02-26-2015, 06:05 PM
(02-26-2015, 04:26 PM)rayheinrich Wrote: "But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral,Fuck me....what have I started?
those who practice the magic arts, the idolaters and poets – they will be consigned
to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death." - Revelation 21:8
Is this a warning of the second coming?
....it's OK. Once billy gets his line back HE will return!
tectak
(02-26-2015, 12:52 PM)Erthona Wrote: Tom, (the last shall be first)Nay no more....from the mouth of the wife of the horse....
There is no doubt that you kneed me, it is something you do frequently.
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Dale: "Wow, "coprolalic" a triple word score. That's just the shits"
Tom: Oh do look it up...do....do....do! Fuck.
Evidently you were having trouble reading. --> That's just the shits<-- Obviously I know what the word means and do not need to do so.
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Dale : This is an interesting sentence, reminds me of Kant. That is by the time you get to the end of it, you've forgotten what the first of it was about. You mean
Tom: THIS sentence? What were you saying?
Sorry I meant the one above (here it is below):
"What hurts us more than faith is not the forlorn hope that by our prayers, the agonised will be relieved but that at best, by grimaced grace, we by forgiveness are reprieved."
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"Each twinge that twists is small distress." How exactly does a "twinge" "twist," outside of Dr, Seuss that is? Seems a bit peculiar. Oh come come! A twinge in a muscle...
A bit of a reach don't you think?
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"Tosser" or "Terrier" choose!
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Rose for Tom
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Acutally the most well known version , the one on all the stuff, is as follows:
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference."
http://alcoholism.about.com/library/origin.htm?
The card, which came from a bookshop in England, called it the "General's Prayer," dating it back to the fourteenth century! There are still other claims, and no doubt more unearthings will continue for years to come. In any event, Mrs. Reinhold Niebuhr told an interviewer that her husband was definitely the prayer's author, that she had seen the piece of paper on which he had written it, and that her husband-now that there were numerous variations of wording -"used and preferred" the following form:
"God, give us grace to accept with serenity
the things that cannot be changed,
Courage to change the things which should be changed,
and the wisdom to distinguish the one from the other."
tectak

