:WikiProject Christian saints. Please express your opinion on this proposed renaming, and the accompanying re-definition of the scope of the project, here. John Carter 17:04, 9 March 2007 (UTC) Article on Fool for ChristThanks for the comments! Majoreditor 07:04, 11 March 2007 (UTC) Can you help with article on Intinction?Hi. May I trouble you to look at and possibly improve the article on intinction? The article says hardly mentions how intinction is practiced in the Eastern churches. Thanks! Majoreditor 02:40, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
I did a re-write of the "other religions" section of this article, based on our conversations at WP Saints. Would you mind having a look at it and seeing what you think? Thanks. - Pastordavid 17:00, 20 March 2007 (UTC)
Thank youThank you for your help. I'll look over your recommendations this weekend. -Yahuzs 17:31, 20 March 2007 (UTC) LOTR RacismYeah, I dont think you should have removed that peice in the Lord of the Rings article, yes it did need some citations but it wasn't nonfactual, the observations made were completely correct and taken directly from the books. In my opinion there was not enough straight opinion or speculation to warrant an outright removal. Perhaps you should discuss the matter in the discussion page. Sultangris 02:58, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
If that is indeed the case, then the uploader themself needs to add information like this. An image description of "== Licensing == {{pd-self}}" is not sufficient information, and if you see any images tagged this way in future, they should be challenged. There needs to be at the very least a statement by the uploader confirming that they did indeed take the picture. Anyway, if that's a photo of an album, it is fair use, not PD. Chris cheese whine 00:52, 22 March 2007 (UTC) Thank youI wanted to tell you how appreciative I am of the helpful notes you have been giving me. I'm rather new at all this, and need all the helpful suggestions I can get. Please keep me in your prayers. MishaPan 05:13, 27 March 2007 (UTC)
Trinity, again.Hey, thanks for your support in the discussion over the inclusion of the nontrinitarian links. Now that the whole thing seems settled, for the most part, more productive changes can take place within the Trinity article. I'd like to take some time in defending the Trinity doctrine on Nontrinitarianism, but it seems like it would be a sour move at the moment, considering how long the discussion went on when it concerned the inclusion of links. I'm also unsure in general how much of a response/rebuttal is warranted... it isn't exactly "Criticisms of the Trinity", but the article practically serves that purpose. Anyway, thanks for your input.--C.Logan 01:47, 28 March 2007 (UTC) Am I the only one who finds the sudden appearance of an article ex nihilo to be slightly dodgy? InfernoXV 02:28, 29 March 2007 (UTC) Invite to WikiProject SpamHello, Csernica. Thanks for input on tolkiengateway.net. If you're interested, come join us at WikiProject Spam and help fight linkspammers on Wikipedia. --Hu12 00:27, 30 March 2007 (UTC) Article has passed as GA. -- Pastordavid 20:42, 5 April 2007 (UTC) Succession Boxes and FancruftHey there. I was wondering if you could tell me about an example where a succession box led to fancruft. I have my own ideas about how this may occur but I wanted to ear about a specific example. Thanks in advance.--Dr who1975 04:33, 10 April 2007 (UTC) Removal of Vandalism at List of saintsHi. I see you caught the rest of the vandalism there - sorry I was trying to rv it all but couldn't be certain I'd got the lot. Thanks and happy editing. Pedro | Chat 19:55, 12 April 2007 (UTC) For Braneslav JovanovicHere's the example I offered on WP:MCQ. It's pretty rough, but you get the idea.
<div class="thumb tleft"> <div class="thumbinner" style="width:392px;"> {| style="margin-left:1px;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" |[[Image:Valtazar Bogisic.jpg|none|65px|Baltazar Bogišić]] |[[Image:Boroevic.jpg|none|65px|Svetozar Boroević]] |[[Image:280px-MilutinMilankovic.PNG|none|65px|Milutin Milanković]] |[[Image:N.Tesla.JPG|none|65px|Nikola Tesla]] |[[Image:Patrijarh Pavle.jpg|none|65px|Patriarch Pavle]] |[[Image:Rade s.JPG|none|65px|Rade Šerbedžija]] |} <div class="thumbcaption">Famous Serbs who emerged from the territory of today's [[Croatia]], from left to right: [[Baltazar Bogišić]], [[Svetozar Boroević]], [[Milutin Milanković]], [[Nikola Tesla]], [[Patriarch Pavle]], [[Rade Šerbedžija]]</div> </div> </div> These aren't the same images you used since I didn't take a lot of time to look for them, but used the first image from the articles on each person. Boško Buha is missing since his article has no image. Also, for this to work out as the other one did they need to be cropped so that they all have the same aspect ratio. I believe that's possible without violating fair use rules, since it's not enough of a change to create a derivative work. It's possible to specify a maximum height in the Image syntax, but that makes the widths, and therefore the total width of the box which you have to specify, not so easy to figure out. Some hints:
One caveat is that this depends on the style definitions currently supported by Wikipedia. Normally these are invisible to editors, but are used automatically to generate the XHTML rendered by your browser from the Wiki markup you normally use. These styles may change at some future time, which could break this code. It's not likely to happen anytime soon, but I thought I should mention it. TCC (talk) (contribs) 04:24, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
I wanted to respond to a few things you wrote regarding Jesus as myth in the Noah's Ark discussion page. I'm not sure why you wrote about it on that page, but I might have to read back through several kilobytes of discussion to figure it out. I didn't want to further the conversation there, since you were attempting to calm down Codex, who is testing the patience of numerous editors. A couple of items that you wrote: Jesus, however, lived during history.
He is placed in a specific cultural context that we can identify and which seems in most details we can examine via archaeology to be accurate.
We can't say exactly what he did from the historical record, but that's true of nearly all people from that period.
Scripture says he lived right about the time we would have expected him to have based on the available evidence (e.g. stylistic analysis of the New Testament). We have little reason to doubt he actually existed even from an atheist POV.
Some do, but in contrast to the situation with Noah, it is those who think Jesus is ahistorical who are in the minority. To state it in the most minimal possible terms, the historical existence of Jesus is credible.
Yes, I am a serious skeptic of the existence of this man. When I was younger, as a Jew, I was taught that he existed but he was merely a Rabbi. I don't even believe that he existed at all now. Anyways, I actually was responding to the atheist POV comment, since I am not an atheist, and I really believe that Jesus was a myth created for unknown reasons. As a Jew, do you know what this may mean--millions of my ancestors were killed over 2000 years in the name of a myth. That's really troubling about my minority point of view. Orangemarlin 04:52, 21 April 2007 (UTC) What a nice thing to say!You seriously brightened a Milton Keynes morning. I return the compliment in exactly the same terms. Cheers! —Ian Spackman 09:36, 21 April 2007 (UTC) TrimurtiNamaste. I was intrigued by a comment you made on the Trimurti article: "The intro asserts that Trimurti is similar to the "traditional view" of the Christian Trinity, yet the illustrative quote from Swami Sivananda describes a view that corresponds to modalism, which was rejected as heretical in the third century. Is there some other source that illustrates this differently, so as to justify the statement in the intro? TCC" I am wondering if this question still interests you, and if so, if it would be worth discussing here or better yet on the talk page for the article, which is not very well referenced. In fact the Trimurti system was something of an Western "packaging" of some Hindu ideas more than a Hindu tradition. Few Hindu texts mention it, and it never really caught on as an element of devotional practice. I have been thinking about adding some of these points to the article. Buddhipriya 01:12, 23 April 2007 (UTC)
A->anWhile it's usually true that the indefinite article should be "an" if the word following begins with a vowel letter, there are times where this is not the case as with this edit: [1]. "Euchological" as normally pronounced in English begins with the same consonant sound as "you" and "yes", like "eureka" and "euphony", and so the preceding article should be "a", not "an". See the usage note here [2]. I wonder if this is a uniform enough rule for words beginning in "eu" that it should be made a general exception? TCC (talk) (contribs) 03:02, 25 April 2007 (UTC)
The Noah debateI saw your discussion on Allenroyboy's page so I left you a comment. Rush4hire 15:47, 28 April 2007 (UTC)
PalamasHey I was wanting to know if you could help out with some of the Orthodox theology pages? LoveMonkey 18:00, 30 April 2007 (UTC) SWEET! Please chew up my additions to theoria. I was hoping to make the article more direct and concise. LoveMonkey 19:04, 30 April 2007 (UTC) Gregory the TheologianHello, Csernica. We've been working on Gregory the Theologian and will have it ready for GA review once we finish cleanup and add some cites. Would you care to look at it? Much appreciated. Majoreditor 18:32, 1 May 2007 (UTC)
Roman difficultiesYou are welcome. The discussion is interesting, but I guess you realize it has relevance only to us personally, not to the article. And it's very long already. You are right, every change can not be accepted right away. In fact, people educated in one mindset would likely change only very little their view till they die. But the point is that with every generation people are educated slightly differently, and per total the society does change, although the individuals do not change their oppinions (they simply die). I am from Eastern Europe, and I have seen how much things have changed in 20 years, even in less than one generation. If you would asked me 15-20 years ago, I would have not believed. So, I guess some in Vatican want to create a new atmosphere in which the next generation of Catholics is just starting to grow. When those people will be in their 50s-60s and influential, let us see then! They would have lived all their life with the recognition that filioque etc would have to eventually go. Unlike today's higher clergy, they will be much more likely to compromize. I do recognize the difficulties posed by the issues of purgatory, the Immaculate Conception, Papal infallibility etc. My point is, people with different mindsets/educations would assign less and less weight to those issue in exchange to more an more weight of the church as the moral pillar for the society, and Catholic church will eventually call them misteries/unknowns, not facts. We, Orthodox Christians also will change our mindsets with new generations: we will recognize that the split is temporary, and that as soon as the issues we talk about are dealt with, then the re-union is the only way to go. We will no longer talk about "a possibility if they ...", but about "a certainty immediately as they ..." There are hundreds of millions of Orhtodox and one billion Catholics. There are those who will never want or even accept re-union, and those who are ecumenic. The dialog and the agreement reached will never be all with all, but the good majority with the good (in the sense of "big") majority. Church being a more "educated" are that society, noone will call the "hardliners" extremists, everyone will simply wait till they die out. You see, to whom did Jesus Christ address his message: not only to the clergy, but to every honest person's inner mind. The purpose of the church is, IMO, that eventually to reach everybody. Not to impose anything on people, but simply be always ready to support, to give a sense of community lasting from before times till after the end of times. The purpose of the church is, IMO, to serve bringing people closer to God. - Not to worship God, b/c God has no need for our worships, He wants our good, not His good, He alaways was and will be good, it's about us not Him. -- And not to define "abstract theology" without any practical relation (as filioque or immaculate conception for example do), but only that which is sound and relevant, and helping creating a common spirit for the society. B/c the God has known the answer to filioque and immaculate conception before the times, and because people will never know the answer until the end of times. Therefore who supports it would eventually drop it - it is like the truth, white or black, drop or carry. As for the councils, God has worked miracles that by far exceded this. I don't think it will be a problem for Him to arrange the things. :Dc76 19:10, 3 May 2007 (UTC) Three Holy HierarchsI have removed the image from the article, and assume that the image will be deleted shortly. I'll add another image if I find one in public domain -- but so far I've had little luck. Should you happen across one please point me to it. Thanks. Majoreditor 02:13, 4 May 2007 (UTC)
Hello, Csernica. An automated process has found and removed a fair use image used in your userspace. The image (Image:280px-MilutinMilankovic.PNG) was found at the following location: User:Csernica/Sandbox/Small gallery code/testbed. This image was removed per criterion number 9 of our non-free content policy. The image was replaced with Image:Example.jpg, so your formatting of your userpage should be fine. Please find a free image to replace it with. User:Gnome (Bot)-talk 00:17, 7 May 2007 (UTC) You may be interested in the current discussion about the meaning of the word and the extent to which the article should address persons of exceptional holiness in non-Christian traditions. Pastor David † 15:20, 8 May 2007 (UTC) You may be interessted to know why Joseph was most likely a stonemason. This is not a pet theory, but is accepted by many theologians today, the most prominent I can point you to being Prof. Bruce Malina of Creighton University or Prof. Richard L. Rohrbaugh of Lewis & Clark College. The Bible states Joseph was "tekton," a builder. Not specifically a carpenter. Three things suggest he was a stonemason. Carpentry was a rare profession at the time, wood was and is scarce in the region, and nearly all buildings at the time were built of stone or mud (in the Middle East & all around the Mediteranian). —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 24.9.97.202 (talk) 16:50, 9 May 2007 (UTC). Your note on Noah's ArkHi! I understand from your note that you believe that points of view should be weighted based on their correspondance with "objective evidence" and that POVs not corresponding with the "objective evidence" should be discounted. I believe the Arbitration Committee addressed what appears to me to be a similar perspective in Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Sathya Sai Baba 2#Wikisunn, ArbCom stated that
Arbcom expressly held that it is improper to judge reliable sources based on their degree of correspondence with what an editor regards as "the real facts /reality" and "what is really happening". I don't see the difference between what an editor regards as "the real facts / reality" and what an editor regards as "the objective evidence." In either case, I believe WP:NPOV precludes making such judgments. Science and religion often involve different methods of drawing conclusions about reality from combinations of authority and observed experience. I beleive it's definitely the business of Wikipedia to clarify which conclusion is based on which method, so it's important to say clearly that "theologian A say believes X" and "scientist B concludes Y" and not to misrepresent a religious claim as a scientific one, or vice versa. However, I understand the WP:NPOV policy and ArbCom's rulings to indicate that it isn't the business of Wikipedia to judge between different worldviews. In many encyclopedias a scientific perspective is the editorial position, but in Wikipedia it's simply one view. On a specifically religious topic like Noah's Ark, religious and theological views have greater notability and relevance to the topic, and therefore (I believe) deserve more weight, than they would in an article on, say, the Big Bang Theory or Charles Darwin. Best, --Shirahadasha 07:51, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
ThanksTCC, thank you for your kind words in support of my RfA, which closed successfully yesterday. Please feel free to drop me a note any time if there is anything that I might be able to do for you. Pastordavid 16:12, 14 May 2007 (UTC) Hello Csernica, an automated process has found an image or media file tagged as nonfree media, such as fair use. The image (Image:Rade s.JPG) was found at the following location: User:Csernica/Sandbox/Small gallery code/testbed. This image or media will be removed per statement number 9 of our non-free content policy. The image or media will be replaced with Image:NonFreeImageRemoved.svg , so your formatting of your userpage should be fine. The image that was replaced will not be automatically deleted, but it could be deleted at a later date. Articles using the same image should not be affected by my edits. I ask you to please not readd the image to your userpage and could consider finding a replacement image licensed under either the Creative Commons or GFDL license or released to the public domain. Thanks for your attention and cooperation. User:Gnome (Bot)-talk 06:11, 17 May 2007 (UTC) Creation and DestructionI wanted to respond earlier, but I wasn’t sure if I should ever address you again, because you seemed very offended. But I find you an interesting subject. You’re a computer programmer like me, (but more advanced), you have a semblance of devotion, as far as I can tell, and you like KJV like me. If I have offended you, then I hope you will accept my apology. The bible does say a lot of things about the motivations of people, and I really didn’t intend to direct any verses at you personally. I really want to have a prophet's eye view of the human race. When I saw the discussion I noted that evidence was being given by both sides, and I felt a desire to step outside of that perspective for a bit and give my own testimony of how the Lord has led in my life concerning these issues. Since the time I wrote that I have had a fascination to study Creation Science, and I have had some overwhelming discoveries; treasures which I would like to share. Matthew 13:52 Then said he unto them, Therefore every scribe [which is] instructed unto the kingdom of heaven is like unto a man [that is] an householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure [things] new and old. Before I began to gather research, I suspected that there was already tons of evidence that would easily bury the Evolution Theory because it is a man-made theory designed by atheists to conveniently do away with moral responsibility to an intelligent Creator. I realized that Adolf Hitler was huge fan of Evolution and thereby thought he was doing a good thing for mankind by eliminating the Jews, (but he only killed ~6 million). Next on his list was the blacks. His intention was to take over the whole world and progressively eliminate “inferior” races. Of course there have been many other attempted genocides in the cause of progressing humanity by eliminating “weaker” races. Some people may still sympathize with this cause. We would call these racists and Neo-Nazis.
A lot of people seem to feel more free if they convince themselves there is no Creator, but that people have evolved and just make their own gods and religions.
But I’ve already explained why fallen man would want such a thing, and at the start I suspected, though I had not done so much research yet, there was already overwhelming evidence to verify the biblical account of creation and the flood. Discussing the evidence may persuade some, but never all. Jesus made it plain that no amount of evidence will persuade those that are not willing to be persuaded.
There’s really no way to prove God created life on this earth in 6 days and destroyed all air breathing creatures with a flood, but there’s also no way to prove that life created itself over billions of years. I would be more inclined to accept the former because of the righteousness taught by God and the promise of eternal life to those who prove they can handle it. The latter theory promises nothing and teaches no kind of morality, just “survival of the fittest”. If men are convinced they are animals they will behave like animals in contrast to those who will strive to live up to the “Image of God” idea, as it is defined in the Bible. If overwhelming evidence where required for us to take God at His word, He would have created Adam first, but instead Adam was created very last, and then God told him He created everything. God even put a deep sleep on Adam before He created Eve. Maybe God wanted to surprise his child. We wrap up gifts for our children, right? So God decides to not provide overwhelming evidence because the eternal life He has promised is a surprise and He really wants us to take Him at His Word? That’s one theory… But when I see this world, I see a wreck. No one would observe a wrecked car and think: “Why would a car manufacturer put out a wrecked car?” It should be assumed that the thing was created perfect and got wrecked somehow. That’s exactly what the bible tells us happened to this earth. Is there any book more reliable than the bible? EvidenceThe theory of evolution runs into many problems as new evidence is discovered. Nevertheless the scientists don’t budge, but act as if they didn’t even hear or see the evidence. Theories in school text books have been disproved, but they are never removed from the books, in spite of state laws which say things like textbooks shall be “..factually accurate and incorporate principals of instruction reflective of current and confirmed research.” California Education code 60200 © 3 It is a fact that the earth’s rotation and orbit around the sun is slowing gradually at a constant rate, making the day and year longer by about 1 millisecond every day. Wind that back millions of years ago and the earth was spinning and orbiting the sun pretty fast. It’s ridiculous to say life could have survived in those conditions. If any thing decided to start evolving itself into existence here, it would have been thrown off by centrifugal force. The moon also increases it’s distance from the earth by ~1 inch every revolution. Was the moon part of the earth millions of years ago? Furthermore, the magnetic field is growing weaker at a significant rate. No life could have endured the heat generated by what the magnetic field would have been 44,000 years ago. If that’s not enough, the continents are eroding at a rate that would level them in much less than 25 million years. The ocean is now 3.6% salt, but the continual washing of mineral salts into the ocean increases its salt content. The oceans could easily have been completely fresh water 5000 years ago. Is this enough time for “natural selection” to adapt all those creatures to salt water? The human population growth can be extrapolated back to one family ~4200 years ago. If people had been populating for millions of years, there would be bones everywhere, and the population would be inconceivable. The Grand Canyon must have been formed within a few weeks by the over-spilling of a very large lake left after the recession of the flood. This is the simplest explanation. The large lake eventually broke one of it’s borders and erosion quickly took down the dam and carved out the canyon, washing the sediment over the state of Arizona. This explains why there is no huge river delta at the end of the Arizona River like there would be if all this sediment eroded gradually over millions of years. Also the river’s current source is lower than the top of the canyon which is a big problem for the “millions of years” theory.
So what about the fossil record? It’s called a record because it is assumed that a worldwide flood never happened, but those layers show a gradual build up over millions of years. But it can be demonstrated that if you had the carcasses of all those creatures, mollusks, fish, dinosaurs, birds, mammals, and mixed them up in an enormous amount of water, sediment and mud, they would settle in roughly that order. But really, they are not often found in such a way. In fact the fossils are dated by the layers, but then the layers are dated by the fossils, is a perfect example of circular reasoning. The trilobite, thought to be extinct for 300-500 million years is considered a good “index fossil”. The only problem is they are not extinct, as was supposed. These would settle to the bottom because of their density and shape. Somehow it was assumed these layers give evidence of long periods of time. But there are no erosion patterns between the layers, and in some parts of the earth are found giant petrified trees sticking up through all layers. The simplest assumption is there was a flood and that’s how the sediments settled and then hardened. This can be demonstrated in aquarium or even a glass. Just put some mud and sand other junk and water and mix it up. When it settles, you will see layers. The flood was not a gentle shower over the earth, but “that same day...all the fountains of the great deep where broken up”. Most of the water came from under the earth and during this process many geological changes occurred. The naked mountains, rock formations, canyons, and deep sea crevasses where not there before the flood. There was also no erosion because it didn’t rain. The world today resembles God’s original design, but is greatly damaged. If someone says fossil bones are carbon dated, I would say carbon dating is not the method used to determine how old the fossils are, but they are dated according to where they are found in the rock strata, and many dates are assigned according to presupposed theories. Living penguins have been dated to be over 2000 years old, one part of a mammoth body dates 10,000 years while the other part of the same body dates 22,000 years. Your fingernails could date to 3000 years, but you wouldn’t go around telling people your fingernails are 3000 years old! Petrifaction doesn’t take millions of years as many items have been found petrified that couldn’t have been very old, like dogs, sacks of flour, boots, hammers, pickles, and other things. The trees destroyed by Mount St. Helens are already petrified. Other mineral formations, such as stalactites and stalagmites, which are assumed to take millions of years to form, have been found on people’s cars and sheds. Recently fresh, non-petrified dinosaur bones have found as well as fresh, soft tissue inside of petrified dinosaur bones. Ice core samples are drilled out of Greenland and Antarctica containing rings which are assumed to be “annual rings”. The drilling goes 10,000 feet down and 135,000 rings have been counted, which would represent 135,000 years assuming that one ring forms each year. I suspect it’s easy for many rings to form each year. A light ring represents lightly packed snow, and a dark ring represents snow that got warm and refroze. How can educated scientists assume this happens only one time per year. Any high school drop out would figure it would snow and melt 50 or so times per year.
Is there anything that can be proven to be over 4,400 years old? The oldest plant is 4,300 years old. The oldest desert, the Saharah is estimated to be 4,000 years old according to the current rate of desertification. The oldest coral reef is estimated to be about 4,200 years old. “Look at all the pictures of the skulls lined up in a certain way, and the horses lined up with the smallest to the left, and the embryos all lined up. This has to prove something. It’s taught everywhere in the whole world.'”, I can hear people saying. It’s propaganda. It’s real easy to draw pictures. A lot of skulls have been taken from aborigines which had various skull structures. Some of those bones are fake. The Nebraska Man was created by a single tooth, which was later found to be a pig’s tooth. Lucy was created from a bunch of shattered bones which could have been those of a child or an ape. Neanderthal man was just an old man with arthritis in his back.
It is taught that humans and animals have vestigial parts, things they no longer use, and this is evidence of previous stages in their evolution. But some of these have a purpose.
Evolution and Big Bang go against established scientific laws.
Concerning the flood.. I have heard many weird arguments to disprove the flood story. 1. There is not enough water to cover the mountains
2. The huge boat couldn’t have held up.
3. The coal and oil couldn’t have been made from organisms that where destroyed all at once.
4. How can there be such a diversification of species in only 4400 years.
I don’t think environmental adaptations take countless generations to occur. There are just some things we should admit we don’t know much about. It’s much better to be humble than to wage a war against The Word of God. 5 A quote like this: “So when someone says the worldwide flood recorded in Genesis really happened as a historical event, and that a single man and his family actually built a large ship to preserve humankind and breeding specimens of all the world's animals, he steps outside the religious worldview and into the areas where geology and other earth sciences, archaeology, engineering, biology, and physics have something to contribute. These disciplines, both singly and together, tell us that it simply did not happen.” Firstly, it’s not safe to assume that all such experts are atheist. The “experts” are funded with government money. If any individual among them ever shows a thread of doubt about established theories like Evolution or the Big Bang, he will be fired, or he won’t get funded. The government has invested billions into such research. They are not about to change theories and see all that funding have gone to waste. If individuals are happy with state issued religions, then that’s fine, but for those who want the good stuff, you have to go searching: “seek and ye shall find..”
Yes, Evolution, including cosmic evolution, (Big Bang), is state funded religion. They don’t make much sense as explanations for the origins of things, but it’s the best people can do to explain thins independent of the inspired Word of God. Popularity is not a test of truth. Religious leaders in Jesus’ day came up with many reasons to reject Him. One of those was: “Have any of the rulers or of the Pharisees believed on him?” (John 7:48) Here’s a page with seven videos with a lot of nice information. I watched them all. Very entertaining too. Is The Bible is Scientific?It is often assumed that the bible is in opposition to science, but on the contrary, the bible is very scientific, and observations in nature should bring one closer to God rather than place one in rebellion against. How many times have individual scientists achieved temporary fame when they assigned a new number to the stars? Potolomy said 1056, Pico Broth said 777, Kepler said 1005, In the 17th century before the telescope the established number was 5119 stars. Now the number of visible stars is 70 septillion? The bible says the stars are without number. (Jer 33:22, Gen 15:5; 22:17) Job knew the earth floats in space: “He stretcheth out the north over the empty place, [and] hangeth the earth upon nothing. ” (Job 26:7) Isaiah knew the earth was round: “[It is] he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth” (Isaiah 44:22) I think of the bloodletting practice that resulted in the death of George Washington. This could have been prevented if they would have known: “For the life of the flesh [is] in the blood” (Lev 17:11) The laws of washing and quarantine are found all through Leviticus when dealing with leprosy and other diseases. These principles are understood by doctors today, but it wasn’t always so in secular hospitals and many perished because the spread of diseases through microbes was not understood. People can benefit greatly by observing simple health laws in the bible.
The bible teaches that having a positive attitude will be beneficial to ones health:
If folks are taught to trust the bible, they can learn what it takes to stay healthy. It is shear folly to assume that people had a shorter lifespan in those day because they didn’t have the medical care we have today. And Pharaoh said unto Jacob, How old [art] thou?
At the bottom of this page is a collection of quotes from Nobel Prize winning scientists who believe Creation is the only way to explain things. Proverbs 9:10 “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy is understanding.“
The Rise of AtheismRevelation 11 foretells the rise of the atheist revolutions, which later developed into Communism and Nazism. The rise of the Theory of Evolution plays a big part in this. Rev 11:4,7-10 These are the two olive trees, and the two candlesticks standing before the God of the earth.
There’s no doubt the two witnesses are the Bible, Old and New Testiment, Law and the Prophets represented by Moses and Elijah, the two witnesses that visited Jesus. Elijah shut up heaven so there was a famine and Moses turned the water to blood and brought the plagues on Egypt.
Sodom would represent the licentiousness as well as pleasure and entertainment loving social elements. Also a despising of godliness.
Egypt displays character traits of racism, superiority, slavery, and bold defiance against the authority of God.
The best description of this I have found, is in The Great Controversy, Chapter 15; The Bible and the French Revolution Here are a few quotes:
..All religious worship was prohibited, except that of liberty and the country.
Rev 11:11 And after three days and a half the Spirit of life from God entered into them, and they stood upon their feet; and great fear fell upon them which saw them. Rev 11:12 And they heard a great voice from heaven saying unto them, Come up hither. And they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and their enemies beheld them. This has very negative results on the nation of France:
Proverbs 14:34; 16:12. "The work of righteousness shall be peace;" and the effect, "quietness and assurance forever." Isaiah 32:17. He who obeys the divine law will most truly respect and obey the laws of his country.”
This was written before 1888. It was not a national policy in the U.S. to teach children that the bible is a myth, thereby destroying any hope of them cultivating Christian values, until 1960 when it was decided that public schools should teach evolution, like communist Russia. Shortly after this, the Ten Commandments where banned, and public prayer was prohibited. Russia beat the U.S. in the space race, so it was assumed their system of education was superior and worthy of imitation. Since then SAT scores have plummeted, teen pregnancy has gone up, there has been a dramatic increase in children carrying guns to school and shooting their teachers and fellow students. It’s arguable that science could be taught just fine without telling the children they are just animals. A notable atheist revolutionary and a huge fan of Evolution is Adolf Hitler, who is quoted as saying: “Let me control the textbooks and I will control the state..” He also said: "I regard Christianity as the most fatal, seductive lie that ever existed." cited in Twentieth Century in Crisis: Foundations of Totalitarianism by Larry Azar Damnable HeresiesTragically there are certain "damnable heresies .. by reason of whom the way of truth shall be evil spoken of" (2 Peter 2:1–3)
I could quote more than 100 verses that say plainly that the wicked are ultimatly destroyed after they are punished according to the evil they did. "the soul that sins, it shall die", "And fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in hell. (Matthew 10:28) There are no such phrases in the bible as “immortal soul”, “spend eternity in hell”, and “eternal torment”. I will make a good article just on this topic as soon as I get time. This comment has already grown long enough. The Four Catastrophes in Matthew 24We see four different catastrophes in Matthew 24.
I have to find a way to justify God for destroying large numbers of people, otherwise I would take the side of the accuser. I personally believe the lives of the righteous where, in some cases, in jeopardy. That is to day: If God didn’t destroy the wicked in the flood, they would have eventually seduced or destroyed all of God’s faithful. Then what would be the point of the world existing if no one would ever qualify for eternal life? And how would the Messiah be born, as prophesied in Genesis 3:15:
After this God reduced the lifespan of mankind from 900+ to about ~120 years.
This verse had duel meaning, for Noah also preached while he slowly worked on the ark for 120 years. That’s how much warning they had. Not only did the whole world know of the reform Noah was preaching, but they had plenty of time. In each of these four destructions, the people had plenty of time and warning to repent and turn to God. Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die? saith the Lord GOD: and not that he should return from his ways, and live? (Ezekiel 18:23) 1. The FloodAnd spared not the old world, but saved Noah the eighth person, a preacher of righteousness, bringing in the flood upon the world of the ungodly; (2 Peter 2:5) The reason they should have believed was based on Noah’s righteousness, defined by God’s holy law. This was all the evidence they needed that he was not making stuff up, but was speaking on behalf of God Himself. God was justified in destroying them even if He didn’t give them scientific evidence that He had the power and willingness to do so. 2. Overthrow of SodomAnd turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah into ashes condemned them with an overthrow, making them an example unto those that after should live ungodly;
Lot set a good example of hospitality, inviting strangers in. He didn’t know those where angels. This is the incident referred to in this verse: “Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.” (Hebrews 13:2).
3. Destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D.
The best references to these three events I have found are in Patriarchs and Prophets and The Great Controversy by E.G.White:
4. The Second Coming of Christ.The ever popular Left Behind series says that because the Lord “comes as a thief”, there will be a secret rapture and everyone will be alive after the Second Coming to have another chance. Boy, a lot of people like that idea. They just eat it up. Those book and movies sell like hotcakes.
2 Peter 3:10–14
Great motivation to be “without spot, and blameless” 1 John 3:2–3
The righteous are not saved from the Second Coming by getting in a boat or leaving a city, but by receiving the Seal of God.
A mark saving the righteous from destruction can also be found in Ezekiel 9. The Six DaysIf you’re a computer programmer, you know programs are not just wished into existence, but take a lot of work to develop. The technology of creating organisms and the systems that sustain life on this earth, and likely other worlds, probably weren’t developed in 6 literal days either, but I believe the creation of life on a planet like this one would be better compared to installing software on a new computer, rather than writing it. Let me demonstrate from the bible. Albeit, I do believe this world is special, and I’ll explain why later. Some creationists will vehemently argue that the earth itself is only 6000 years old, but the bible really doesn’t tell us how old the earth itself is, but before the acts of creation began the stage is set with an already existing earth covered with water:
Each acts of creation are sandwiched between the statements: “And God said” and “And the evening and the morning were the nth day.” The first is the creation of light. The first verse, "In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.", is a summary of the creation week. It does not describe an act of creation that happened before the week, for in the week we see these two terms defined: "heaven" and "earth".
Gen 1:14 And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years: Gen 1:15 And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so. If the earth was here, we could assume the sun and moon and planets and stars where here also, and the work on the 4th day was to make many vital adjustments for the earths to sustain life. God made the Sun and Moon (and the stars also) rulers of the day and night. The bodies would be for signs and to keep seasons, days, and years whereas before they where in disarray and also they could not be seen through the atmosphere because it had a thick, dark layer of stuff, like we see on Venus. Of course God didn’t put the lights literally “in” the firmament, but they are there in the sense that we see them there. Like you would say: “Who’s this man in the picture?” There’s not literally a man in the picture, but everyone knows what you mean. So considering the bible doesn’t tell us when the earth and the rest of the universe was created, it's possible that fossil bones could be only ~5000 years old and be full of minerals which are millions of years old. The mineralization process can be recreated in mineral rich water and give you a fossil in 2 weeks. There have been fresh dinosaur bones dug up in some places, and some large fossilized Tyrannosaurus bones have been broken open to reveal fresh, stretchy blood and marrow. I do not advocate the evangelical’s tragic immortal soul doctrine. (see helltruth.com) Then there’s the gap theory, which I don’t personally adhere to, but at least it doesn’t blaspheme Moses and the prophets. Second Day: The Two FirmamentsIt is thought that there was once a shield of water in the upper atmosphere. Some think this shielded the earth from harmful x-rays and UV rays, and increased the air pressure which gave an atmosphere richer in oxygen. The two firmaments seem to suggest there was once a layer of water in the atmosphere. Some have suggested that this reflected the rays of the sun in such a way as to distribute heat around the world so there would be no extremes in heat or cold. It’s also possible the water shield protected the earth from harmful UV rays and X-rays and increased the air pressure giving a more oxygen rich atmosphere. There where many other things that where not the same then as they are now and Christians remind themselves of the promises of God to recreate the earth as it was before sin. disclaimer: not complete lists Before sin:
Before the flood:
Rush4hire 20:20, 19 May 2007 (UTC) SummaryThank you for the tip concerning the images. I wasn’t sure which license type to use. Also I didn’t mean to make that last comment so long. I really took great pains trying to trim it up. Maybe I misunderstood the arguments. It seemed like you where saying there is too much evidence piled against the claims of Genesis 1–11 for anyone who is not unlearned to take them literally. Tell me if I’m wrong. Is this not what you’ve been raving about? This is a recent quote from you: “the literalism on the early part of Genesis ..as it's perfectly justifiable as a religious belief absent knowledge of natural history. It's merely wrong” But first off, what do you call “natural history”? History of nature? The word “history” basically means “knowledge or record of past events”. Are you among the brainwashed masses who define the speculations of large groups of atheist scientists as history? The only history of this world is in the bible. There’s no other record that goes back farther than 6000 years. If that's not the case, tell me how you define "natural history". To reiterate my case, in my first post I pointed out how Jesus and all the disciples seemed to take Genesis 1-11 literally, and demonstrated how easy it is for large groups of people to develop a strong, mutual desire to disprove the bible.
I don’t see how these are just random ideas. This dissertation makes my arguments pretty plain. And here’s another humble attempt at a summarization: Belief in the bible is viable, even when explaining observations in geology and nature. Beware of those who represent the bible as unscientific, for they may have an agenda. 1 Timothy 6:20–21
Science independent of, and contrary to, the bible is defined, by the bible, as false science. Who are you going to believe? The prophets and apostles or the atheists? You can't be in agreement with both. 2 Peter 3:4–7
This quote demonstrates how men can become very confident that the way things are is the way things have always been, and that people are ignorant because they want to be ignorant, (willingly are ignorant), not because God hasn't given enough evidence. I believe these quotes also, are prophecies against the rise of Atheistic Evolution.
Thank you
Yikes.There's an individual (who, I should note, abstains from signing comments) who has become rather irked that I've removed his edits made to the article several times (in accordance with WP:OR and WP:UNDUE). He's added several responses to older discussion, and apparently prefers to present his tenuous theories as arguments (for instance, he implies that as his mother was a Lutheran who denied the co-equality of the prosopa of the Trinity, then it is reasonable to assume that a large amount, if not a majority, of Christians also doubt the co-equality). His edits to the article itself are very OR and seem completely ignorant of the theological elements of the incarnation- specifically, the 'lowering'(or humbling) of the Son. Therefore, not only are his arguments giving undue weight to a minority opinion, without even citing sources to begin with for such a 'view'- but indeed, his argument is easily refuted. Should everyone begin to cite verses they don't understand and place them into the article? --C.Logan 20:27, 28 May 2007 (UTC)
SupportThanks for your coming to my support. I'm still confused why I was a target of an admin, but whatever. However, even though I appreciated your support, you probably shouldn't have said anything about getting off a high horse--that probably was a bit too much. But I still laughed. :) Orangemarlin 03:39, 29 May 2007 (UTC) Morgoth's namesWhy was my edit on Morgoth's names reverted? It was a cleanup of both un-Wikipedia information (roots from Etymologies) and mixing internal and external history of JRRT's writings. Plus some clarification. In case you only wanted to revert that awful edit about Morgoth in films, I will reinstall mine. Surendil 12:49, 29 May 2007 (UTC) Sumo tournament championship boxesI planned to wait around for feedback on sumo tourny boxes for individual rikishi, because I knew there was a good chance they wouldn't survive in that form. But, I couldn't stop myself and I put one up for Akebono, Takanohana and Musashimaru. Also, do you know where tournament records for rikishi (also sansho etc) are archived on the web? I couldn't find such detailed information to put in those empty boxes.Malnova 06:55, 30 May 2007 (UTC) Personal InvitationPlease remember to sign up for the Sumo Wikiproject! Wikipedia:WikiProject Council/Proposals, number 1.116.XinJeisan 17:13, 3 June 2007 (UTC) Note of appreciationI appreciate your basic NPOV edits and support in many contentious articles. I know you are Christian, and I've read what you posted on my page a few times--I think you have a good head on your shoulders, so I may not completely agree with all of your edits, I do know you are fair and balanced as much as possible. Anyways, thanks for showing up occasionally on these articles, and I hope to see you around more. Orangemarlin 06:04, 4 June 2007 (UTC) This edit is not only NOT Flood geology, it's no geology I've ever read in my life. It sounds like some original research to me! Good catch there. Orangemarlin 05:46, 5 June 2007 (UTC) Your sandboxesHere is the code I found on the pages, but I have the same crash when I try to re create them, so I assume there is a problem with your syntax : {{#if:{{{1|}}}|<!-- -->{{#ifeq:{{#uc:{{{1}}}}}|JURYO|bgcolor="#BBBBBB"{{!}}(Juryo)|<!-- -->{{#ifeq:{{#uc:{{{1}}}}}|INJURED|{{!}}Sat out due to injury|<!-- -->{{#ifeq:{{#uc:{{{1}}}}}|EMPTY|!x|<!-- --><span style="text-weight:bold;"><!-- -->{{!}}{{../Sumo rank{{!}}{{{1}}}{{!}}{{{2}}}{{!}}{{{3}}}</span><br /><!-- -->{{#ifeq:{{#uc:{{{5}}}}}|Y|<span style="text-weight:bold;color:DarkGreen;">{{{4}}}</span>}}|<!-- -->{{{4}}}}}<br /><!-- -->{{../Sumo basho awards{{!}}{{{6}}}{{!}}{{{7}}}{{!}}{{{8}}}{{!}}{{{9}}}{{!}}{{{10}}}<!-- -->{{!}}{{{11}}}{{!}}{{{12}}}{{!}}{{{13}}}{{!}}{{14}}}}}<!-- -->}}}}}}|!x}} {{#if:{{{1|}}}|<span style="background-color:black; font-size:80%; font-weight:bold;">}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{1|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{1}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{2|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{2}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{3|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{3}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{4|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{4}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{5|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{5}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{6|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{6}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{7|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{7}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{8|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{8}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{9|}}}|{{../Sansho|{{{9}}}}}}}<!-- -->{{#if:{{{1|}}}|</span>}}
Sumo clipThanks for the compliments about uploading that video. It was a lot of hard work, getting a good shot and then encoding it correctly and what not. About the reading, I think I am correct? But sumo have weird names, so I suppose I could be wrong? Hmmm. Nesnad 10:29, 11 June 2007 (UTC) Tourney boxesHi there. It's Malnova. I just wanted to make it clear again that I think your tourney box is very attractive and concise and no doubt an improvement over my version. And I was happy to see that you agreed with and emulated most of my conventions. I have no reservations about using your template as "the template". However, as I said, I don't really want to reenter all the info., but would be very willing to use your template to make tourney boxes for other rikishi. If something does get moving on your version, there are a few things I would like to discuss about your template. But there is no point wasting time on the details of your template until/if interest develops. Cheers. Malnova 00:44, 12 June 2007 (UTC) My issues with your template are small:
More feedback:
Continuing...
By the way, I was worried that my jumping the gun and making so many tables ahead of time would cause consistency problems, but the end look of the tables doesn't differ enough that the casual visitor will feel any incongruousness between old and new versions of the tables before (or if) all the old tables are replaced. Malnova 04:24, 19 June 2007 (UTC) Hey again. I tried to put up a tourney table for Tochiozan using your template, and though I followed the same system as I did for Kakuryu it doesn't come out right. I checked and double checked. I have one guess that maybe the template has trouble handling a wrestler who has not had been in Makuuchi tournaments in at least two years (?). Or it could be I am just not good at this stuff... Malnova 01:28, 21 June 2007 (UTC) It's up Tochiozan, but there could be additional problems cuz I was in a hurry. I have an appointment in a few minutes. Malnova 01:44, 21 June 2007 (UTC) Hey again, did you update the tourney template to include sources? If you did, I think we need to go back and update the tables added recently so they have a source. Malnova 00:10, 26 June 2007 (UTC) John Howe's image policyFrom http://www.john-howe.com/forum/smf/index.php?topic=1910.0 - the man speaks:
What tag should one use if one uses his images then, if it's even acceptable? (Cross-posted to Wikiproject Middle-earth.) Uthanc 00:37, 17 June 2007 (UTC) SumoforumDid you mean to write sumoforum.net or sumoforum.com sumoforum.com doesn't look very good, while the .net looks more like what you were talking about.XinJeisan 09:28, 19 June 2007 (UTC) Christian Scienceon the Trinity page, under references= Science and Health there is a list of verbage attached. How do I either edit it or have some dialogue with the person who attached the dialogue? I'm in Guatemala and my name won't appear. Simplywater
Crowning momentsGreetings. I'm contacting you because you have experience in dealing with our non-free content policy as it pertains to images. A so-far unresolved issue deals with "crowning moments" for beauty pageant contestants. This specific issue is heated because of previous disputes between the aptly named User:PageantUpdater and the obscurely named User:Abu badali, but the same issue could apply to many other classes of images as well. All parties have made their cases adequately, but consensus is still elusive, so the issue remains open long after other problems have been resolved. Could you go to Wikipedia:Images_and_media_for_deletion/2007_June_18#Image:MissUSA2007Crowned.jpg and give your opinion? It would really help us to finish this issue and move on. Thanks! – Quadell (talk) (random) 18:47, 28 June 2007 (UTC) EucharistWhy did you remove my photo? --Mactographer 09:00, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Image of Hakuho's yokozuna promotionHi. I just added a few paragraph headings to Hakuho and in the process I've messed up one of the images that you added-- it's disappeared! I've tried to correct it but I can't work out how to do so. Could you possibly put it back if you have time? Thanks and apologies. Pawnkingthree 16:10, 2 July 2007 (UTC)
Tourney table templateWhen I look at your template tourney table in Safari at home, it's fine. But when I look at it on Explorer, the table hides half of the wrestler's name written above it. I don't actually remember this happening before; maybe putting the reference there has something to do with it? Malnova 08:24, 4 July 2007 (UTC) The IE I am using is for Windows XP. Malnova 23:54, 4 July 2007 (UTC) I was wondering if a little padding at the bottom might be a simple fix. I might give it a try when I'm on XP again tomorrow. Malnova 10:57, 5 July 2007 (UTC) Hey. When I use your template, I get kind of bogged down when it just reads Basho six times in a row. Is it possible to change this part of the template to read the Hatsu Basho (or 1 Basho or Jan Basho), Haru Basho etc. in order instead of Basho 6 times? This would help me (and maybe others) to keep from losing our place when we are making tables. Would this screw up the template or is it an easy fix? If it screws things up too much don't worry about it. Thanks for listening, Malnova 20:05, 8 July 2007 (UTC) Thanks for the advice. I'll try working it out. You are right of course about putting such questions/advice on the sumo project page. I'll paste my Q and your A on the project page. Thanks. Malnova 20:34, 8 July 2007 (UTC) Image copyrightHello there, on Wikipedia:Media copyright questions oyu indicated that fair use was not possible since a free image was obtainable. Did you meana free iamge exists somewhere or just that it might be possible to get the image free licenced by contacting the museum? I have emailed them now asking if they are willing to release it to the public domain or under licence. If they are not willing to do this, is a low-res version of the photo reasonable under fair use? I find this photo licensing a nightmare to behonest, I don't understand it! Many thanks - PocklingtonDan (talk) 10:23, 7 July 2007 (UTC) Middle-earth triviaI saw your edit to Middle-earth, and I couldn't find out exactly what the Maryland town was about either, though I did find some scary references like some private school in Pennsylvania... I also found "Performance Surety Bond from Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland for the Middle Earth subdivision" here, and also found something in the Maryland State Archives Land Survey, for 1 June 1979, for "Middle Earth, Lot 4". My guess is that someone, or some company, brought a plot of land and tried to, or did, found a 'town' (more like a housing estate by the sound of it) called Middle Earth. I've seen many examples of street names based on Tolkien's characters. A good example is the housing estate in Holland. See this google maps link. Maybe this was something similar? Not suitable for the article though, but I thought you might like it. Carcharoth 22:56, 8 July 2007 (UTC) Glossary of sumo termsSomehow I think you missed this discussion to delete the sumo glossary. it went down in flames, so there is no worries about it and no need to argue it on the talk page. keep up the good work with the sumo! XinJeisan 09:33, 16 July 2007 (UTC) Kotos and KaiosYes, Kaio has been pulling henka or near-henka all basho. It gets on my nerves because he is such an artist that he doesn't need to do that. I don't know how long you've been following sumo, but Kaio is the most maddening rikishi to watch. He could have been yokozuna ages ago if it weren't for his own self-defeating attitude. When he absolutely has to win, he chokes from the pressure. But when nothing's on the line, he can beat the best of them. Remember his last yusho? His yusho was guaranteed on the 14th day, and on the 15th day Asashoryu was bound and determined to beat Kaio to show him that he still had his stuff...and Kaio put him down almost as an afterthought to moving on the Emperor's Cup ceremony. Even more maddening is I can see the kind of self defeatist attitude developing in Kotooshu. Just like Kaio, you can often see it in his face when he thinks he's going to get beaten; he's almost falling down before he makes contact. Or am I over-imagining? Malnova 00:35, 17 July 2007 (UTC) Peniel Revival CategoryDon't know if you came upon this from my removal of the category from Second Coming, but I'm glad you took the step to bring this to CfD. It seems to be solely for promotional purposes, and the category text itself makes little sense. I'm guessing that the article of the same name may have a few problems as well, considering that it has also been edited almost entirely by user Apfaq.--C.Logan 05:10, 17 July 2007 (UTC) Ernest Hemingway photoI have reverted your change in images. The new version is filled with digital artifacts (it is a jpg) and taking out the crease destroys the historical authenticity. I might be able to stomach a version saved as a png. -N 23:43, 19 July 2007 (UTC) Second comingCan you help with the tag in the second coming page. Regards, -- Jeff3000 13:57, 21 July 2007 (UTC) Image:Sharpe's Grysbok.jpg: CopyrightThanks for that!--GRM 19:28, 22 July 2007 (UTC) SatoyamaHi. When I was updating wrestlers, I saw that Satoyama has a really short bio and should be in the "articles that need attention" column. I finished him and moved him to the correct section. This moves him into your assigned wrestlers, but he is already finished, you don't need to do him. Also, on another note, as PK3 said, there is a problem with the infobox rank, they now all read N/A. If I had a clue how to fix it, I'd give it a shot, but I don't.Malnova 23:37, 22 July 2007 (UTC) sumo info netHi, I see you are in the middle of updating, no hurry on this next question - I went to that sumo info site in French that you mentioned to PK3. It took a little patience (I know no French), but I managed to get an account. I did this because I wanted to see Iwakiyama's kettei-sen win (I was actually rooting for Kyokutenho, always liked him). How is the speed of the video for you? It is pretty choppy for me, but watchable. I doubt it is a bandwith problem as Tokyo is famous for it's lightning fast broadband connections comapared to other cities and countries. Do/Did you have the choppy problem as well? If not, did you do something to fix it? Thanks.
InfoboxesHi. Thanks for your work on the infoboxes. I used your latest version in two new articles, on Nankairyu and Yamato, and it seems to have put the characters "tr>" at the beginning of the article. Have I overlooked something or is it something you could clear up by tweaking the template? Many thanks. Pawnkingthree 17:49, 23 July 2007 (UTC) Tolkien battle articles may be deletedRespectfully seeking your input at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Battle of the Pelennor Fields. Uthanc 03:30, 29 July 2007 (UTC) Image:'The Young Sophocles Leading the Chorus of Victory after the Battle of Salamis', sculpture by John Talbott Donoghue c. 1889.jpgThe photo is my own creation, which I unconditionally release. I am sorry if I used the incorrect tag. Wmpearl 05:39, 30 July 2007 (UTC) MosesI meant if he existed. Not if he wrote. Just tired of talk pages turning into places where people argure/debate/discuss their personal feelings and beliefs/disbelief (seem more vocal) on said topic not how to improve the article. Which is the point of the page. Not to prove in the existance of it. --Xiahou 03:10, 2 August 2007 (UTC) I took the liberty of including your reasoning in the upload page. Please delete if you do not agree :-)--Legionarius 03:33, 3 August 2007 (UTC)
your outrageous revertCsernica, don't revert all that information because a couple things weren't sourced. The majority of it was. It was obviously an outrageous revert and your edit summary was uncivil. I hope you re-examine your borderline disrespectful behavior and I'm sure I'm not the only one that feels this way. I see up above on that talk page where someone else, who had a similar problem with you, wrote this to you: If you said that all parodies should be included then why are you deleting the entire list. That doesn't make a lot of sense? Tratare 06:35, 10 August 2007 (UTC) I already know about reverting and I am angry at you because I have reason to be. Instead of pointing out specific things you thought were unsourced, you went and reverted a bunch of stuff that WAS sourced. As I said, most of it was sourced. If you had a problem with one part of the controversy section, you can feel free to go to the discussion page and discuss why, but you don't revert every edit a person made because a couple of those edits that person made didn't look right to you. It doesn't make sense. For example, I think your revert was outrageous. Now, how would you like it if I went and revert everything you've reverted in the past all based on the fact that I felt that this one revert you made looked outrageous? Tratare 07:09, 10 August 2007 (UTC) I agree with you somewhat about some of it belonging on Judith Sheindlin. Particularly the controversy section. I didn't realize there was even a page. I assumed Judge Judy is Judith Sheindlin. Why there is a separate page, I have no idea. Regardless, you didn't remove that and place it on Judith Sheindlin if that's how you felt. You also didn't just erase that specific info. You just reverted everything, including the section about Judge Judy show and how she acts on her show which I thought was inappropriate Tratare 07:25, 10 August 2007 (UTC) you say that your reason for not removing that to Judith Sheindlin was because you didn't feel like it. Exactly! Just like the reversion of a bunch of stuff, including sourced info, because you didn't feel like pointing out what you thought wasn't sourced on the discussion page so I could look at it or merely correcting that specific info, so instead just reverted every edit because you're lazy. You see, when you don't do things because you don't feel like it, like going to work everyday to put food in your stomach, it can actually make the problem worse like it is now. And now that I think of it, your example of why Judge Judy and Judith Sheindlin are separate articles didn't even make sense. Your example was that it was like David Letterman and Late Show with David Letterman which it is not. You probably won't ever hear someone walk up to Letterman and say, "how goes it, Late Show with David Letterman" like you'd hear someone say, "how goes it Judge Judy?" You could have at least used Dr. Phil as your example. Even still, that page is known as Dr. Phil (TV series), not Dr. Phil. I think it makes plenty of sense to put information about Phil McGraw on a page that says Dr. Phil without TV series. That article is not called Judge Judy TV series. It's called Judge Judy and she's even known better by that name anyway. To be honest, that controversy info I removed to Judith Sheindlin could have stayed on that page. Perhaps those aren't reliable sources and perhaps they are for that info. That was never the issue here as that still doesn't justify reverting the entire page Tratare 09:02, 10 August 2007 (UTC) 1. You wrote: Articles about people are titled by their correct names. The woman's name isn't "Judge Judy". That's the name of the TV show she stars in. That's not rocket science. (And yes, I am a rocket scientist.) Articles about people are titled by their correct names? Visit The Undertaker page. Visit Hulk Hogan page. 2. You wrote: I also said that I am not responsible for your edits, but I would become so if I pasted it somewhere and I have no reason to take that responsibility. It's not mine. It's yours. Do your own work. So let me get this straight. You avoided copying and pasting a small paragraph over to another page because you felt you would be responsible for something I should be doing, so instead you decided to revert the entire page, good edits included, all to avoid that responsibility. Wow! LMAO! That would mean you wouldn't correct anyone's work here at wikipedia because you felt you were responsible for something they should be doing since someone had to have edited it before you. That's my cue to give up on you. Goodbye Tratare 09:43, 10 August 2007 (UTC) Nasmith imagesI don't think that the Ted Nasmith images are replacable fair use - surely any illustrations of anything in the legendarium are derivative works? Will (talk) 02:19, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
Ah, but I wasn't commenting on the rest, merely the issue of whether it's a derivative work, over which there appeared to be some disagreement. (Note: derivative works can be copyrightable if they're sufficiently different to the original.) --Mark H Wilkinson (t, c) 07:42, 12 August 2007 (UTC) A media copyright questions Barnstar
Noah's Ark frustrationsSorry to see your frustration on the Noah's Ark talk page, though I'm not surprised. Tendentious editors, as Taiwan boi certainly seems to be, will wear down anyone's patience eventually. Hope to see you back once the absurdity ends. Sxeptomaniac 20:46, 23 August 2007 (UTC) ThanksThanks for fixing my error. Don't worry, I don't recall ever making that mistake before! (I'll try to make other ones!) -- Ssilvers 00:57, 24 August 2007 (UTC) Fan art of literary charactersCould you re-post your essay at Commons:Village pump? It would be much appreciated. (Hoping we can find good art and willing artists... I believe CBD suggested using comissioned art first - saw it somewhere.) Uthanc 14:34, 25 August 2007 (UTC)
TemplateHello Csernica. I saw that you have identified yourself as someone with excellent knowledge of template coding. I have been trying to create a template that automatically includes my signature in it. It is mostly the same as Template:Welcome. The one I am editing can be found at User:Dantheman531/Welcome. As you can see (if you choose to look), the template ends with {{CURRENTDATE}}. I was wondering if you knew a way so that CURRENTDATE would be subst'ed every time I use this template. Thanks. --דניאל - Dantheman531 20:38, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
... is now a Featured Article, thanks in large part to your contributions. Majoreditor 12:39, 31 August 2007 (UTC) Aragorn and ArwenIn case you missed it, I added something on this here. Carcharoth 16:45, 4 September 2007 (UTC) Oh. I wasn't aware of that; the edit section wasn't clear as to what the reason for those "span" tags was. — Rickyrab | Talk 15:34, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
Just a quick noteTo let you know that I moved your last comment at EA/R up above mine so that it is right below the comments to which it refers. I assumed that you just misplaced it slightly due to the lack of a signature and timestamp for the comment above mine. Regards, Adrian M. H. 00:12, 7 September 2007 (UTC) User TratareHi. I don't know if you're an admin, but I seem to be having some trouble with Talk:Tratare, who is engaging in an edit war with me over the accompanying image of the Jeph Loeb article, without providing any rationale for why the pic he favors is a better image to accompany than article than mine. For my part, I have explained why I think it's a more appropriate image, in part because the pic he favors has been tagged for its unclear copyright status, and mine was one I took and released into the public domain myself. His only response was to revert the article and say, "I don't agree", without any elaboration. You can get an idea of the situation by looking at the Edit Summaries and the discussion I'm attempting to engage with him on his Talk Page. I have had images of mine removed from articles before, so I assure you, I have no problem with it is someone shows how the other image is better. Are you an admin? Thanks. Nightscream 18:43, 7 September 2007 (UTC) ThanksThanks for tidying my efforts. Made me look competent! Ewen 09:40, 14 September 2007 (UTC) Another Thanksthanks for the feedback, i'll keep posting Apotofgold 14:03, 15 September 2007 (UTC) Orphaned non-free media (Image:Relics-return.jpg)Thanks for uploading Image:Relics-return.jpg. The media description page currently specifies that it is non-free and may only be used on Wikipedia under a claim of fair use. However, it is currently orphaned, meaning that it is not used in any articles on Wikipedia. If the media was previously in an article, please go to the article and see why it was removed. You may add it back if you think that that will be useful. However, please note that media for which a replacement could be created are not acceptable for use on Wikipedia (see our policy for non-free media). If you have uploaded other unlicensed media, please check whether they're used in any articles or not. You can find a list of 'image' pages you have edited by clicking on the "my contributions" link (it is located at the very top of any Wikipedia page when you are logged in), and then selecting "Image" from the dropdown box. Note that all non-free media not used in any articles will be deleted after seven days, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. Thank you. BetacommandBot 16:10, 17 September 2007 (UTC) my war aginst demonsWeekly activity reports? It reminded me more of the Weekly World News! -- But|seriously|folks 22:53, 18 September 2007 (UTC) WP:MCQIt didn't seem like clear cut vandalism to me, so I assumed the good faith of that user and moved it to the appropriate place. If I was trying to move piles of garbage to other places, I would have also copied an anon's "bitch" from the header template also. Natalie 00:58, 25 September 2007 (UTC)
PHASE 2 ImageHi there, and thanks for your helpful responses to my question about using a photo of graffiti art. My apologies, but I'm still a bit unclear about what to do about this and was hoping you could clear it up. This is the first image (you can find it at Image:Phase2bubbler.gif) I've uploaded and though I read through some of the copyright and fair use instructions I was not really sure how to proceed. If I want to argue that it is fair use to use this image, and if I do not know who the copyright holder is (other than the fact that it is the person who took the picture) what kind of copyright tag do I need to apply to the image, and how do I explain my rationale for why we could use an unfree image? As of now the copyright status of the image is undetermined, so it will be deleted in a few days. If you could give me a hand with this I'd really appreciate it, or if you're too busy right now I'll try to find someone else more versed in these matters than I. Thanks!--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 02:38, 27 September 2007 (UTC)
SauronThanks for this edit summary—it made me laugh out loud. Entirely true, cogently argued, and perfectly silly. -Phoenixrod 04:53, 29 September 2007 (UTC) Thank you!For your comment on my page helping me with fair use rationales. With you and ybbor I just might have gotten it. Millancad 03:58, 2 October 2007 (UTC) Re: Image:OralFixation2.jpgHello. Please read Template:Non-free use rationale. It says that low resolution pictures are "no more than 300 pixels in width or height", so what I'm doing is uploading low resolution images in place of those that do not match low resolution criteria. Thanks. Daniil Maslyuk 14:01, 3 October 2007 (UTC)
Trinity changes.An anonymous user has made some significant changes to the Economic and Ontological Trinity section of the Trinity article. This is certainly on your watchlist, but I'd just like to bring up this fact, so that it may expedite your review of the information. In general, the presentation is agreeable, though much information was discarded from the previous version. Additionally, there are some sections where the user appears to be arguing a particular POV (e.g. the last paragraph), although this may be based more in the continuation of thought concerning the viewpoint of a denomination (for example, presenting the claims of a group by speaking them directly, rather than adding "They believe..."). In any case, it would seem that this addition should be checked for neutrality, and the information which was discarded should be assessed as well.--C.Logan 18:00, 5 October 2007 (UTC) I hate to bother you again, but I've become involved in a dispute/discussion with an editor who is adding information which appears irrelevant to the topic of Criticism of Christianity. I've explained why on the talk page, but he appears to be listing a simple history of Christianity, and is implying that the internal debates are indeed "criticisms" in and of themselves and therefore are appropriate for listing. I disagree, as in keeping in format with the article as it is, and to avoid original research, we should only list actual criticisms made by individuals or groups explicitly, not implicitly- the fact that a group had internal debates does not mean they "criticized" one another in the popular sense. I hope I'm being clear. In any case, he/she appears to be misreading sources (inexplicably altering the article to claim that Cerularius excommunicated Pope Leo's legates first, as opposed to being a response to their own excommunication of the Patriarch, even though the source noted the latter, and reverting my sourced addition of "orthodox" translating as "correct belief/praise"). If you can, lend some help in the matter. I know you're more familiar with Church history and theology than I may be, and I'll need assistance in making this user's contribution presentable (i.e. listing actual criticisms, which certainly exist; Martin Luther's claims being one example).--C.Logan 15:15, 6 October 2007 (UTC) Origin of religionCsernica, The material you have readded to Religion is highly contentious and consensus seemed to be, months ago when it was kept out of the entry, to keep it out. Will you please join in discussion on the talk page about the merits of this information. Given its history I think we need to keep it out unless there is consensus to put it in. Thanks.PelleSmith 23:23, 9 October 2007 (UTC) |