Bulbasaur
Get in my pokéball, baby!
★★★★★
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2025
- Posts
- 27,209
- Online time
- 19h 38m
I will say once again that this is the best cope. Incels such as Saint Paul or John the Baptizer are venerated by the Church. This might seem unimportant, but at the very least it means that "virgin" is not an insult, because holy men were virgins.
Users here sometimes claim that happy church couples mog them when they go to there. I’d say it depends. Many churches are filled with 70 year old widower pigeon ladies. Literally.
Users also say that God, were He to exist, is not praiseworthy, mildly put, because He made them ugly and unlovable. This is basically the age old question: "If God is all good and all powerful, why is there evil in the world?" The same question can be posed by a person born extremely poor in the slums of Nigeria, or someone in a wheelchair, and so on. To this, I’ll admit, there is no answer that would satisfy an extremely skeptical person. Christians sometimes say that this is because people choose evil and God respects free will. Yet some evils, say, inborn genetic diseases, do not involve acts of will. Christians also say that some hardships are blessings in disguise. Meaning, let’s say you get rejected a lot, this makes you brave, then, when you're brave, God will give you a wife and you can be a stalwart protector of your family. Yet some people die without ever getting married. But what I’d say is that it is possible to sort of gloss over this question.
The reason to skip over the question theodicy is simple: whatever the will of God, church provides benefits. In church, you can join a men’s Bible study group and talk to people in real life, no matter how ugly or autistic you are. It’s something.
Users here sometimes claim that happy church couples mog them when they go to there. I’d say it depends. Many churches are filled with 70 year old widower pigeon ladies. Literally.
Users also say that God, were He to exist, is not praiseworthy, mildly put, because He made them ugly and unlovable. This is basically the age old question: "If God is all good and all powerful, why is there evil in the world?" The same question can be posed by a person born extremely poor in the slums of Nigeria, or someone in a wheelchair, and so on. To this, I’ll admit, there is no answer that would satisfy an extremely skeptical person. Christians sometimes say that this is because people choose evil and God respects free will. Yet some evils, say, inborn genetic diseases, do not involve acts of will. Christians also say that some hardships are blessings in disguise. Meaning, let’s say you get rejected a lot, this makes you brave, then, when you're brave, God will give you a wife and you can be a stalwart protector of your family. Yet some people die without ever getting married. But what I’d say is that it is possible to sort of gloss over this question.
The reason to skip over the question theodicy is simple: whatever the will of God, church provides benefits. In church, you can join a men’s Bible study group and talk to people in real life, no matter how ugly or autistic you are. It’s something.





