Joshua10 wrote: ↑September 3rd, 2022, 3:28 pm
LuckyR wrote: ↑September 3rd, 2022, 3:01 pm
Joshua10 wrote: ↑September 3rd, 2022, 9:39 am
LuckyR wrote: ↑September 2nd, 2022, 4:15 am
Uummm... gods do wrong things all the time. Ares slept with Hephaestus' wife Aphrodite and then got caught at it by Helios. Big mistake, since then Helios ratted him out. Very embarrassing.
I would say that a one true God doesn’t make mistakes.That would make that God imperfect.
Sorry to burst your bubble but every believer of a religion believes that their gods are the "true" gods.
The point I am making comes back around to my rejection of secular science simply because it is unable to answer all my deeper enquiries and makes no connection whatsoever at the psychological level.I would suggest that only natures science can do that.Secular science also claims that there is no such thing as good and bad but then decides the need for rules or else society would collapse.I believe that that is the secular sciences weakest link.Where does that remote sense of right and wrong come from?Even if it stems from mechanical reasoning, which I would suggest it doesn’t,if even mechanical reasoning comes to a conclusion that rules are required or else society would collapse then I would suggest there has always been a difference between right and wrong.Now I would suggest that if there has always been a difference between right and wrong then the deeper question is what is that difference? This brings me to a God who would need to keep those rules perfectly or else be a hypocrite.Which brings me back to my point that I believe that a God would keep rules perfectly if that God created them in the first place.
So much to unpack here.
No doubt there are those who do not deal well with the concept that some things are (currently) unknown and some are perhaps unknowable. Such folks are, of course drawn to identities that claim to know everything. No surprise there.
Personally when someone or something makes extraordinary claims, that makes me automatically suspicious, especially when extraordinary evidence to back it up is not forthcoming. But others differ (which may be why con artists can make a living).
As to your use of the term "rules" to describe right and wrong, that implies that morality is objective when even the most cursory review would easily demonstrate that it is subjective.
As to perfection of gods, that concept suffers from the same illogic as omnipotence and omniscience.
"As usual... it depends."