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02-23-2003, 09:27 AM | #31 | ||
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What if he tells you what he told Job, which is basically "I don't have to explain a damn thing to anybody." I'm saying I have absolutely no evidence most skeptics wouldn't whine and moan if God's rules and nature are approximately what I say it is. AIF says he doesn't care how many boomog voices he hears- God has to give him the right answers or he won't change. Right? So no, I think rebellion, not faith is the problem. And I think God knows that by now. Rad |
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02-23-2003, 10:21 AM | #32 | |||||
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Consider a prisoner in a nazi deathcamp... he's in no position to ask Hitler or the Nazi party any questions, but if he does wonder how people can commit such atrocities is he just bitching and whining? Quote:
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That's why answer are needed; to make sense why something is wrong or not a good idea to do. It's the randomness and lack of answers that makes most religions such abysmal belief systems. Quote:
Same with atheists and God. If we can't see the product, there's no sale. If the sale is forced on us anyway (I grab your wallet, take the money, and throw you and the bicycle out of my shop), then we've perfectly good reason to assume we may have been ripped off, don't you think? |
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02-23-2003, 01:09 PM | #33 |
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Jayjay, you are clouding the issues I raised by asking me to reason why God is right or wrong. I specifically asked questions re his nature which I thought you might disagree with so as to avoid getting off the point. Let me ask it this way (though I thought it was obvious)
If you found out God was real, would you fear him even though he did not explain everything to you, or if you personally still believed he was a tyrant. Aren't you in effect asserting that he would have to be a certain way in order for you to respect and obey him? And that unless he answered certain questions to your satisfaction you would not obey him? Is that fair to say? If so, then God showing himself to us, or coming down to whack bad guys over the head, or even the NT Jesus coming to judge the world- these would make no difference in whether you were willing to serve him. That is one of my points. Rad |
02-23-2003, 01:34 PM | #34 |
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I'm afraid I don't understand the question. Radorth, why should I fear a god that is supposed to be both benevolent and merciful?
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02-23-2003, 01:34 PM | #35 |
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I just wanted to say one quick thing about the concept of "Fear of God" and how religions tell you "You must fear god" or "God's wrath" etc. When you fear someone or something there must be a negative or evil characteristic in it that makes you fear him/it. If god is all loving and benevolent then there should be nothing to fear about him. If we must fear god, then god must be partially evil and must do evil things, which means he is not all loving and all nice (just another self-contradictory concept of religion). And even if the god mentioned in the Bible really does exist, I would never fear him, I would oppose him and stand up to him. If god really exists he is the biggest murderer in the universe who has commited the worst and most violent crimes against not only humanity but all of living things. I'm not just talking about the world he has created for us, but the concept of hell: Infinit torture and pain for people who were for example born more "Id-driven" than rest of us, or biologically less moral, or were born in a poor environment lacking any access to true teachings of god, etc. Even humans who are supposed to be far less intelligent than god have come to the conclusion that cruel and unusual punishment is not the answer to any crime, and yet god promises unlimited cruel and unusual punishment for anyone who doesn't serve him. His characteristics sound more like Stalin's than god's.
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02-23-2003, 01:47 PM | #36 | |
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Radorth: I love the way xians are so sure they know all about what god is like and what god thinks about things.
How would you react if god showed up in some miraculous fashion and stated that he was pissed off with intolerant xian bigots who are against so much of his creation: homosexuals, raped women who want an abortion, terminally ill people begging for euthanasia, sceptics happily getting on with cultivating their gardens, etc.? Suppose god said that the bible was a load of tosh and that churches were reprehensible institutions. What would you do? How about if he said that heaven and hell were non-existent and that this life was the only one you had? I could go on, but I expect you get the picture. IOW, those of Oliver Cromwell, to be precise, Quote:
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02-23-2003, 01:51 PM | #37 |
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Originally posted by Magus55:
You can ask God to make himself real to you and in time he will - tell him you have a hard time believing and ask him to show you the truth. That's exactly what I did for most of the first 45 years of my life. Results: I've been an atheist for going on three years now, and foresee no change in the future. If god is so interested in me, why wait so long to answer my heartfelt pleas? God doesn't make himself blantantly obvious today because if you knew he existed - not many people would deny him - he wants you to love him without having a flashing neon sign appear saying I Am that I Am. Welcome to faith Umm, why are we different than those in the past to which god supposedly made himself blatantly obvious? Was god not interested in the biblical characters loving him without the neon signs? If it worked for Moses, the disciples, Paul, etc., why not try it on me? Further, the bible, in the NT, describes the faith of Abraham, Moses, et al, (in Romans, I believe) quite nicely, in spite of the descriptions of god's neon signs he displayed for them. Of course, supposedly within the near Future will be the Rapture Yeah, right. The same rapture that Jesus said would take place before the generation alive at that time passed away? The same rapture that has been predicted to happen in the near future countless times in the past 2000 years, including in my church back in the '60s, when it was supposed to happen within no longer than the next 10 years? The same rapture that apologists have spent the last two thousand years trying to explain why it's been delayed? How many years until people realize that this is a false hope? Another 100? 500? 1000? 2000? 10000? ...where all believers are caught up in Heaven with Jesus and he unleashes his wrath on the unbelieving world ( and the Antichrist ushers in his reign and promotes a lie of peace) - if you aren't so decieved as to believe the AC's lies and take notice of the billion people that instantly vanished - and you don't accep the mark of the beast - you still have a chance even after the obvious evidence. If that's the particular version of the end times you hold to, anyways; it's been interpreted many different ways, you know. BTW, how will you handle the "obvious evidence" that "coming soon to a lost world near you" is a false hope when at the end of your days, hopefully after a long and happy life, you ponder why Jesus still hasn't returned as he promised he would 2000 years ago, and as you, in your younger days, thought he surely must do soon? |
02-23-2003, 06:11 PM | #38 | |
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I suspect you understood the question perfectly, but chose to set up a straw man. As Paul said Behold the goodness and severity of God. Take a Zen course. The Bible will become far more clear I'm sure. Rad |
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02-23-2003, 06:17 PM | #39 | |||
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Another thing that boggles the mind is why you think that fear, love and obedience are connected to each other? If there was a clear and guaranteed punishment for particular behaviour, I'd stop that behaviour (or take the punishment, if it's lesser of two evils), but then again if I knew this, there's be no reason to fear. And why should I love or respect a deity? Out of fear? That's insane. Quote:
This "whacking bad guys over the head" strawman is just a christian storytelling device, which is used to "demonstrate" that people wouldn't change their minds even if they knew how things really were. Like the story about Lazurus and the rich man; it implies that nobody would change their ways if their dead relatives contacted them from hell, which is just silly. I for one would. Another example is what Family Man said about Exodus: you just don't start worshipping a golden calf if you've seen Moses part the Red Sea. These fictional stories are propaganda to help christians convert more drones in their armies, so of course they make stupid assertions like that. |
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02-23-2003, 06:52 PM | #40 | |||
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So either you are an unusual case, or they were not being truthful- or maybe people would just react differently depending on how rebellious and depraved they were. Rad |
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