Skavau
Ode to the Forgotten Few
Is it?This is true....
So the senseless and arbitrary suffering is because....?
If it was not God's goal then he can not be sensibly described as moral. Words have meanings regardless of how flagrantly you might wish otherwise.If that was His goal, then yes, this statement is also true.
This is not clear for most of the planet.He has. He even came to earth as a man and lived for some 33 years to demonstrate how much He loves us. He died for us, and rose again for us. He ascended into heaven for us. etc. etc.
You might be convinced. I am not. The non-Christians on here are not. The non-Christians across the planet are not. There exist people, billions of them as 'pious' and religiously devoted as you are with their own convictions. They are Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Zoroastrians, Pagans, Baha'i, Jains, Buddhists amongst thousands and thousands of tribal and historical beliefs. They are not deserving of retribution, of torment for believing and living how they believe they ought to. They are ultimately no different than you.
His presidency is somewhat lacking.Not if He is superintending the whole process while at the same time allowing men to exercise their God given abilities, talents, and intellect.
Apparent. Is this why there are thousands of Christian denominations?The Bible makes His will known quite clearly.
Irrelevant.That would be true only if everyone willed to acknowledge Him as Creator. But this is clearly not the case. For in this very forum, several men have already confessed that even if they were convinced God did exist, they would still not worship, reverence, honor, or even acknowledge Him as Creator and Lord.
Whether we would or would not show reverence or adulation towards God has nothing to do with whether or not we would believe in him.
At any rate, I'd be inclined to show some kind of reverence for a God that prevented non-human suffering and instituted no torment, fiery or otherwise for those who did not praise him.
It is only the God you describe and his characteristics that people like me detest. I hope I'm there when the why of that finally dawns on you.
Of course, we all know that you think to be "wicked" really means to be human. We all know that our "wickedness" is merely a product of us being born with a specific propensity towards self-interest and survival that can sometimes contradict with the welfare of others. If God did not want us to be drawn that way he should not have allowed us to be born such as we were.That cannot happen at the present for several obvious reasons, namely, that the wicked have not been removed from the earth and judged for their wickedness. That in no way implies that it will never happen however.
If righteousness was really all about virtue then the criterion for salvation would not be belief based.
If you think the presence of a few "just-right rocks" is indicative of intelligent design then I suggest you get your standards checked. This would be like praising the existence of an edible spot of primarily gone-off bread.Hmm... just-right rocks...
Sure.The small portion of the universe we know about and can observe through the lens of telescopes and machinery does not constitute the "universe" my friend.
So is there anything that indicates a considerable amount of life beyond what we can observe?
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