Please rid the documentary called "the God Who Wasn't There" from the streaming feature of Netflix.

Please rid Netflix of the documentary called "the God Who Wasn't There". Please rid it from the streaming feature of Netflix. It infringes on the religion of other individuals. During the documentary, the director purposely commits the eternal sin just to reveal his hardened heart. Please don't support this director in his endeavors. Please sign this petition. Please spread this petition to your friends, family members, and neighbors. 

Hello there, this is Aaron. Please sign this petition and support removing a documentary from the streaming feature of Netflix. It's called "The God Who Wasn't There". Don't say that I haven't seen this documentary because I've seen it at least 5 times.

 It's not family friendly. Netflix usually connotes family members gathering together to watch Netflix. That's how Netflix represents itself. "The God Who Wasn't There" isn't friendly for people of religion. I feel that documentary infringes on the faith of Christians. I understand that everyone has the right to believe whatever they want, but the thing that documentary does is it inhibits that behavior of religion. It inhibits it because it ridicules Christianity. It arrogantly brings up the failure of Christians. It makes followers of Jesus look bad.  The documentary forces you to think one way about religion and not the other.  This documentary isn't even objective. It places emphasis on embarrassing people and making other people look bad. Now what type of documentaries do those connote?

The documentary spouts all types of lies that professors of religion would disagree with. And people won't understand because not everyone attends college courses. During the documentary he went outside a Billy Graham Crusade and started trying to lead other Christians astray.  How insensitive is it to go to a spiritual crusade and convict people on pagan Gods. He went to a well-known spiritual movement just to mock and ridicule Christians for their faith and religion. Billy Graham is known to be one of history's most influential Christian pastors. He attracts millions of people to his crusade. The director Brian Flemming most likely looked for vulnerable Christians and asked them some arrogant questions. He did something else during the documentary. He went to a Christian school filled with children and embarrassed the authority in regards to how they should run things. Imagine an Atheist trying to explain to people how they should run their Christian schools.  If I'm not considering religious freedom, then what did Brian Flemming do? This "let it be" concept needs to work both ways. This "objective" standpoint needs to be done both ways. And Brian Flemming shows nothing like that in his documentary.

The documentary also showcases the director trying to do the eternal sin (that sin is unforgivable according to the Gospel). It's inconsiderate (and insensitive) to make viewers sit through that.   And the guy who directed that documentary got the people of Youtube to do the eternal sin, just so they can win a shoddy cheap prize.  The incentive to getting the people of Youtube to give into eternal damnation was his shoddy documentary. Doesn't the director come into play in regards to keeping a program on Netflix? 

In the documentary, the director Brian Flemming purposely gave a direct confrontation to born again Christians and embarrassed them by referring to Jesus as being similar to other pagan Gods. He made them look pathetic. Brian Flemming most likely feels better after having other individuals commit the eternal sin (alongside him). He feels better after publicizing his eternal sin on camera for everyone to witness. He did this in the documentary that he created. Now what about stopping people from seeing someone WASTE Christianity. He most likely sleeps better at night after having the people of Youtube broadcast themselves committing the eternal sin. What Brian Flemming wanted was for people to commit themselves to eternal damnation (that's what he did). He created a video on Youtube trying to make other people give into the eternal sin (just so they could win a shoddy documentary). The documentary that Brian Flemming created forces people to continue in the eternal sin. Brian Flemming told the people of Youtube to broadcast themselves committing the eternal sin. A lot of streamers watched those people make a shameful display of themselves.

People who commit something that is eternal in the hopes of winning a DVD are not sound in logic or rationality. The director decided to pin his hopes on those non-believers who probably would readily give into getting an easy fix. Why does the director need to complete someone's non-belief by getting them completely damned to Hell? A non-believer doesn't know about the Holy Spirit and has no regard for the eternal sin. Does it even need to be apparent when they have no regard over the subject? That's why it's trickery. Those non-believers are doing something they have no regard for.  The director lured people into doing the eternal sin. And think about this. If Christianity is the right religion then what did a thousand people do in return for giving up their soul.

Following Jesus is something cherish-able and precious. People who follow Jesus usually exhibit some peace in their lives and Brian Flemming wants to take away their peace and have them live in a sinful and Godless lifestyle. He showcased this during the documentary as well as showing this on Youtube. He gave the people of Youtube an ultimatum. "Do the eternal sin and get a CHEAP documentary or don't do it and live without the documentary". Imagine. Imagine all those people on Youtube commit themselves into eternal damnation with no hopes of ever coming out of Hell. Those people gave up their soul for a CHEAP documentary.   Look at all those people on Youtube commit the eternal sin just to win an arrogant documentary just to continue in the way of the eternal sin.

Look at all of them blindly follow Brian Flemming into eternal damnation.We don't need someone to request for eternal damnation over winning a DVD. Losing your soul and gaining a DVD in return is extravagant. He's influencing people to lose Jesus through broadcasting themselves committing the eternal sin. Do you know how shameful it is to witness someone doing something that is eternal? We don't have to support people that go that far in expression.

 


Brian Flemming had an ultimatum which was for a thousand people to broadcast themselves doing the eternal sin. Anyone who did such a thing got a copy of his documentary as a reward for committing the eternal sin (on camera, for everyone to witness).

The ultimatum was reserved for 1001 people who had to broadcast themselves doing the eternal sin.

Do you know what this means? It means that 1001 people lost their souls just to win a shoddy cheap prize (the documentary). Imagine. Imagine 1000 people.

Here's evidence that the director did such a thing. http://www.blasphemychallenge.com/

It says this on the website:

UPDATE: The Rational Response Squad has awarded all 1001 DVDs of The God Who Wasn't There to participants in the Blasphemy Challenge. If you want a copy of the movie, you'll have to buy it the old fashioned way at the official site. The following is provided for historical purposes:


I understand that this blasphemy challenge is over, but there's something about people who do things like that, that shouldn't have their works established in popular settings. This is especially true considering that the documentary was what led people into broadcasting themselves doing the eternal sin.

Please don't support the director who did such a thing. Please don't support the director in his endeavors.

 


Don't you see how shameful it is to see the results of broadcasting yourself doing the eternal sin and inciting all these opinions on Youtube (from real people). Brian Flemming made it clear that he wanted people to fall away from Christendom by causing the people of Youtube to commit themselves into eternal damnation. How is that respectful of another person's religion? How is winning a DVD worthy for living in Hell for all eternity? What is it worth if what you got was a DVD after understanding that what you did was something eternal?

He even got a child to do the eternal sin. Here's evidence that he did such a thing. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BEIWjjUCPM I have told you one and now I have told you another. 

The director doesn't want religious freedom. He wants people to do the eternal sin. That type of base isn't consistent in regards to good documentaries. A good documentary is set on informative facts. It does not have to arrogantly embarrass or make people look bad.



Pretty please sign this petition and support the removal of the documentary called "The God Who Wasn't There". Please sign this and have it be removed from the streaming feature of Netflix. Thank you for giving this petition a chance. God bless your heart, Thank you again, I appreciate this.

 
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