FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > IIDB ARCHIVE: 200X-2003, PD 2007 > IIDB Philosophical Forums (PRIOR TO JUN-2003)
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 05:55 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 05-28-2003, 04:39 PM   #61
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: limbo
Posts: 986
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by wiploc
That explanation is called "first order theodicy." It falls prey to the "first order problem of evil," which points out that since god knows the future, he could have put the tree elsewhere, or sent the snake on a different day, or started us off with, say, Solomon and Ruth rather than Adam and Eve. We would still be living in the garden if that was what god wanted.

The Christians respond with "second order theodicy," explaining that okay, yes, god planned the Fall, but it was for "higher" purpose of gaining glory by the crusifiction.
Okay...so God is, once again, implicated as the originator of the sins for which he makes his creatures (and his son) atone. Which brings this discussion back to my original query, the question which contained the claim that Predestination means that everything that happens, happens because God wants it to happen that way, and it couldn't have been different unless God decided it should be.

He has written the script, and we all have to play along; our morality, as his Predestined creatures, is not bound up in the idea of an unfettered free will, but rather of compromised will. Sure, we can choose to be moral or immoral, but God has poisoned the well in various ways; our natures are already corrupt, because he is punishing us all for a crime committed by two beings in the distant past, a crime that he knew would happen, and indeed he facilitated it; we are kept ignorant as to God's motives and plans; and finally, just to rub some salt in our wounds, God dangles the carrot of salvation, even though he has already separated the wheat from the chaff, choosing what he sees as the best of a bad lot, and many of us (despite good works and faith) are predestined to perdition anyway.

Christalmighty...and people actually believe this.


Quote:
I asked whether our suffering couldn't be an accidental or natural result of the Fall. I'm told that isn't the orthodox teaching. The descendants if Eve suffer because god decided that would be Eve's punishment, not because a sinful nature is naturally heritable.
crc
God, then, is the Author of our suffering...we suffer because he wants us to, because he's punishing a woman he created in such a way that she was meant to fall.

I don't see how folks who subscribe to this dotrine can reconcile God's omniscience and omnipotence with the idea of his omnibenevolence.
Luiseach is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 08:21 AM   #62
Contributor
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Alaska!
Posts: 14,058
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Luiseach
God, then, is the Author of our suffering...we suffer because he wants us to, because he's punishing a woman he created in such a way that she was meant to fall.

I don't see how folks who subscribe to this dotrine can reconcile God's omniscience and omnipotence with the idea of his omnibenevolence.
That's called the second order problem of evil. There's no way they can talk themselves around it. And it applies to all of Christianity, not just Calvinism.
crc
Wiploc is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 09:37 AM   #63
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: limbo
Posts: 986
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by wiploc
That's called the second order problem of evil. There's no way they can talk themselves around it. And it applies to all of Christianity, not just Calvinism.
crc
...and is it at this point that they would pull out the 'God moves in mysterious ways' card?
Luiseach is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 10:08 AM   #64
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: USA
Posts: 20
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by wiploc
I asked whether our suffering couldn't be an accidental or natural result of the Fall. I'm told that isn't the orthodox teaching. The descendants if Eve suffer because god decided that would be Eve's punishment, not because a sinful nature is naturally heritable.
crc
Hmmm....That may not be orthodox within the context of whoever it is caliming to be orthodox, but Orthodoxy (as well as many other christian denominations) teaches that suffering is a natural and accidental result of the Fall.

Calvinistisc denominations which hold to a traducianist view of the soul and that the imputaion of Adam's sin as immediate, believe that each person is not only without volition to do good, but also each person bears full guilt for Adam's sin.

Between the above teaching and Limited Atonement, that Jesus died for only the Elect, I don't see how calvinists can escape the charge of worshipping a god who predestines some of his creation to heaven without choice and others to hell without hope.
noli is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 10:46 AM   #65
Contributor
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Alaska!
Posts: 14,058
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by Luiseach
...and is it at this point that they would pull out the 'God moves in mysterious ways' card?
At this point they two step, dancing back and forth between incompatible positions.

With first order theodicy, they conveniently forgot that god was supposed to be all-knowing. With second order theodicy, they remember that he is all-knowing, but they covertly redefine "omnipotent" to mean "less than omnipotent," and they undefine "good" entirely. There must be some sense in which god can be good, right? They are happy not to mean anything in particular by the word so as to be able to skip back and forth between meanings.

Four possible types of goodness that might be attributed to god:

1. Dental goodness.
As a dentist causes you pain in order to prevent a greater pain; similarly, god allows suffering in order to prevent greater suffering.

2. Might-makes-right goodness.
God is strong enough to enforce whatever definition of "good" he wants. You'd better agree or he'll hurt you bad.

3. Magical goodness.
If god can do anything, then he can make anything good --- and we humans don't have to be able to see anything good about it.
He can know the future but still have free will; he can be omnipotent but still be unable to defeat iron chariots; he can be perfectly just but still torment people with infinite hellfire; and he can make anything he wants good without having any justification at all. It's just a miracle.

4. Secret goodness.
They admit god looks bad on the evidence, but say that if we knew all the facts, like god does, then we would see that he is really good.


So if the Christian does the dental goodness move, and you point out that an omnipotent could prevent the greater pain without causing the lesser pain, they say god can make anything good he wants because he is the baddest guy on the block.

If you say might doesn't make right, and that if it did they should worship Bill Gates at least a little bit, they say god can magically make anything good.

If you say magical goodness has nothing to do with us, that something has to be actually good for humans in order for humans logically call it good, then they say god is secretly good.

If you point out that they are admitting that god seems bad on the evidence, and that logically we should then conclude that he is actually bad, then they say god only hurts us to prevent greater pain.

That's the goodness two-step. Even Baptists have to dance sometimes.

crc
Wiploc is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 01:37 PM   #66
Contributor
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Alaska!
Posts: 14,058
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by noli
Hmmm....That may not be orthodox within the context of whoever it is caliming to be orthodox, but Orthodoxy (as well as many other christian denominations) teaches that suffering is a natural and accidental result of the Fall.
If I believed in god, and wanted to believe he was good, this would be a really important point. But I still don't see how it could work out. After all, god is the one who designed nature so that sin would be heritable, right?


Quote:

Calvinistisc denominations which hold to a traducianist view of the soul and that the imputaion of Adam's sin as immediate, believe that each person is not only without volition to do good, but also each person bears full guilt for Adam's sin.
I can't see how any of us could have any guilt for Adam's sin. I can understand how we could be inferior, damaged goods, so that a nose-in-the-air god didn't want to share heaven with us. But that's different from being guilty. Suppose I'm of Germanic descent, that doesn't make me guilty of Hitler's offenses.


Quote:

Between the above teaching and Limited Atonement, that Jesus died for only the Elect, I don't see how calvinists can escape the charge of worshipping a god who predestines some of his creation to heaven without choice and others to hell without hope.
I agree.
crc
Wiploc is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 02:21 PM   #67
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: limbo
Posts: 986
Default

Quote:
Originally posted by wiploc
At this point they two step, dancing back and forth between incompatible positions.
I like that: the 'two step,' very good.

Quote:
With first order theodicy, they conveniently forgot that god was supposed to be all-knowing. With second order theodicy, they remember that he is all-knowing, but they covertly redefine "omnipotent" to mean "less than omnipotent," and they undefine "good" entirely. There must be some sense in which god can be good, right? They are happy not to mean anything in particular by the word so as to be able to skip back and forth between meanings.
Okay. Now I'm beginning to understand the slipperiness of Christian apologetics. This ambivalence in Christian Apologetics...it disturbs me. Why cling to an unviable position, even if it means a loss of coherence and consistency?

Quote:
Four possible types of goodness that might be attributed to god:

1. Dental goodness.
As a dentist causes you pain in order to prevent a greater pain; similarly, god allows suffering in order to prevent greater suffering.
I've heard this one...the 'it's for your own good' argument...

Quote:
2. Might-makes-right goodness.
God is strong enough to enforce whatever definition of "good" he wants. You'd better agree or he'll hurt you bad.
Do some Christians actually use this argument to demonstrate God's goodness?

Quote:
3. Magical goodness.
If god can do anything, then he can make anything good --- and we humans don't have to be able to see anything good about it.
He can know the future but still have free will; he can be omnipotent but still be unable to defeat iron chariots; he can be perfectly just but still torment people with infinite hellfire; and he can make anything he wants good without having any justification at all. It's just a miracle.
The 'Santa Claus' clause for God's goodness. :-D

Quote:
4. Secret goodness.
They admit god looks bad on the evidence, but say that if we knew all the facts, like god does, then we would see that he is really good.
Now this one sounds familiar...I've heard this from theists in my own circle of acquaintance IRL. I always think that arguments from this point reveal more than a little uneasiness about the evidence of evil in the world; it's as if there is a difficulty in reconciling an awareness of worldly nastiness with childhood ideas of a loving God. Double-think can result.

Quote:
So if the Christian does the dental goodness move, and you point out that an omnipotent could prevent the greater pain without causing the lesser pain, they say god can make anything good he wants because he is the baddest guy on the block.

If you say might doesn't make right, and that if it did they should worship Bill Gates at least a little bit, they say god can magically make anything good.

If you say magical goodness has nothing to do with us, that something has to be actually good for humans in order for humans logically call it good, then they say god is secretly good.

If you point out that they are admitting that god seems bad on the evidence, and that logically we should then conclude that he is actually bad, then they say god only hurts us to prevent greater pain.

That's the goodness two-step. Even Baptists have to dance sometimes.
This is very clearly written and reasoned. Again, I sincerely thank you for taking the time to outline this stuff for me. It's very good of you to do so.

P.S. I really like the phrase the 'goodness two-step.'
Luiseach is offline  
Old 05-29-2003, 05:45 PM   #68
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: USA
Posts: 20
Default

Originally posted by wiploc
If I believed in god, and wanted to believe he was good, this would be a really important point.


Lol.

But I still don't see how it could work out. After all, god is the one who designed nature so that sin would be heritable, right?

It wasn't meant to be an apologia, just a clarification that orthodox christian thought is more than calvinism. Of course if I had seen your last posting to L, than I wouldn't have bothered.

I can't see how any of us could have any guilt for Adam's sin. I can understand how we could be inferior, damaged goods, so that a nose-in-the-air god didn't want to share heaven with us. But that's different from being guilty. Suppose I'm of Germanic descent, that doesn't make me guilty of Hitler's offenses.

Agreed.
noli is offline  
Old 06-04-2003, 07:40 AM   #69
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Meridian, MS
Posts: 18
Default

The explanation of choice, in the circles I used to run in, for the "Problem of Evil" is that the Fall was necessary so that man could know God in his fullness - not only as Creator but as Redeemer.

Thus, Satan in this scenario is a pawn, a concurrent event unwittingly being used to bring about The Plan.
fundamental spawn is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:15 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.