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Old 02-27-2003, 09:01 AM   #101
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Yes. He's omnipresent and omnipotent, right?
Well good. Somebody finally admitted they are asking the absurd.

In other words, God should let us do what ever we damn please, live on flood plains, drink and drive, have as many kids as we want, raise them stupid, and take no personal responsibility at all while he gets us out of every jam.

That is precisely what many skeptics are saying., much as they blather about personal responsibility. You are the first to admit it via another mindless presumption. You and Ciphergirl will share "Mindless Assertions of the Week" Award.

And I have the most rational arguments, save one. Be warned that thinking your assertions through can produce small wrinkles. Ask Bill.

Rad
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Old 02-27-2003, 09:04 AM   #102
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Originally posted by Jack the Bodiless

How many tornadoes has the Holy Spirit stopped? And a "spirit" sounds like it would be the ideal astronaut. How many tiles did it fix?
The Holy Spirit ain`t interested in any of that shit. The only reason it hangs around here at all is to do parlor tricks and fuck with people like Radorth by waking them up in the middle of the night babbling.
It probably had Radorth up out of bed doing the chicken dance too,but we`ll never know for sure since Rad was hypnotized at the time and doesn`t remember.

I also heard that it sometimes gets a kick out of making people jump out of their wheel chairs thinking they`re healed only to find themselves even more fucked up and in more pain just a few moments later.

That loveable little scamp.
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Old 02-27-2003, 09:10 AM   #103
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Guess nobody wants to deal with my scenarios, obviously because they wouldn't look as holy as they claim. Better to just insult Rad and cross some fingers.

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Old 02-27-2003, 09:13 AM   #104
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Radorth:

Everything about God is absurd. I'm glad it wasn't me who invented him.

However, I also provided a much-less-absurd example, stopping just one tornado (preferably on live TV). I'm sure Superman could manage that one, so why not Jesus?

And I'm not sure how "character-building" a tornado is. It's something to do with bad parenting now?

If that's a rational argument, please keep your irrational ones securely caged.
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Old 02-27-2003, 09:13 AM   #105
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Originally posted by Radorth
Guess nobody wants to deal with my scenarios, obviously because they wouldn't look as holy as they claim. Better to just insult Rad and cross some fingers.

Rad
Who here is claiming to look "holy"?

That nonsense description is all yours my friend.
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Old 02-27-2003, 09:26 AM   #106
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As for your scenarios:
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OK, but let us say God, for the sake of argument, is one who allows people who build in flood plains to drown, and folks dumb enough to build over known earthquake faults to get sucked into the earth by the thousands.

Would you not choose to live here anyway? I certainly would.
Well, unless you're suggesting somewhere else I can live, I don't see what you're getting at.

Would I fear or worship this God? Insufficient data. Why does he "allow" this?
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Let's go a step further and say this earth was the very best he could make (if he did) but he wasn't omniscient of every posible problem with it. He tells you it's the first earth he ever made, it has lots of problems, but it's the best he can do for now. He shows you his best photos and asks you if you want to live there.

Would you? I think yes we, all still would.
This obviously isn't the Christian omnimax God here. If God is incompetent, then at least that's an excuse, yes. This is essentially what I believe anyhow: God is omni-incompetent (being nonexistent), therefore not actually to blame.
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Now suppose he tells you that he's going to put you down there, and he will make sure you are well-fed and happy as long as you don't disobey him, and that if you do, he will curse the earth and not help you much at all because he would merely be facilitating rebellion. And if he decides a large group of people his enemies, and all their kids will be as well, he might kill the whole lot.

OK, at some point, we might decide he is just too harsh, and say no. The question is, where is that point? And the point is, half this thread cannot rationally be called anything but hypocritical, holier-than-God whining about how a "good" God wouldn't do this and would do that - blah blah. (Certain present company excepted).
It's simply a matter of definitions. No, a "good" God wouldn't act like that. That's inherent in what it means to be "good". It is somewhat scary to us when Christians (particularly those of the fundamentalist/inerrantist variety) say that Biblical genocides are "good" because it's God doing them.

Such people have some very serious problems.
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Old 02-27-2003, 09:29 AM   #107
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Originally posted by Radorth
Wait, I get your drift now. He should have stuck around and should have been in 6,000,000,000 places at once, chastising people for 18,000,000,000 sins each day and healing everybody at once while grabbing people out of floods, stopping tornadoes in their paths and going out to patch tiles on the space shuttle, all the while preserving our ability to make bad choices. (And we could just sit around inventing more and more tests for him than we already have).
According to what Christians tell me, their god could do all of these things, he/she/it simply chooses not to. But the real point is that according to Christians, God will eventually put an end to all bad things. So why not do it tomorrow? Why not do it it right now? In fact, why not 2,000 years ago? Remind me again what the whole point of this exercise in creation was, in the first place?

To hear Christians tell, the population of Hell is growing exponentially with every generation that's born onto the earth. What supernatural plan could possibly be worth so many billions of souls suffering for all eternity? What Machiavellian end could possibly justify such means?
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Old 02-27-2003, 02:02 PM   #108
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Originally posted by Radorth
Jayjay's "solution." I always love these escoteric and simplistic assertions about how God should do things When examined closely, they stretch our credulity more than anything recorded in the Gospels.
Too bad you didn't examine it very closely then.

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JJ:1) The consequences of disobedience would be immediate and obvious: when one commits sin, there's immediate feedback. Wicca has a concept such as this, I believe.

See post above on how God would do this. I'm sorry but your post borders on the narcissisti and raises far more questions than mine. How exactly does the Wiccan system work? Do they hear voices or what?
The principle is that whatever you do, good or bad, it comes back to you five (or three? I don't remember) times amplified. Unlikely you'd like to think, God would not have to just tell everyone why something is bad (though it'd be nice if he did), just demonstrate it. So if you steal, you'll be stolen from... if you lie, you'll be lied to... and so on. Depending of course what sins are theoretically possible in Heaven.

In your above post you naively assume that God would have to allow there to be things like hurricanes at all, as if God could not create the laws of nature as he pleased. Are there hurricanes in heaven? If not, why the heck would we have to practise with them here on Earth?

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JJ: 2) Likewise, consequences of obedience should be immediate and obvious.

Yes,God whacks 6,000,000,000 people over the head at once.
I guess you confused "obedience" with "disobedience". God does not need to whack anyone on the head, just rig the world so that there is an adverse reaction to disobedience, and a positive reaction to obedience, so that the reaction has a logical connection to the action. World is not rigged in this way, as far as we can tell: evil people often get huge rewards, and good deeds go unnoticed. If the purpose of the world was to train willing and obedient subjects, why is there nothing in the world that motivates us to being such?

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JJ: 3) No suffering from sins committed by someone else. This confuses the learning process.

Unless of course you commit far more than you could ever possibly redeem yourself from. Of course you, unlike my pastor, you have few faults, and should you run over a child and ruin his parents life, you will still somehow redeem yourself. Meanwhile you leave the thief on the cross to fend for himself. That's simply cold and self-righteous IMO.
I don't know where you get this idea of redemption, it makes no sense at all if the world as we know it is just a training ground. You've completely (and deliberately?) misunderstood the point of everyone suffering from their own sins: if I drive over someone, it should be me who bears the consequences and not the person whom I drive over.

Maybe you are confused because this would be so far away from our present world that you cannot even imagine it? That's the whole point: the world doesn't look even remotely like it should, if your belief that we're here to become willing and obedient servants were true.

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JJ: 4) No random suffering (unless there is random suffering in heaven). That also distracts from the real purpose of the world.

And what would that "real purpose" be? Removing random suffering at some point is unforgivable apparently. We note you didn't respond to one of my scenarios and whether you would still choose to live here.
The real purpose is what you yourself stated: to create willing and committed servants in heaven. If there's no random suffering in heaven, there's no point to have random suffering on Earth either. I don't know why you'd say that removing random suffering would be "unforgivable", if that's supposed to be God's plan all along.

Yeah, I'd choose to live in a world where there was no random suffering. But it wouldn't really be my choice anyway, it would be God's. What I might want is irrelevant.

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JJ: 5) Environment that resembles heaven, but is better structured. Kind of like an obstacle course is compared to real terrain.

Huh?
To train those servants that you say God wants to hang around in heaven, for whatever reason.

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JJ: 6) As much knowledge about the "real thing" as possible, so that instead of trial and error we can figure out what is expected of us in the end.

What part of "Do good, love justice, and walk humbly with your God" don't you understand?

Oh I know. The "walk humbly" part.
Where did God say this? Oh I know, in one of the millions of so called holy books that are indistinguishable from ramblings of madmen and liars. You seem to have trouble grasping the idea of God actually providing us with knowledge of the supernatural rules of this world, rather than just vague hints hidden in thousands of contradicting religions.

Out of curiosity, would this be the same kind of humility you have when you're challenged to consider that your religion is bunk? Oh yeah right, when atheists poke holes in your religion it's "pride", but when you try to find contradictions from the atheist point of view, you're being "humble"...

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Never was "the more you need repentance the less you can do it" more appropriate than on this thread.
Another christian brainwashing technique of yours?

In any case, either you were deliberately misrepresenting my points about what world would be like if its purpose was what you claim it was, or you were unable to really tell us what exactly is it that God uses this world for. I can't blame you for trying though: you must be pretty desperate to justify its sensibility, considering how convinced you are that it's religion that has made you the good person you are (not being sarcastic, honest). It's interesting to see how religious indoctrination can make a person think that everything bad is your own fault, but everything good is attributed to the religion...
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Old 02-27-2003, 02:45 PM   #109
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In my response, I meant that I actually attempted to engage in your topic without bringing in grudges from other threads and hatred towards you for past transgressions.

I also had some trouble finding out exactly what it is you wanted, because your post was sort of all over the map and further discussion only spread it out more. So, I was sort of hoping for a concise recap of the scenarios you want us to describe and I'd be happy to oblige.

I will attempt to answer the parts of your post that seemed to be actual attempts at discussion or questions and not just insults towards atheists.

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If we ask how exactly God was supposed to get an entire “stiff-necked” people out of the wilderness without knocking off 250 rebellious leaders, we are assured God could have found a way just because he’s God.
I don't know my bible, being a born-and-raised atheist, so I don't know the exact story you refer to. What I tend to complain about is when God does things like killing innocent children, or punishes people for the crimes of their ancestors. Of particular interest is where God "hardens Pharaoh's heart", thus punishing Pharaoh and all of his people for doing something that God essentially forces him to do. I think God could have done better than that. If free will truly exists I'm sure there are instances where someone just won't listen and God must take punitive action, but killing children doesn't fit the bill, nor does altering someone's temperament so that they do something wrong merely so you can punish them.

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Whatever you believe, I challenge skeptics to tell us honestly what would make you personally fear God, how you would change your life if you found there was a God much as described in the Bible, etc Would you be like the woman who told Elijah, “We saw what your God did and we feared him”? (not sure of exact wording or location) Do you think the fear of our God is a good thing or not? How exactly should God have impressed on the early church that it ought not to lie to the Holy Spirit? You have freely judged and questioned our God, his methods, inconsistencies, etc. Now let us freely judge and question how consistent you are, and whether your own “benevolent designer God” would be any more respected, loved, or obeyed. So far all I’ve seen is rather inconsistent, short-sighted avoidance of complex issues, or suggestions which virtually eliminate free will.
I would fear God if it was demonstrated that he existed and that he would inflict punishment upon me for doing things. Same reason I would fear anything else. However me fearing him hinges on him actually existing, so if fear of God is a necessary aspect of His grand plan, he would need to show some evidence.

I don't know why fear of God is necessary, though. Fear as a motivation not to sin is a good thing. But God could accomplish that a whole lot better than his current punishment scheme. How about every time someone sins, their soul is punished in the fires of hell...for a finite period of time, fitting to the gravity of the sin. THAT would instill fear that would prevent us from sinning, though we would still have the free will to choose to. Instead, of course, God chooses a punishment that is completely useless. In Psych 101 you learn that punishment needs to be immediate, consistent, on the first offense, and severe enough to be aversive in order to be effective. God's punishment is severe enough to be aversive but not definite enough to be aversive. It is also definitely not occuring consistently, immediately, or after the first offense. It is completely ineffective.

The key part of my "benevolent designer god" that I think would be better than Yahweh is that he would be a good enough designer to design us with a propensity NOT to sin instead of the other way around. If this gets rid of free will, then we shouldn't enjoy sin, either. If making sin unpleasant eliminates free will, then making sin pleasant eliminates it as well. Sin should either be unpleasant or completely neutral if God were truly omnibenevolent.

Hope I answered your question, though you mention "scenarios" so let me know if I missed any.

-B
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Old 02-27-2003, 06:26 PM   #110
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Thank you for your post BBT and I think you answered the questions pretty well. (not that there was necessarily a "right answer.") However in a recent reply Bill Sneddin, I presented three scenarios and asked whether he and other skeptics would still choose to live on this earth if God were like such and such. I suspect they have been rather studiously avoided because they get to the heart of the matter.

And Jayjay is still asserting God should have "rigged" the world with no comment at all on how free will would be maintained. Yada yada.

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