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EricPH wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2021, 9:36 amYour first is un-qualified, which is why you understand me incorrectly.Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 2nd, 2021, 12:14 pm Who is more likely to use genocide and kill instead of cure, Yahweh or Satan?If you can only see a satanic god; I can understand why you don't believe in his existence. I don't believe this satanic god as the creator of all that is seen and unseen either.
Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2021, 6:54 pm I do not believe in your version of a god because mine has shown itself to be more moral.I look towards what God said is the greatest. To love God and to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves. If we could be kind to each other as God commands; then the world would be a better place.
EricPH wrote: ↑December 6th, 2021, 8:00 amSo you think a genocidal evil god is wort following.Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 3rd, 2021, 6:54 pm I do not believe in your version of a god because mine has shown itself to be more moral.I look towards what God said is the greatest. To love God and to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves. If we could be kind to each other as God commands; then the world would be a better place.
Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 12th, 2021, 5:07 pmIf god were genocidal, he would not command us to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves.EricPH wrote: ↑December 6th, 2021, 8:00 amSo you think a genocidal evil god is wort following.
I look towards what God said is the greatest. To love God and to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves. If we could be kind to each other as God commands; then the world would be a better place.
EricPH wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 2:04 am????Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 12th, 2021, 5:07 pmIf god were genocidal, he would not command us to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves.EricPH wrote: ↑December 6th, 2021, 8:00 amSo you think a genocidal evil god is wort following.
I look towards what God said is the greatest. To love God and to love all our neighbours as we love ourselves. If we could be kind to each other as God commands; then the world would be a better place.
You say there is no god, but can you prove how the universe came to be purely by natural causes.
Can you conclusively show how life started from no life purely by natural causes.
Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 7:48 pmI've never understood this objection to the Christian God. I'm an atheist, myself (agnostic, I suppose, but atheist for all practical purposes), but if God created humans as mortal beings, he knew we were all going to die. He created us to die. What is "genocide" to God? He's "genocided" everyone who was ever born, by creating the world as we know it.
What was/is Noah's flood and Jesus' Armageddon if not genocides, and a show of hate from a god who you believers claim can cure just as easily as kill....
Ecurb wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 9:13 pmMorality is at issue, and any god who can cure as well as kill, and chooses to kill, is an evil to his core God.Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 7:48 pmI've never understood this objection to the Christian God. I'm an atheist, myself (agnostic, I suppose, but atheist for all practical purposes), but if God created humans as mortal beings, he knew we were all going to die. He created us to die. What is "genocide" to God? He's "genocided" everyone who was ever born, by creating the world as we know it.
What was/is Noah's flood and Jesus' Armageddon if not genocides, and a show of hate from a god who you believers claim can cure just as easily as kill....
Besides, from God's perspective, death may not be so bad. I mean, what if you get to loll around on clouds, playing harps? Maybe that's a little boring, but there's probably some other good fun, like scaring Shepherds tending their flocks by night.
Complaining that God killed those first-born Egyptians is no different from complaining that God made mortal humans in the first place. Merry Christmas!
Ecurb wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 9:13 pmI can help. I have a friend who grew up two doors down from me. He became an evangelist Christian and was deeply involved, giving sermons and helping with gay conversion therapy. Over time, married with children, he had to accept that he himself was gay. He left the church an absolute mess from the conversion therapy. Ever since he's been an activist for gay people damaged by religious institutions. Not a fan of the church, these days.Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 7:48 pmI've never understood this objection to the Christian God.
What was/is Noah's flood and Jesus' Armageddon if not genocides, and a show of hate from a god who you believers claim can cure just as easily as kill....
Sy Borg wrote: ↑December 22nd, 2021, 7:34 pmI go along with everything else you wrote. Fine. This is that part I questioned in my post. The perspective is a human one. Of course from our perspective floods and famines seem horrible. Death seems terrible to us mortals. But if God knows what will happen when we die, is death horrible to Him? And if it isn't terrible to Him -- if, indeed, it is rebirth to a better place for those He loves -- why would all of those slaughters constitute "atrocities"?
As for God itself, the OT is replete with its frequent unnecessarily violent atrocities. You can't whitewash that with a feelgood second testament. That's akin to a rapist offering his victim a bunch of flowers and a box of chocolates.
Ecurb wrote: ↑December 22nd, 2021, 8:34 pmA fair point. Still, the OT God was a vindictive character, seemingly capable of far less wisdom than the most wise humans. Come to think of it, numerous mythological gods are posited as fools that are entirely subject to their most base emotions, never questioning themselves.Sy Borg wrote: ↑December 22nd, 2021, 7:34 pmI go along with everything else you wrote. Fine. This is that part I questioned in my post. The perspective is a human one. Of course from our perspective floods and famines seem horrible. Death seems terrible to us mortals. But if God knows what will happen when we die, is death horrible to Him? And if it isn't terrible to Him -- if, indeed, it is rebirth to a better place for those He loves -- why would all of those slaughters constitute "atrocities"?
As for God itself, the OT is replete with its frequent unnecessarily violent atrocities. You can't whitewash that with a feelgood second testament. That's akin to a rapist offering his victim a bunch of flowers and a box of chocolates.
Ecurb wrote: ↑December 22nd, 2021, 8:34 pmThe Problem of Pain seems a more difficult one for Christian apologists than a few billion killings, which might, after all, be a kindness to the departed.Seems largely sound to me. Suffering is usually posited as character-building, eg. hair shirts, and Mother Teresa famously loved to see people suffering as she believed that it would make them better people before they succumbed to their poorly treated ailments. In this scenario, it's as if we were sculptures in progress, except that it hurts us every time God chips off a piece.
I'm not saying any of this is true -- just that, given the story, my apologetic seems logically sound.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑December 22nd, 2021, 7:34 pmThe recent child abuse scandals in churches, and subsequent cover ups and lack of justice and mercy among senior churchmen is ample evidence of toxic corporations.Ecurb wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 9:13 pmI can help. I have a friend who grew up two doors down from me. He became an evangelist Christian and was deeply involved, giving sermons and helping with gay conversion therapy. Over time, married with children, he had to accept that he himself was gay. He left the church an absolute mess from the conversion therapy. Ever since he's been an activist for gay people damaged by religious institutions. Not a fan of the church, these days.Greatest I am wrote: ↑December 21st, 2021, 7:48 pmI've never understood this objection to the Christian God.
What was/is Noah's flood and Jesus' Armageddon if not genocides, and a show of hate from a god who you believers claim can cure just as easily as kill....
Or another example, again really an issue with adherents' behaviour than God. I used to work at a scientific institution and those working in evolutionary biology would sometimes travel to do public classes, and Christians were always trying to cause problems. It became intense and toxic.
As for God itself, the OT is replete with its frequent unnecessarily violent atrocities. You can't whitewash that with a feelgood second testament. That's akin to a rapist offering his victim a bunch of flowers and a box of chocolates.
I am agnostic, personally, and take the Bible and other myths as the metaphors they were intended to be. Amusingly, and sometime horrifyingly, many modern people are so naive and gormless that they take the scriptures' blatantly metaphorical content literally.
I feel this disconnect is related to ignorance of, and consequent hostility, towards science. When there is too much information available for one to test personally, one can:
1) either trust the information implicitly - orthodoxy,
2) largely trust the information, but with some reservations,
3) reserve judgement entirely and focus on less macro issues
4) learn just enough science to try to justify predetermined positions,
or 5) dismiss the information entirely.
In a society with significantly divergent bodies of knowledge - the science strands and the esoteric strands, options 2) and 3) strike me as the logical choices. However, due to current hostilities 1) and 5) are becoming more prevalent. It seems that religions need to transform themselves to avoid behaving like toxic corporations*.
* Not saying all corps are toxic, but some certainly are, eg. certain media organisations that promote divisions or arms and mercenary companies that feed on war.
As for God itself, the OT is replete with its frequent unnecessarily violent atrocities. You can't whitewash that with a feelgood second testament. That's akin to a rapist offering his victim a bunch of flowers and a box of chocolates.Me, I view the atrocities as part of the history of God and theistic culture, culminating in the life and work of Jesus of Nazareth. God's history is not at an end yet, and I hope that broadly Christian morality will prevail, and encompass other sects such as Islam, Buddhism, and Wicca.
[quote=Belindi post_Most church goers are saddened and shocked that this happened. But when these people abandon God and do what they choose to do; how can you blame God when they go against God's commands?
The recent child abuse scandals in churches, and subsequent cover ups and lack of justice and mercy among senior churchmen is ample evidence of toxic corporations.
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