Ray Comfort: As If We Needed More Proof
I’m writing this mainly so I will have a record of this, because once people start calling Ray out on this, he’s likely to remove it from his website with no explanation, as though it never happened.
Today on this thread on Ray Comfort’s blog, user SmuckersTheDog left this comment (there’s a bunch more, but this is all I could get in one screen shot):

Ha! Clearly this comment is intended as a joke. Yet Ray is not above quoting the non-Fresh-Prince portions of this comment to add to his header, making it appear to the clueless that some people find Ray’s work tenable:

“In reading your books…seeds of doubt about my atheism have been sown.” Wow, Ray, it looks like you’re reaching people! If only we knew a bit more about where this atheist was born and raised! I’m sure some are even wondering where he spent most of his days!
Alternative hypothesis #1: Ray Comfort has never heard of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. I find this unlikely, since Ray lives in the United States of America in the twenty-first century, in southern California, has Hollywood connections, and has even written books about Hollywood.
Alternative hypothesis #2: Ray is busy, and can only skim the comments, and simply missed this part. Since he decided to use a quote from this comment in the header, however, I think it behooves him to read the entire thing. Also, most of it is in verse form. Kind of eye catching.
Taken in context, added to all the other similar things that Ray has done, my conclusion is that he is once again practicing dishonesty.








December 10th, 2008 at 11:56 am
Ray Comfort is like a dog that rolled in dirt and then sleeps on you on your bed.
December 12th, 2008 at 10:14 am
Dur. My favorite is the “I enjoy reading your blog, even though I disagree with just about everything you’ve ever said”
December 19th, 2008 at 12:37 pm
[…] when that guy posted that thing on Ray Comfort’s blog that included the lyrics to the Fresh Prince …? Remember how Ray took one part of that guy’s post and used it to look like positive feedback […]