Let me emphasize that no one — including adults— should have a blog or personal website. … Blogging has become a socially accepted practice — just as are dating seriously too young, underage drinking and general misbehaving. But just because someone else “jumps off the cliff” does not mean you should do the same.” That’s right, folks. blogging is just as evil as underage drinking! I had no idea — did you?

Visit site:

http://www.thercg.org/youth/articles/0403-bagy.html

Comments

  1. 001 // Keith // 10.13.2006 // 7:36 PM

    That’s pretty damn funny.

  2. 002 // Brian Ford // 10.13.2006 // 9:40 PM

    After reading this, I seeded it to Newsvine, and something struck me while reading it:

    In essence — isn’t what the author just wrote a blog?

  3. 003 // Adam Spooner // 10.13.2006 // 10:11 PM

    Where do you find this stuff?!?! Why in the world would somone say something so rediculously abhorrent. It’s Christians like this, the boycotting, anti-this-and-that, God-hates-such-and-such that give Christ such a bad image. Boo to them.

  4. 004 // Sam // 10.14.2006 // 6:24 AM

    Hot damn, now I’m guilty of all those things!

  5. 005 // Matthew Croft // 10.14.2006 // 11:41 AM

    I wonder if God allows me to keep a diary? I guess Anne Frank went to hell because she wrote her thoughts down and published them. Atleast I know I get to meet her.

    I think Brian is right, this guy is blogging. Atleast I can argue with him in hell as well.

  6. 006 // Brian Ford // 10.14.2006 // 2:03 PM

    Actually, in the article he mentions that a diary or journal is okay because it keeps your thoughts private and is not the sin of vanity that blogging happens to be — because blogging publicizes your thoughts.

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