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08-05-2003, 06:35 PM | #81 | |
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08-05-2003, 06:50 PM | #82 | |
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08-05-2003, 06:51 PM | #83 | |
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08-05-2003, 07:09 PM | #84 | |
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08-05-2003, 07:15 PM | #85 | |
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08-05-2003, 08:33 PM | #86 |
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Well, will wonders never cease!
theophilus: Now, what are the implications of that statement for Free Will? I can't seem to locate your little "jibe," so I guess I can't take offense. In any case, it's just a reflection of your evolutionary brainwashing. I don't think I have ever seen a single sentence from you that wasn't completely humorless- and here you make two jokes, however small, in the same thread! Why, perhaps one day we'll have you laughing at Monty Python's Life of Bryan. But, then again, perhaps I'm over-optimistic. ------------------------------- Originally posted by Wyz_sub10 "Just to be clear then, god wanted sin?" theophilus: Well, "wanted" is an imprecise term. God's eternal purpose was not to have sin. Sin is a condition, i.e., the result of disobedience. God ordains all that comes to pass. I have no problem saying that God is the ultimate "ground" of human disobedience, yet he is not the immediate cause of it. Jobar: theo... honestly, can't you see just how this short paragraph contradicts itself twice? If "God's eternal purpose was not to have sin" and "God ordains all that comes to pass", that can mean *nothing but* that God is powerless to prevent sin, or else desires it. If God is the "ground" of human disobedience, how can he be anything *other* than its cause? |
08-06-2003, 06:58 AM | #87 | ||
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08-06-2003, 03:17 PM | #88 | ||||||
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You may have guessed that I neither believe in "spiritual genetics" or that Adma and Eve were ancestors of ours, but for the sake of argument let's say this is true. My original point remains - if banishment was part of the plan, what "sin" is there to pass down? It sounds like what happened, happened for a reason. So what is there to carry and what purpose could that serve? Quote:
"God wanted it that way" is problematic because it sends confusing messages about god's nature and about the value of humanity in god's eyes. If babies dies in Noah's flood (a flood brought about supposedly by sin), and one responds that this is so because god wanted it that way, then what does that say about god's nature? That he hates sin? Maybe. That he loves us? Not really. That he values the lives of the innocent? Definitely not. Quote:
No, I'm not looking at god's declaration on my nature. I am saying that if any way I behave is the way god wants it, then any way I behave is the appropriate way to behave. Therefore, I am acting according to god's will, no matter how destructive my behaviour. If I'm doing what god "ordains" then how can I be criticized by anyone, even god? After all, I am doing his will. It makes no sense to say: "I ordain your sin." And then when I sin say, "You are a sinner and it is bad!" Hey, I thought he was ordaining this? That it was all according to his plan? Sounds like it's his fault (i.e. plan) not mine. Quote:
You say god does not force me to sin, yet insist that all is well and perfect. Can you not see the paradox withing this view? If my actions contribute to "the way things should be", then not only are they good, but they are essential to the master plan. The concept of "choice" becomes very muddy with this view. Quote:
The problem with that analogy was that it lacked an omnipotent being reponsible and aware of everything. It also did not imply a "perfect" situation. Your view of our existence does. I have to run at this point...my wife is on her way to pick me up, but I will continue this later on. |
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08-07-2003, 05:50 AM | #89 |
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perfect?
SOCRATES: What sort of pot would you get if it were made by a perfect pottter?
WYRDSMYTH: That's easy, Socrates. You'd get a pot, perfectly made and without flaws. Milton: WYRDSMYTH, what is a "perfectly made and without flaws" pot? Is it made of clay? How big or small is it? What is it's shape? How long will it remain in this "perfect" form? Can it ever be broken? And SOCRATES, what is a "perfect potter"? Is it a man who is perfect and happens to be a potter? or is it an imperfect man who happens to make "perfect pots"? What is perfection? |
08-07-2003, 09:56 AM | #90 | |
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Re: perfect?
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