Free Kill

The premise though is to kill them just after birth so he wouldn't have had the time to do all that stuff between wise men and crucifiction before being rezzed. Not sure how much religion you can get out of baby born, baby dies, baby ressurects and pops off to heaven.

The point stands - do you really think the son of God would be beyond rezzing twice? First time as a baby, then he gets on with his life, then gets killed and does it again?
 
The point stands - do you really think the son of God would be beyond rezzing twice? First time as a baby, then he gets on with his life, then gets killed and does it again?

The miracle of ressurection starts getting a bit dull if you have to keep doing it!


He referred to his father in heaven... That's pretty clear...

So does the Lord's Prayer, doesn't make us all Jesus. :D
 
All those saying Jesus... you'd probably want to kill the Roman leaders that made him up in the first place.
 
Much more to do with criminal psychology than laziness really. If you've just killed someone you're not thinking logically you're thinking with a mind for survival. For example, if you have a body in your boot 99% of the time you are going to drive down a main route and take your first left then first left again and dump the body there, why? because your sub-concious doesn't want to cross the path of oncoming traffic and risk collision nor does it want the body in the car for too long.

very interesting...

I always thought somewhere like rannoch moor..very bleak.
 
All those saying Jesus... you'd probably want to kill the Roman leaders that made him up in the first place.

Jesus was created by roman leaders? either way getting rid of his name/idea's would cause a serious change in the way the world is now. Would certainly be more interesting than killing myself, or becoming my own granddad.
 
He referred to his father in heaven... That's pretty clear...

Gilly is correct. Not one time in the bible does Jesus say "I am the Son of God". There are, however, numerous occasions where he refers to the father and being his son, etc. As such he "never claimed to be the Son of God".

We are all supposedly sons of God in some way. First line of The Lord's prayer "Our Father, who art in heaven..."
 
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But I'd have to exist in order to cease my own existance otherwise I wouldn't have been able to kill me!

As soon as you killed yourself as a child you would diminish into a pile of dust!

I always thought somewhere like rannoch moor..very bleak.

You have thought into this WAY to much... or maybe you have something on your conscience!? Police, Police! Get to Rannoch Moor!
 
As soon as you killed yourself as a child you would diminish into a pile of dust!

Ah but if that were the case I could never have gone back to kill myself. This is what is known as a paradox and the only way it would make sense is if time is linear.

Basically I go back in my original timeline to when I was a small child and kill myself.

Now a Point of divergence is created and I(being my future self) have caused the original timeline to continue from the point at which I killed myself on parallel timeline.

Therefore the original timeline while being the original future is a part of the parallel timelines past and has thus become past and the parallel timeline becomes the continuation of the original.
 
Gilly is correct. Not one time in the bible does Jesus say "I am the Son of God". There are, however, numerous occasions where he refers to the father and being his son, etc. As such he "never claimed to be the Son of God".

If I remember my Dark Ages module at uni, I believe the Church actually decided that Jesus was more than just a man (i.e. immortal) and the son of God at the Council of Nicea about 350 years after his death.

I might be wrong though, I didn't particularly enjoy the course :p
 
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