I was a bit lazy with my words when I wrote that post. My argument goes more like this:Your current rewording doesn’t improve your argument in any way. You suggested specifically that an argument which suggested that bad things in the world could also be attributed to God was, “decidedly illogical, unbalanced and, dare I say, unfair”. Yet you have completely ignored my counter-example, written more than 160 years ago, a much earlier claim. I asked you twice if you thought it was logical, balanced and fair. Unsurprisingly, you haven’t answered.
If all the bad things in the world can be used to argue AGAINST the existence of God, then all the good things in the world can be used to argue FOR the existence of God. Furthermore, if one thinks life is worth living, then one must believe that there are more good things in the world than bad things - in which case, there is more evidence for the existence of God than the non-existence of God.
Moreover, you clearly grasp the point I was trying to make:
If God made all the good things, and if he is omnipotent, then he would also be capable of making bad things.
Exactly. So a claim for only good or only bad things for an omnipotent God – whatever that means precisely - is likely to be illogical, unbalanced and unfair.
I often hear atheists citing the bad things in the world as evidence against the existence of God, but they conveniently ignore the flip side of their logic.It is not their logic! Atheists are not making a claim for an omnipotent God! They may, however, be pointing out one of the consequences of such a claim.
If you are incapable of imagining why God might make ‘bad things’, then that is your problem, since you are unable to explain what seems to be an inherent contradiction. If God is omnipotent and if God made everything – big ‘ifs’, considering that you yourself accept that it might be a fantasy - then why do you only want to talk about what you consider to be ‘good things’? Why do you then consider it to be “decidedly illogical, unbalanced and, dare I say, unfair” that somebody might want to point out that the world does not consist entirely of ‘good things’?
Incidentally, I find the ‘good things’/’bad things’ argument almost childishly simplistic in itself, but I am going along with it to avoid unnecessary expansion and deviation.
According to my religion, "God is love", so the thought of a loving God making bad things doesn't make any sense. My religion also teaches that bad things are not of God's making, but are a result of the Original Sin of Adam and Eve.What you believe and what you can argue in a philosophy forum are two different things. I asked you long ago if you considered it your moral duty to do as you are told – or what you are ‘taught’ - and you never answered me. It is a significant question because, if all that concerns you is that you do what you are told or 'taught', then why does logic, balance and fairness even matter to you? If you are unable to discern the mind of God, then who are you to question 'Him'?
I also asked you, specifically, in my last post, “If you are asserting a lack of logic, then where do you think that arises? In the claim that ‘God is good’ or in an atheist questioning of this claim?” You now transpose ‘God is good’ for ‘God is love’, whilst continuing to have problems with ‘bad things’. Yet, astonishingly, you have tried to criticise atheists for the exact lack of logic, balance and ‘fairness’ which your position illustrates.
By the way, I am not particularly interested in what your religion teaches you. What does interest me is what you actually believe and, if you want me to understand that position, how you can provide reasons for that belief. Or, if you are criticising others, then how that criticism can be justified.