Bluesball was just being sarcastic and rightly so.Nope, not that far at all. So the second player thinks God left him down? And they are going to change their religion. Really? Yes, that is quite idiotic.
Bluesball was just being sarcastic and rightly so.Nope, not that far at all. So the second player thinks God left him down? And they are going to change their religion. Really? Yes, that is quite idiotic.
Sarcastic or not, it's a idiotic post. People/Sportspeople are religious and pending on their depth of faith, they acknowledge it in winning. Katie Taylor does it all of the time as do soccer players and GAA players.Bluesball was just being sarcastic and rightly so.
But i believe everything you say and i never claimed to be infallible as for the Keane mistake i attend a minimum of 2 games at least per week and as you get older the mind sometimes does make mistakes.
That's all it is, I blame Jesus for every missed putt on the course and it I hit my thumb with a hammer.At a loss to understand how grown adults still think God is a bearded man in the clouds tossing coins on people's lives like Liam Neeson in Clash of the Titans.
One thing to be an atheist, no issue there. But to think God went - "yes Scottie, you will win even though you will 4 putt on the 18th because McIlRoy only turned up on the Sunday and Shane Lowry had a mare on the 4th." - is childish in its interpretation.
If Scottie believes his faith in a.n.other God enhanced his performance and believes he should be thankful, then maybe his faith, misplaced or not, did and he should be thankful.