LuckyR wrote: ↑May 15th, 2023, 3:06 am
Fanman wrote: ↑May 14th, 2023, 3:11 pm
If God exists, it seems to me that he is absolved from the atrocities committed by people, because we have autonomy. I would say free will, but I don’t want to start a splinter debate. But for the things that people don’t have control over, such as natural disasters etc., we can attribute blame (or responsibility) to him. I don’t believe that because bad things happen in life that means God would be evil because good things happen as well.
If we are to attribute blame to God for what is considered evil, we must also (in reasonableness) attribute to him what is good. An omnipotent being has the power to stop evil from happening, but if such a being were good or benign – it is puzzling as to why they do not do so. As a human being with limited knowledge, it is impossible to draw absolute conclusions as to why a purported omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent being does the things that they do. Therefore, ultimately, I think it would be illogical to blame God or claim that he has done things wrong in an absolute and not theoretical sense.
Alas, one cannot reconcile godly absolute goodness and omnipotence with the world as it is. Something's gotta give. An omnipotent evil god would be possible, but no one seems interested in that.
God is a subjective phenomenon, existing as the part of the brain that was shaped by the mystical beliefs of our ancestors over many generations. Meanwhile, good and evil are obviously subjective. Thus, God is only
apparently omnipresent and omniscient; God knows our minds because it IS our minds.
Thus, the question about what "God has actually done wrong" measures two subjective concepts against each other. The result, unsurprisingly is deeply subjective.
Most theists on the forum look for God outside of themselves as well as within, as if God was an incorporeal magic man. In doing so, they ironically travel ever further from the actual subjective God and into rank superstition that posits physics-breaking miracles. That is, unless Star Trek was right, where advanced aliens had visited Earth in antiquity and posed as deities because they found that being worshipped was an ego rush :)