Nah. I'm not on Facebook anymore. But this law could easily affect places like reddit and lemmy and mastodon, twitter, and the rest of the internet. It sets a bad precedent.
I'm not so sure that Satan didn't get to design any part of our brains. In the fall, we are subject to the affects of sin - even our reasoning is affected by sin. So in some way at least, Satan has affected our brains. We are flawed in our thinking because of it.
However, it's not wrong to ask questions. It's good to ask questions. That's actually usually how I start evangelizing people. I ask them questions. And then I seek to try to get them to ask questions. Once people start asking questions - good questions... they realize that there's more to life than only what they can see with their eyes.
Click on the post so that you're viewing the page (rather than the list of posts). Then select the triple dot, then 'Community'
2 Peter 3:8-9 "But do not overlook this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. The Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance."
I think these verses directly answer your question, though I realize that might be an unsatisfying answer to you.
Yes. I've done it.
Removed for trolling
I drive an EV now. Where's the 'never' option?
African or European?
If you're counting Augustine, then he'd be my favorite.
But if you're thinking closer to the actual reformation and people who really did try to bring some needed correction to the Roman Catholic Church, then yeah, I'd say Jan Hus. Although, I think he's the one I'm the most familiar with anyway.
I have no love for tech bosses.
Let me ask you - do you think we shouldn't be allowed to share links to news articles on Lemmy?