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Old 11-08-2006, 02:30 PM   #221
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Default Christianity and Homosexuality

Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
Ok. We don't know whether it is true or not. So, what do you do? Do you ignore that which could be true where there are potentially significant impacts on you?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Sketpic
And as always, at least where you are concerned, all roads eventually lead back to Pascal's Wager, aka risk assessment...
Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
And as always, you refuse to answer the question...because you recognize the obvious but are afraid to admit to it.
Afraid to admit what, that there might be risks? Who do you think you are kidding? I have never claimed that there are not any risks, and you have known that for many months. Even if God showed up in person and threatened to send me to hell if I refused to love him, I would not be able to, nor would any other decent person. If God told lies, you would not be able to will yourself to love him, and yet you ask people to love a God who has committed numerous atrocities against mankind that are much worse than lying is. How utterly absurd. It is you who are afraid to admit that you know that you will embarrass yourself if you try to refute my arguments. God is willing that some will perish, but assuming that you have children, if they were drowning, you would not be willing that any of them perish. You would try to save all of them. You continue to refuse to reply to that argument, and others, because you do not want to make God look bad.

In my previous post, I said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
And as always, at least where you are concerned, all roads eventually lead back to Pascal's Wager, aka risk assessment. As I have told you dozens of times in a number of threads at three different forums, risk assessment DOES NOT work on rational minded and fair minded people. If God told lies, you would not be able to love him, and yet you ask people to love a God who has committed many atrocities against mankind that are much worse than lying is. God makes people blind, deaf, and dumb, reference Exodus 4:11. God punishes people for sins that their ancestors committed, reference Exodus 20:5. God kills some of his most devout and faithful followers with hurricanes. Even Attila the Hun did not kill his own followers. God refuses to tell some people about the Gospel message who would accept it if they knew about it. Now don't try to tell me again that it is my fault for not telling people about the Gospel message. God is willing that some people will perish, but you would not be willing that any of your children (if you have children) perish if they were drowning and you could prevent it. In addition, you feel obligated to tell all of your children about the Gospel message, not just some of them.

Pascal's Wager is utter nonsense. It is a fraud, and it is illogical. It is impossible for anyone to love a God based upon threats. Anyone with just a modest amount of common sense, including the average sixth grader, is aware of this.

It is interesting to note that if your buddy Pascal was at this forum, he would tell you that you will go to hell because you are not a Roman Catholic. It is also interesting to note that your buddy John Calvin endorsed murdering Christians who disagreed with his religious views. You sure do have questionable tastes in Gods and humans. Calvin opposed people getting married whose ages very far apart. Consider the following from Wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Calvin

Critics often look to the Consistory as the emblem of Calvin's theocratic rule. The Consistory was an ecclesiastical court consisting of the elders and pastors, charged with maintaining strict order in the church caste and among its members. Offenses ranged from propounding false doctrine to moral infractions, such as wild dancing and bawdy singing. Typical punishments were being required to attend public sermons, catechism classes, floggings or torture. Protestants in the 16th century were often subjected to the Catholic charge that they were innovators in doctrine, and that such innovation did lead inevitably to moral decay and, ultimately, the dissolution of society itself.

Johnny: You have a very strange, and quite detestable, taste in Gods and humans.

The issue of inerrancy is pertinent to the issue of homosexuality. There is excellent evidence that the Bible in not inerrant, but you always refuse to discuss inerrancy, even though many of the issues that you discuss depend lock, stock, and barrel upon the Bible being inerrant. The undecided crowd, which essentially are the only crowd that you have any chance of influencing at this forum, are not impressed with your frequently evasiveness. As I have said before, you are a light workout at best.
You refused to reply to one single point in my arguments because you are afraid to, and yet you claim that I am afraid to reply to your arguments. I replied to your argument in detail. You did not reply to my arguments at all. You are not interested in having serious debates with me because you are well aware that you have been beaten. All that you are trying to do is to outlast me by making absurd posts that do not deal with my arguments. Well, if I live to my life expectancy, which is another 15 years, you can rest assured that that ain’t gonna happen anytime soon.

If the God of the Bible exists, why has he refused to give you the wisdom that you need to deal with my arguments? I am just a puny skeptic, and yet I am beating you up and embarrassing you, one of God’s supposed elect, and I have been beating you up for many months at the GRD Forum, at the EofG Forum, and now at this forum. I never run and hide like you frequently do. The undecided crowd are not impressed with your frequent evasiveness, and they are essentially the only crowd who you have any chance to influence, which is a very small chance indeed.
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Old 11-08-2006, 05:41 PM   #222
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Originally Posted by rhutchin View Post
It's better than getting denied entry into heaven. Do I have to do anything to ensure that outcome or will it automatically happen? I won't die and find myself standing before God will I?
please if you could, since I'm woefully uneductaed about this christian heaven. If you could please give me bible passages that support your views of...

heaven
what it is
when you get in
how you get in

again please back up with specific bible quotes

this would better help me understand your point of view
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Old 11-09-2006, 12:10 AM   #223
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Originally Posted by rhutchin View Post
I think your point, however, is that a person may be coerced to do that which is right but this does not make the person a right thinking person right. I agree on this distinction. My point is that an action can be “right” regardless whether a person is coerced to do it or does it for some other reason, selfish or not. A selfish ingrate can do “right” things even though he is not to be credited as being a morally right person.
Yes, but in Christian terms, the "rightness" of the act is utterly meaningless. All that matters is whether the person is saved. The actions don't have souls, so the categorization is meaningless.

There is no benefit to attempting to make people "do the right thing". It does not make them less sinful, and indeed, it serves as a barrier to moral contemplation, and thus as a barrier to repentance.

Quote:
I agree that people cannot determine morality. That does not mean that morality does not exist or that a distinction cannot be made between right and wrong. God can determine morality and people can discern what God has determined to be morally right and wrong. Morality can be sought and found in the Bible.
I would agree.

The point I was making was that you misunderstood my position. You were implying that, by leaving moral choices up to people, I was asserting that there was no objective moral reality.

That is not the case.

It's very nice that we can discern morality. We cannot enforce it on others, and doing so hampers their attempts to discern it themselves.

Quote:
Confused position. What is denied to the person is the ability to express physically the option he chooses.
Not just that; also the chance to consider the issue in its own right. As long as the coercion is there, it will tend to dominate perception of the issue, and this prevents people from seriously thinking about the moral question.

Quote:
Nonetheless, we can still say that it is “wrong” to rob a bank regardless whether a person is free to express his desire to rob the bank.
Yes. And if we prevent him, he is inhibited in efforts to get past the question of "dare I" to the question of "should I".

Quote:
Stupid?? Not really. On a positive note, you now seem to agree that a moral code distinguishing right and wrong can be constructed.
I have always asserted that. I just don't think there is any point in trying to enforce such a code.

Quote:
Your argument has not been expressed well. I think your argument got confused when you took the position that “if you're coerced into it, it's no longer ‘right.’” Regardless, we can still straighten out your argument.
I stand by that assertion. The rightness of "not robbing a bank" comes from the consideration of the needs of others. If our hypothetical would-be robber never thinks of that, because he stops inquiring once he realizes he would be personally harmed by the law enforcement, he never reaches the right action, and commits only a selfish action which is coincidentally convenient for others.

Quote:
The original issue was whether right and wrong can be identified. We both now seem to have come to agree that it is possible to do this.
I agree that it is possible. I am not at all convinced that it is reliably and humanly possible; I believe that humans can do so only unreliably. Coercion regularly serves as a barrier to successful discernment.

Quote:
All the law does (and is intended to do) is distinguish between right and wrong and provide a basis for society to compel (coerce) people to do that which is right when a person wants to do that which is wrong.
And in so doing, deprive them of circumstances under which they might hope to discern the moral truth. In short, what they do is no longer right. Right action is a function of moral actors, not of physical events.

Quote:
Preventing a person from doing evil does not mean that the action is not evil (which seemed to be your original contention).
You completely misunderstood my posts, then.

My point is that you cannot prevent a person from committing the actual evil, that of desiring to harm others. You may be able to discourage them from implementing it, but in so doing, you make it harder for them to address the real problem.

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It’s a little stronger than that. To be an abomination may involve ritual uncleanness but it also prohibits entry into heaven.
Nonsense.

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The person who has lied, murdered, stolen, etc. may be ritually unclean but the effect is that they are then excluded from heaven because they have disobeyed God (i.e., they have sinned).
None of these are abominations. Not one.

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Only the ritually clean person (one without sin) can enter heaven.
You are conflating ritual purity with morality, and this is grave error. Ritual impurity has not been sin since the temple curtain was rent.

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So can we use Leviticus to identify certain sexual activities to be such that they are sin and exclude a person entering heaven?
No, we cannot, because we have established that the proscriptions of Leviticus are no longer generally morally binding. The only way we could establish something to be sin would be to find support for that belief outside Leviticus.

Quote:
Are you saying that rape is “wrong” or just that it might be harmful sometime and under certain conditions? Are you saying that rape is “wrong” even where a person is coerced to not rape when he wants to rape? Can we establish definitively that rape is “wrong” regardless of the motivations of people who do not rape. Can’t we establish activities, like rape, that can be described as either “right” or “wrong”?
You seem to have a serious problem of affirming the consequent. My position is that coerced behavior cannot be right. It has never been that coercing someone not to do something makes that action right in some way.

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Can we use Leviticus to identify sexual activities that are “right” or “wrong”?
No more than we can use it to identify foods that are "right" or "wrong".

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We can do better than that. We can define fornication as any sexual activity that occurs outside marriage.
We could define it to mean a ham and cheese sandwich.

The definition of fornication is "sexual immorality". Not all sex within marriage is moral, and not all sex outside of marriage is immoral. Thus, your proposed definition is wrong in both ways; it misidentifies things as fornication which are not, and misidentifies things as not fornication which are.

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We can define murder as killing another person without justifiable cause.
And "justifiable cause" can be understood only in terms of intent and circumstance.

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These definitions may correlate with intent and circumstance but the definition does not change as intents and circumstances change.
No, because it incorporates intent and circumstance.

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I think you want to make intent and circumstance the determiners of right and wrong. However, right and wrong can be predetermined outside intent and circumstance.
No, they can't. Any true statement about morality will of necessity incorporate understanding of intent and circumstance. Your definition of murder relies on "justifiable cause". The discussion of justifiable cause goes directly to the question of intent and circumstance.

Quote:
For example, we define fornication as any sex outside marriage. Two people agree to have sex. If they were married to each other, it is not fornication; if not, it was fornication.
This definition is simply wrong for interpreting the Bible. The word "fornication" is a coinage to translate porneia, and refers to "sexual immorality". If a man rapes his wife, it is fornication. If a man and his wife have sex as part of an idolatrous ritual, it is fornication. Your definition is incorrect.

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Leviticus disagrees with you.
That's fine by me. I'm a gentile.

Quote:
If not, then you might also say that there is no standing command against a person having sex with an animal. You are ignoring some straightforward statements in the Bible about sexual activities.
I am not ignoring them. I am observing that, as I am not an Israelite seeking a relationship with God through the old Covenant, they do not apply to me in any way. I'm still a gentile. I can eat pork.

Quote:
This is as confused as an argument can get.
No, it's really not. It's very simple and straightforward. You're trying to impose Hebrew law on a non-Hebrew. I can eat pork. If I have a son, I don't have to have bits of his wee-wee removed. I am not under the Mosaic Law, at all, period.

I'm a Christian, not a Jew. I am under the New Covenant, not the Old.
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Old 11-09-2006, 01:59 AM   #224
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Hi Seebs,

To reply to your reply :

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Originally Posted by seebs View Post
So? It's still useful to me.
No problem there - I wasn't saying that discussion & debate aren't useful (or enjoyable) what I was attempting to illustrate (though probably not very well) is the opaqueness of "god's message" - one would think that a god, if he existed, would be able to communicate his message & exactly what it is that he requires in no uncertain terms, yet what we find is that there are almost as many interpretations of "his message" as there are christians.



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I am not sure I could argue this. I have known people who were just as bad, or worse, who came out of it okay. The message is still there, no matter how much we like to put our fingers in our years and yell "LA LA LA I CAN'T HEAR YOU" sometimes.
I agree that there are possibly some useful hints in the bible as to how one should try to live one's life ("do unto others as you would have them do unto you" springs to mind, & "judge not lest you be judged" is another) however, that doesn't make it "from god" ... just good advice ... can't we just take it at that without it having to be "from god"?



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Originally Posted by seebs View Post
Too much baby in with that bathwater.
I don't think so .......... as i say, there are some good things to be had from christianity but many many people have been tortured & died over the centuries, over petty points of doctrine, &, if Rutchin had his way, no doubt many more would too ...... this is why christianity is dangerous!

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Originally Posted by seebs View Post
Obviously, some of us are wrong about at least some of our beliefs... Doesn't mean that we aren't right about any of them.
Of course! I agree ..... & on the whole, from what I've read of your posts here I would say you appear to be a "good man, trying to live a good life" but then so are many of us who aren't christian ........ why the need for "god" in any of that?

regards
JB
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Old 11-09-2006, 02:31 AM   #225
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JB: It's not that I don't think people can be good without believing in God; it's just that I'm convinced that the theistic model describes the world better than any atheistic model I've yet explored. It's not that it's absolutely necessary; you can make nearly any model work, because the brain is quite good at sweeping things under the carpet no matter what premises you adopt. I just think this is one of the least problematic.
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Old 11-09-2006, 03:28 AM   #226
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JB: It's not that I don't think people can be good without believing in God; it's just that I'm convinced that the theistic model describes the world better than any atheistic model I've yet explored. It's not that it's absolutely necessary; you can make nearly any model work, because the brain is quite good at sweeping things under the carpet no matter what premises you adopt. I just think this is one of the least problematic.
Hi Seebs,

I am sorry but I don't understand how can you say it is the least problematic world view when, as I mentioned, many many people have, over the centuries been put to death as a direct consequence of it? Surely there must be quite a lot of "sweeping under the carpet" involved in order to live with that?

Also, it seems to me that broadly speaking (very broadly) there are two types of theists, those like yourself perhaps, who try to live by the tenets of the NT & those like perhaps rutchin, who obsess over the fire & brimstone approach of the OT - both groups though, have to do a lot of sweeping under the carpet because the two approaches are essentially incompatible with each other - & as you say, both can't be right! However, broadly speaking again, personally I'd take your approach over rutchin's any day - but if he does exist, I wonder what god himself makes of the countless different interpretations of his "will"?
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Old 11-09-2006, 04:31 AM   #227
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Quote:
Originally Posted by seebs
JB: It's not that I don't think people can be good without believing in God; it's just that I'm convinced that the theistic model describes the world better than any atheistic model I've yet explored. It's not that it's absolutely necessary; you can make nearly any model work, because the brain is quite good at sweeping things under the carpet no matter what premises you adopt. I just think this is one of the least problematic.
If an intelligent being created the universe, or if an intelligent being did not create the universe, you would live you life the same way, right? If an intelligent being created the universe, he sure did a deliberate bad job, or an accidental bad job, and he has gone out of his way to conceal his specific existence and will, or wants to reveal his specific existence and will but is not able to do so.

Simply stated, if an intelligent being created the universe, he is one messed up dude.
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Old 11-09-2006, 04:50 AM   #228
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Boy this is fun. Rhutchin is back to discussing the widely discredited Pascal's Wager, aka risk assessment. As I showed in my post #221, risk assessment is not a factor at all regarding whether or not a decent person is able to will himself to accept the God of the Bible. If God told lies, and demanded that rhutchin love him or he would send him to hell, rhutchin would not be able to love him, in which case he would go to hell. Now what would risk assessment have to do with such a scenario? The correct answer is, nothing at all. Risk assessment involves choice. Choice is not possible under such a scenario. The same goes for the current situation. If God exists, he has committed numerous atrocities against mankind that are much worse than lying is, and yet rhutchin asks people to accept him. In order to have good arguments, Rhutchin must reasonably prove that lying is worse than the many atrocities that God has committed against mankind, but he cannot do that.
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Old 11-09-2006, 04:57 AM   #229
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Originally Posted by Jon Barleycorn View Post
I am sorry but I don't understand how can you say it is the least problematic world view when, as I mentioned, many many people have, over the centuries been put to death as a direct consequence of it? Surely there must be quite a lot of "sweeping under the carpet" involved in order to live with that?
Outside the scope of what I'm talking about; I'm looking for worldviews that allow me to react to my experiences in ways that lead to future experiences in line with my expectations. When I talk about sweeping things under the carpet, for instance, an example might be "young earth creationism requires you to disregard many apparent claims about biology".

That said, I currently don't think that removing religion would have prevented deaths in most of these cases; I think different excuses would have been used. Humans appear to be bloodthirsty xenophobes given half a chance, and I don't think they wait around for excuses.

Quote:
Also, it seems to me that broadly speaking (very broadly) there are two types of theists, those like yourself perhaps, who try to live by the tenets of the NT & those like perhaps rutchin, who obsess over the fire & brimstone approach of the OT - both groups though, have to do a lot of sweeping under the carpet because the two approaches are essentially incompatible with each other - & as you say, both can't be right!
Yes. That said, my current approach integrates and uses the OT material; however, I treat it as being a record of Hebrew beliefs and traditions, not necessarily a standard of behavior. I'm not ignoring it; I have a clear notion of what its place is in the canon.

Quote:
However, broadly speaking again, personally I'd take your approach over rutchin's any day - but if he does exist, I wonder what god himself makes of the countless different interpretations of his "will"?
I suspect the whole thing is rather amusing, although probably rather frustrating sometimes.
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Old 11-09-2006, 05:25 AM   #230
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Default Christianity and Homosexuality

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Originally Posted by seebs
That said, I currently don't think that removing religion would have prevented deaths in most of these cases; I think different excuses would have been used. Humans appear to be bloodthirsty xenophobes given half a chance, and I don't think they wait around for excuses.
Why do you only discuss humans? If a God exists, it does not appear that he has any interest in saving lives. On the other hand, many humans do have an interest in saving lives.
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