Here is the full story:
UT Fan Credits Prayer by Texas A&M Fan with Saving His Life
https://www.wate.com/sports/orange-and-white-nation/ut-fan-credits-prayer-by-texas-am-fan-with-saving-his-life/
Edit: I now see also posted above.
Ain't he though? Such a nice guy, bless his heartdachsie said:A fine example of being an Aggie......PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:Someone who can't read the room. Someone who can't read a thread title. Someone who just wants to be a jerk.PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:Right on point for someone like you.PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:And there are plenty of other threads for this. You were out of line. Move on.PanzerAggie06 said:Detmersdislocatedshoulder said:Arrakis ecologist said:
Perhaps this Ag Fan could pray for the team as well.
don't be that guy
god is good
It's the football forum not the Bible forum. Lighten up Jebus.
Thanks for the advice muffin. Again, football, not the Bible or Jebus, is the point of this forum. No one ****ing cares where you, or how you, worship. So don't bore us with it.
How's that for "out of line"?
Haha. Someone like me? Please, enlighten me. What kind of person am I? This should be glorious.
Someone who is easy to ignore from now on.
It's fine punkin. You'll get those panties unbunched at any time now. Then you'll be just dandy.
dachsie said:A fine example of being an Aggie......PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:Someone who can't read the room. Someone who can't read a thread title. Someone who just wants to be a jerk.PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:Right on point for someone like you.PanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:And there are plenty of other threads for this. You were out of line. Move on.PanzerAggie06 said:Detmersdislocatedshoulder said:Arrakis ecologist said:
Perhaps this Ag Fan could pray for the team as well.
don't be that guy
god is good
It's the football forum not the Bible forum. Lighten up Jebus.
Thanks for the advice muffin. Again, football, not the Bible or Jebus, is the point of this forum. No one ****ing cares where you, or how you, worship. So don't bore us with it.
How's that for "out of line"?
Haha. Someone like me? Please, enlighten me. What kind of person am I? This should be glorious.
Someone who is easy to ignore from now on.
It's fine punkin. You'll get those panties unbunched at any time now. Then you'll be just dandy.
PanzerAggie06 said:cavscout96 said:apparently you DO care or you wouldn't be admonishing us to take it elsewherePanzerAggie06 said:MooreTrucker said:And there are plenty of other threads for this. You were out of line. Move on.PanzerAggie06 said:Detmersdislocatedshoulder said:Arrakis ecologist said:
Perhaps this Ag Fan could pray for the team as well.
don't be that guy
god is good
It's the football forum not the Bible forum. Lighten up Jebus.
Thanks for the advice muffin. Again, football, not the Bible or Jebus, is the point of this forum. No one ****ing cares where you, or how you, worship. So don't bore us with it.
How's that for "out of line"?
Reading comprehension is a thing sweet cheeks. Try again.
Ghost91 said:
Situations like this usually have a way of ticking off everyone regardless of where they fall on the religion continuum.
While it makes for a nifty feel-good story as well as another data point for the 'Ags are better fans than everyone else' narrative, it also raises all the usual questions from the not-quite-as-religious side:
- Why wouldn't God just not let the bad thing happen in the first place?
- So if the good 'ol Ags hadn't been there to beg God to not let him die, God would've just let him die? But instead God was like, "Wow! Look at all these incoming prayers coming from Knoxville, maybe I should give this a second look!! If there were just the usual 3 or 4 people begging, I'd say 'nah' and let him die in agony in front of his family. But there's like a dozen people pleading for this guy!!".
- And then there's the 'every scenario is a win for God'. As in, Guy goes to game and returns home safe and sound without incident - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his 'spine attack' (whatever that is) but lives thanks to prayers - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his attack but dies despite prayers because God is busy with Israel or Taylor Swift's new boyfriend or something - God is good, he has called home his good soldier to paradise!
Just seems silly when you set aside the emotion and apply logic.
cavscout96 said:Ghost91 said:
Situations like this usually have a way of ticking off everyone regardless of where they fall on the religion continuum.
While it makes for a nifty feel-good story as well as another data point for the 'Ags are better fans than everyone else' narrative, it also raises all the usual questions from the not-quite-as-religious side:
- Why wouldn't God just not let the bad thing happen in the first place?
- So if the good 'ol Ags hadn't been there to beg God to not let him die, God would've just let him die? But instead God was like, "Wow! Look at all these incoming prayers coming from Knoxville, maybe I should give this a second look!! If there were just the usual 3 or 4 people begging, I'd say 'nah' and let him die in agony in front of his family. But there's like a dozen people pleading for this guy!!".
- And then there's the 'every scenario is a win for God'. As in, Guy goes to game and returns home safe and sound without incident - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his 'spine attack' (whatever that is) but lives thanks to prayers - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his attack but dies despite prayers because God is busy with Israel or Taylor Swift's new boyfriend or something - God is good, he has called home his good soldier to paradise!
Just seems silly when you set aside the emotion and apply logic.
Conversely, you could just admit that God IS good, all the time, in every circumstance, just like you've described.
Ghost91 said:
Situations like this usually have a way of ticking off everyone regardless of where they fall on the religion continuum.
While it makes for a nifty feel-good story as well as another data point for the 'Ags are better fans than everyone else' narrative, it also raises all the usual questions from the not-quite-as-religious side:
- Why wouldn't God just not let the bad thing happen in the first place?
- So if the good 'ol Ags hadn't been there to beg God to not let him die, God would've just let him die? But instead God was like, "Wow! Look at all these incoming prayers coming from Knoxville, maybe I should give this a second look!! If there were just the usual 3 or 4 people begging, I'd say 'nah' and let him die in agony in front of his family. But there's like a dozen people pleading for this guy!!".
- And then there's the 'every scenario is a win for God'. As in, Guy goes to game and returns home safe and sound without incident - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his 'spine attack' (whatever that is) but lives thanks to prayers - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his attack but dies despite prayers because God is busy with Israel or Taylor Swift's new boyfriend or something - God is good, he has called home his good soldier to paradise!
Just seems silly when you set aside the emotion and apply logic.
You do seem easily offendedMooreTrucker said:These days, as easily as some people are to get offended, it's a valid question.Ghost91 said:GigEm81 said:
The Ags asked him if he believed in God and prayed over him.
Did this strike anyone else as weird? So if he'd said 'No', does that mean the Ags would've turned around and walked off? Or lectured him? Or done that one weird Yell with the train whistle thing? Or prayed for his quick demise instead of speedy recovery?
And I suspect if he'd said "no" they would have just left him alone, instead of all of that dumb stuff you mentioned.
Nope, not at all. My point stands. Some people these days are hair-triggered to be offended about religion, so to ask is a smart and even courteous thing.ClearlyJustSomeAg said:You do seem easily offendedMooreTrucker said:These days, as easily as some people are to get offended, it's a valid question.Ghost91 said:GigEm81 said:
The Ags asked him if he believed in God and prayed over him.
Did this strike anyone else as weird? So if he'd said 'No', does that mean the Ags would've turned around and walked off? Or lectured him? Or done that one weird Yell with the train whistle thing? Or prayed for his quick demise instead of speedy recovery?
And I suspect if he'd said "no" they would have just left him alone, instead of all of that dumb stuff you mentioned.
Ghost91 said:
Situations like this usually have a way of ticking off everyone regardless of where they fall on the religion continuum.
While it makes for a nifty feel-good story as well as another data point for the 'Ags are better fans than everyone else' narrative, it also raises all the usual questions from the not-quite-as-religious side:
- Why wouldn't God just not let the bad thing happen in the first place?
- So if the good 'ol Ags hadn't been there to beg God to not let him die, God would've just let him die? But instead God was like, "Wow! Look at all these incoming prayers coming from Knoxville, maybe I should give this a second look!! If there were just the usual 3 or 4 people begging, I'd say 'nah' and let him die in agony in front of his family. But there's like a dozen people pleading for this guy!!".
- And then there's the 'every scenario is a win for God'. As in, Guy goes to game and returns home safe and sound without incident - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his 'spine attack' (whatever that is) but lives thanks to prayers - God is good!
Guy goes to game, has his attack but dies despite prayers because God is busy with Israel or Taylor Swift's new boyfriend or something - God is good, he has called home his good soldier to paradise!
Just seems silly when you set aside the emotion and apply logic.