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05-25-2003, 11:07 PM | #121 | ||
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...and if you a referring to the absurd notion that two clay humans and all, without knowledge of good and evil, could be held responsible for the simple act of eating a fruit from a magic tree that your God planted right next to them, then I have no hope of getting past your fairy tale fantasy. Quote:
Is this creature of yours so sad and lonely that he could only come up with this silly game of suffering? Besides ~ the threat of eternal torture does not seem to include much of a free will to choose. The Christian God says do what you wish, but make the wrong choice and you will be tortured for eternity in hell. That is not free will. It would be the same as a man telling a woman to do what she wants to do, but if she chooses to leave him or not love him, he will track her down and beat her bloody. When a man says this, society is shocked and calls for his imprisonment for assault by threat and stalking...and encourages mental health counseling. When your Christian God says the same you call him "loving" and build churches in his honor that you send your children to attend. Sheer disjointed lunacy. |
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05-26-2003, 12:57 AM | #122 | |
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The inability of God to create these things proves His omnipotence. (Which is merely a misleading way of saying that the inability of things to exist outside of an omnipotent being's power proves the being's omnipotence.) If He's truly omnipotent, nothing can exist outside of His power. All of the above mentioned things would be outside of His power. To put it another way: Love couldn't exist without free will, free will couldn't exist without the ability to choose, the ability to choose couldn't exist without desire, desire couldn't exist without dislike, dislike couldn't exist without the potential for pain, the potential for pain couldn't exist without some recognition of death, the recognition of death couldn't exist without evolution... etc. etc. etc... all the way back to God, the first cause. Eliminate any one of these things and the existence of all things above them becomes impossible. Therefore, an omnipotent God can't eliminate any of these things any more than He can make a mistake. God is Love. Pain is necessary for love, even if we dislike this fact. Love without the existence of pain cannot be love. Love needs all of these things mentioned in order to be defined. Interesting... The above dependence scenario eventually terminates in a "Love is necessary for God and God is necessary for Love" loop. Since God is Love according to the Bible, God is 'the first and the last' on the list. Both the A and the Z of the universe. |
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05-26-2003, 03:31 AM | #123 | |||||
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This is not a paradox nor is it beyond omnipotence, apparently, despite your slight of hand attempt. Quote:
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Interdependent cause and effect is observable, no deities required. |
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05-27-2003, 09:18 AM | #124 | ||||
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If my son (nearly 4) hurts himself, I then feel bad because he is in pain. That is empathy. How is that selfish? “The personal fear of negative feelings”? True, I do not like to hurt myself, but to avoid doing so I have learnt to not jump on the bed. I am in no danger of hurting myself at present, so why should I fear? Quote:
PS How many Xians do you know who have sacrificed all their wealth for their religion? How many have taken a vow of poverty? Quote:
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05-27-2003, 10:35 AM | #125 | ||
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PS The existence of imperfect Christians can't disprove Christianity any more than the existence of Nazi eugenics can disprove the theory of evolution. Sounds selfish to me. How about just doing it because it is the right thing to do? Isn't that what I said? Now, doesn’t it say somewhere in the Bible, “I am the LORD, so FEAR me?” Isn’t God described as awe (i.e. fear) inspiring? Doesn’t God punish those who do not obey him? Doesn’t God command people to sacrifice their children to him just to show they do love him? If that is True Love™, I’ll take the flawed kind we have going down here! Is awe and fear equivalent? Can you be in awe of something without being afraid of it? Is granting the free will to reject selfless love and embrace selfish instinct equivalent to divine punishment? Is allegorical Old Testament symbolism of Jesus and the crucifixion meant to be taken at face value? Which brings me to Ronin's point. Is the Bible meant to be read as a literal record of History? If a poem uses personification, is the author a liar? Do creators of abstract art have a problem interpreting reality? Can a two dimensional piece of art literally be a physically imperfect portrayal of reality but still perfectly describe reality in a figurative sense? Doesn't this describe all art? Science has shown us that the story of creation in Genesis is almost certainly literally false. There was no actual first human being who called himself Adam. Adam simply means 'man,' therefore right there I'd assume that the story of Genesis is allegorical and not strictly literal. If the literal interpretation of any art results in ludicrous contradictions, it is wise to contemplate the possibility symbolism behind what the literal things represent before tossing the entire painting away in disgust because the perspective is imperfect and the color is too bright. If art were about literal physical accuracy, painting would have died with the invention of photography. Meaning in art comes from the careful and skilful manipulation of reality, not from simply copying reality itself. Even 'literal' art has some intended figurative interpretation. What it means is always more important than what it is, however what it is is necessary to figure out what it means. The difficult symbolism of books like Genesis and Revelation are a common target of atheists. The relevant question is: "Why should we take it literally?" The reason is almost always: "Because then it is false." No other art is interpreted in this way. It is an interesting fact of their psyche that the Bible would be the exception for many atheists. Objectivity aside, a good rule of thumb for how literally one ought to take a Biblical story is the presence of repeated numbers like 7 and 40 and 3 and multiples of each. This was a common way of bringing together symbols and referencing them indirectly in different books. Whether the literal story actually happened or not is as irrelevant as whether the situations in Jesus' parables actually happened or not. I don't know how historically and literally accurate the Bible is, however historical inaccuracy does not apply to the value of art. |
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05-27-2003, 01:14 PM | #126 | ||||||
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Was it : (1) There is pain on Earth (withdrawal symptoms), but God doesn’t do anything about it (give us cigarettes), because it is for the greater good. [Off topic] In which case, where is the explanation? Why do bad things happen to good people? Why do infants die horrible painful deaths from cancer? If all we can say is “God moves in mysterious ways, praise be” every time a child dies, what good does it do? Is God testing us? Which one of us? Why? Did we pass or fail? How do we know? or (2) In heaven there is no suffering? [back on topic] Using the argument you have put out, one (in heaven) can be empathetic of anothers suffering (i.e. being in hell), but know that it is for the greater good. Thus, according to you, one is not at all upset by this suffering. BUT, being aware of WHY one is suffering does not stop one being aware of the suffering. How can one love another and not feel something for them? I feel for another ex-smoker (not because I am afraid I’m going back there – its been seven years now) but I know they will get over the cravings. How is someone going to get over being in Hell? That is kind of my point. To be aware of suffering (even when one knows it is for the greater good) and yet to not feel the pain of it, to not want the other person to stop suffering, does not seem very loving to me. In fact, I would call it callous and uncaring. So, this bring me back to the idea that heaven and hell cannot both exist as described. PS – you did not address my son’s pain. That is MY understanding of empathy. Quote:
Now – if someone just took my cigs off of me when I wasn’t looking, and gave me no information, then, yes, I would assume something sinister was going on. If someone sat me down and explained why they were bad for me, and helped me throught the process, then I would not think them uncaring. I place God in the former. Its like in one place, he condems cigarettes, then in another, you see him smoking. Quote:
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Exodus 14:31 And Israel saw that great work which the LORD did upon the Egyptians: and the people feared the LORD, and believed the LORD, and his servant Moses. Leviticus 19:14 Thou shalt not curse the deaf, nor put a stumblingblock before the blind, but shalt fear thy God: I am the LORD. Deuteronomy 4:10 Specially the day that thou stoodest before the LORD thy God in Horeb, when the LORD said unto me, Gather me the people together, and I will make them hear my words, that they may learn to fear me all the days that they shall live upon the earth, and that they may teach their children. Deuteronomy 6:13 Thou shalt fear the LORD thy God, and serve him, and shalt swear by his name. Joshua 4:24 That all the people of the earth might know the hand of the LORD, that it is mighty: that ye might fear the LORD your God for ever. 1 Samuel 12:14 If ye will fear the LORD, and serve him, and obey his voice, and not rebel against the commandment of the LORD, then shall both ye and also the king that reigneth over you continue following the LORD your God: Psalm 2:11 Serve the LORD with fear, and rejoice with trembling. Acts 19:17 And this was known to all the Jews and Greeks also dwelling at Ephesus; and fear fell on them all, and the name of the Lord Jesus was magnified. Revelation 15:4 Who shall not fear thee, O Lord, and glorify thy name? for thou only art holy: for all nations shall come and worship before thee; for thy judgments are made manifest. Colossians 3:22 Servants, obey in all things your masters according to the flesh; not with eyeservice, as menpleasers; but in singleness of heart, fearing God; 1 Peter 2:17 Honour all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honour the king. Quote:
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So what is the Bible? You are obviously a “cherry picker”, and you seem to have your own rationale for that – even if we need decoder rings to interpret it the way you do . [PS the Koran has a similar “numberology” to it also (19 is the magic number, IIRC) – does that make it true?]. You obviously believe in heaven and hell as portrayed in the bible, and you can put up a good argument for their interpretation, but why? Why should heaven and hell not be allegorical, while the flood is? You say the flood is not literal because it has been disproven scientifically. I say souls are not real because they have *not* been proven scientifically. And without souls, why heaven and hell? The bible is obviously open to interpretation. 34,000 different denominations, according to religioustolerance.org. That’s an awful lot of “careful and skillful manipulation of reality” if you ask me. |
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05-28-2003, 11:21 AM | #127 | |||||||
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The second point can be addressed with the simple quote: "Not what I want, what you want." People in Hell have rejected God's love. While it is a human emotion to feel sorry for, (or even be angry at,) people who reject our love, the truly selfless and loving thing is to have the attitude "They've chosen their own path. It is pointless to be angry with them or to feel sorry for them. They've found what they were looking for and I'm happy for them." You can't make someone love you. It is selfish and arrogant to feel sorry for someone who doesn't love you solely because they are missing out on your love, even if the love they've chosen is less than the love you would have given. Free will is the key factor in both points. The fundamental motive behind all types of arguments such as "If God is omnibenevolent, why doesn't He..." can be traced back to the human fear of the consequences of our own choices. We don't like to be responsible, therefore we ask God to take away our responsibility. When He doesn't, we accuse Him of being a poor Father, not realizing the irony of the very accusation. Quote:
You want your son to stop hurting. This is empathy. This is good. You want to personally shield your son from pain. This is good up to a certain point as long as the pain threatens His well-being. If you continually act on this desire however, he will never learn to shield himself from pain, which is the only loving thing for a mortal mother to teach her child. Allowing him to experience pain so that he will learn to avoid dangerous things is loving, don't you agree? And don't come back with a ridiculous example of a life threatening injury, just look at the sentence itself. It is loving to allow your son to experience pain so that he may learn from his mistakes. If you understand this sentence you can understand why, on a much bigger scale with a much more valuable thing at stake, God can love a human being and allow him to be tortured and killed without intervention. The torture and death of the body are analogous to the minor pain you allow your son to experience to teach him a lesson. "Don't fear those that can destroy the body, fear the One who controls the fate of the soul." Quote:
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Here is how your God expects to be loved. Not quite free will, is it? ... Try looking up the word "afraid" in a concordance. Count how many times God admonishes people to "be not afraid, for I am with you." If you're going to quote mine, at least pick a difficult topic to refute. God does not expect His children to fear Him. Those who believe this have not read the Bible, or if they have, have not seen the forest for the trees. Finding little excerpts that contradict other little excerpts is easy. Actually finding contradictions that pan out when taken into context is very, very hard. By OT symbollism, do you mean the “prophesies”? Or did you mean NT? I’d say all the stuff about Jesus and the ressurection was just story, and not to be taken at face value (but, then I say that about all of the bible). I thought by your reference to divinely ordained child sacrifice that you were referring to Abraham and Isaac. You probably didn't recognize this as a prophecy, but it was. Abraham was about to sacrifice son. Instead, God saved Isaac and provided His own sacrifice of a ram, (caught in thorns, no less.) This is what the "crown of thorns" on Jesus' head symbolized. God provided Himself as a sacrifice to save His children. The entire OT is symbolism and reference to the Gospels. Since it was written hundreds of years before the NT, it is considered prophecy. Quote:
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05-28-2003, 03:44 PM | #128 | ||||||||||||
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My quotes had been from the KJV. Here is another: Hebrews 12:28 Wherefore we receiving a kingdom which cannot be moved, let us have grace, whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence and godly fear (KJV) I will admit that I am no biblical scholar, and I have not even seen a Greek or Hebrew MS from the bible, so I do not know what the actual words for “fear” and “reverence” are. But, given the above passage, I would assume they are different. True, I have now looked at other bibles and seen that the word “fear” is sometimes replaced with “reverence”. Quote:
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When I have read it in the past (as a child, and a teenager) to try and find the same truth in it you have found, all I found were the crab-apples. Now, I read the bible critically. It is in my nature to do so. Maybe that is evidence that God doesn’t want me to understand it . I see contradictions in the bible when I read it. Was man made before or after the beasts? Or is the whole story of Genesis symbolic? If the Genesis is symbolic, then is the flood symbolic? The resurrection of Jesus symbolic? God symbolic? Where does the symbolism end and the literal begin? My reading is that all of it is symbolic. Thus, none of the (apparent) contradictions matter, because it is just a story. BUT – the bible is not presented as being purely 100% symbolic! People go to their graves defending the veracity of the words in it (or at least come to my doorstep and try and convert me). It is presented as being (in general) the word of God. Not as some nice poem. But a moral guide to everyday living, complete with rewards if you do good and punishment if you do not. If it were presented as Aesops fables, or Clifford the Big Red Dog, or the story of Santa, then I would not have a problem with it. But it isn’t, is it? We are repeatedly told that it is Gods Word, The Good Book, The Truth etc etc… I read science critically. It is in fact part of my job to do so. I look at how much supporting evidence a hypothesis has. I try to see if I or the author of a paper has missed an explanation for the data. I am always open to the fact that even if I accept a given hypothesis, another experiment may prove it wrong, and force a rethink. That is the nature of science. It is wrong to try and liken science to religion. Science is not presented as the Truth. It is our best approximation of the truth, given the available data. Its all subject to change (within the framework of also explaining existing data. Usually this means revisions to generally accepted theories, not complete paradigm shifts (although these may happen too)). You bring up the scientific method and Ockhams razor again. Ockham (a theologian of some sort, IIRC) devised his razor analogy at a time when there was no other explanation for the universe. Science could not explain lightning, let alone cosmology, abiogenesis and evolution. True – we cannot fully explain all of these things now, but we have reasonable theories for them. Ones that do not require a God or a supernatural being. You have used the razor to explain the (apparent) contradictions in the bible, and I understand what you are trying to do there. I would grant that your approach is a whole lot more rational than one who should go nameless here. But just how well does the bible itself stand up in the presence of the scientific method and occams razor? Is the simplest explanation “God exists and created the universe” or “the universe exists”? Is it simpler to state “pain and suffering exist on earth and are the result of Gods great master plan” or “pain and suffering exist on earth”. Do we have an eternal soul that lives forever in the absence of our bodies or do we just die? Finally [phew!] brain power is not magic. No need for Godidit. We just evolved this way. |
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05-28-2003, 05:22 PM | #129 | |
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I admire those honest enough to correct flawed arguments based on the Bible, but it's important not to judge the actual content based on anything other than the most logical interpretation. If something that you used to think was contradictory can be resolved without violating the text, you ought to abandon the assumption that it is contradictory until you can prove that the contradiction cannot be resolved. The fact that heaven and hell might not be contradictory in the text given the context should be good enough to not assume the contradiction as an axiom in future arguments. Some otherwise honest and rational atheists don't do this. Atheism forces one to be responsible, because there is no God to turn to. In fact, I’d say the concept of gods traces back, in part, to the human desire to not be responsible as well as to have an explanation for things that cannot easily be explained, and to have solace in the face of death. This makes sense, however as a famous theologian once pointed out, Christianity is the only religion where you don't really have to do anything to be saved. This seems to go against human nature in a created religion IMO, but then that is another topic. I agree that the common conception of God fits your above description. I disagree that the God in the Bible fits the common conception of God. I went to a Catholic school as a child and attended Mass and Sunday school every week until I was 16, learning the common conception of God in order to fit in with my peers. When I was a reasoning adult and considered myself above all the superstitious nonsense of religion and above the desire to change who I was in order to fit in, I decided to read the most contemporary translation of the Bible I could find from an objective point of view as a piece of literature only. I was surprised at how familiar I was with the verses, yet how different they were when taken into context. The message turned out to be a lot different than what I thought it was. Many of the things that I was told in Sunday school were wrong. My teachers and priests all had the words right but they got the meanings mixed up. (For some reason, they didn't seem to do too well with Elizabethan English. Imagine that! ) The main reason though, I believe is because they already knew what the Bible said. Since the Bible was inerrent, they had little room for speculation and therefore put no time into honest and critical analysis of what the text meant. Questioning what I believed allowed me to see the text from a critical angle, not ignoring and hiding from conflicting things and not embracing them as vindication for my disbelief. I don't know what the Bible is, but I know it is not what most people know it is and doesn't mean what most people know it means. Not irrelevant, and I think you missed my point somewhat. I never claimed that Picasso was a bad artist – I can appreciate his work. I can enjoy poetry for the underlying message that I get from it. I know it is allegorical. My point was it should be clear which is real and which is made up. In another thread Biff the unclean said (and I agree – this is the point I am trying to make): So, if I cannot see it as allegorical, then is it my fault or that of the authors? I don't believe that you can't see that it is allegorical, I think you don't want to put the effort into contemplating the issues and the concepts that the Bible presents from a detatched point of view. And I don't blame you. It takes patience even to contemplate relatively simple poetry, much less poetry containing layers upon layers of symbolism. There is very little time nowadays to reflect on poetry. In this respect, I think it is your fault, but not entirely your fault. I can hardly blame you for not wanting to waste your time with something you already know is nonsense. I think it is religious culture in general that beats people over the head with faulty logic and frightened finger-shaking. Someone who didn't understand told you exactly what was what. Not only did you recognize the inherent problems associated with what they told you, you recognized that they didn't understand what they were saying either. This was my problem anyway. Once I recognized it, I was able to start over and treat the Bible as I would any other piece of art. Since I enjoy contemplating symbolism and allegory in poetry, I lost my predjudice and the Bible no longer became someone else's book with someone else's feelings attached to it, it became my book and I began to read it with an open mind. Long story short, I found it's a lot more philosophically profound than most people think, theist and atheist alike. It actually makes a lot more sense than one would think if you take the time to understand the implications of each individual book on the story itself. The authors and compilers of the Bible had to be either God inspired or genius artists to make a story spanning hundreds of years fit together so remarkably and flawlessly. (And I doubt they'd have seen any difference between the two.) Reading a contemporary language version helps too. Try "The Message" by Eugene Peterson. It captures in modern day American English the essence of the original text as it was read in the original languages. You bring up the scientific method and Ockhams razor again. Ockham (a theologian of some sort, IIRC) devised his razor analogy at a time when there was no other explanation for the universe. Science could not explain lightning, let alone cosmology, abiogenesis and evolution. True – we cannot fully explain all of these things now, but we have reasonable theories for them. Ones that do not require a God or a supernatural being. You have used the razor to explain the (apparent) contradictions in the bible, and I understand what you are trying to do there. I would grant that your approach is a whole lot more rational than one who should go nameless here. But just how well does the bible itself stand up in the presence of the scientific method and occams razor? Is the simplest explanation “God exists and created the universe” or “the universe exists”? Is it simpler to state “pain and suffering exist on earth and are the result of Gods great master plan” or “pain and suffering exist on earth”. Do we have an eternal soul that lives forever in the absence of our bodies or do we just die? Finally [phew!] brain power is not magic. No need for Godidit. We just evolved this way. I don't dispute this. Ockham's razor (or Occam's razor, the second is the common usage but I think the first is historically correct? William of Ockham?) may indeed eliminate the concept of a creator God. But strictly in the context of the Bible, occam's razor eliminates interpretations that result in contradictions. Since the Bible was temporarily assumed in the op for the sake of argument, I think it is logical and fair to defend against accusations of contradiction with the interpretation of the Bible that has the least ammount of inherent contradictions. It doesn't make the Bible right, it just shows that the argument hasn't proved that it is wrong. Whether or not the Bible stands up to scientific scrutiny is another matter. I really don't know. It's possible, but I don't know that it is likely. Perhaps a postiting a creator God is just pushing the first cause back unnecessarily? It does stand up to the contradiction presented in this thread, however. |
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05-28-2003, 09:22 PM | #130 |
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Long winded fool,
I have certainly enjoyed our conversation, but I think that from the point of the OP we are at an impasse. While I am not entirely convinced, you have made a good job of explaining how heaven and hell may co-exist. Your interpretation of the bible is not quite what I am used to, but I can certainly see where you are coming from. I will bear it in mind in future discussions. [However, I think I'll be sticking to my view that the whole thing is symbolism. ] Cheers |
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