lucaspa
Legend
Sure, God can do anything He wants. Include lie, cheat, and steal. But that isn't a God either of us is going to worship. We may acknowledge that such a God exists, like we acknowledge that Bin Laden exists, but we aren't going to follow or love a deceptive God anymore than we are going to follow Bin Laden.Vance said:Lucaspa said:
"If God is honest, then the surety value of some ideas being false is 100%. Now, if you want to make God deceptive but use "good" motives for that deception, then you have an ad hoc hypothesis to get out of anything."
This really boils it down to the question. I agree that certain things may seem deceptive if they were created a certain way. But I stop short of denying that God could have done it any way He chose to and had a valid, imperative reason for doing so. I am not God, you are not God.
First, I don't buy the gap in understanding argument. A mind created in the image of God can understand God. Also, morals aren't relative. We don't have one set of morals for humans and another for God.The ratio of God to Man in understanding and depth of knowledge is as Man to ameobe. For us to claim that we could possibly second-guess God's actions and say that if He did something a certain way it MUST be the type of deception that would make Him unworthy of worship is far too presumptuous for me.
Second, as to nothing being able to shake your worship of God. Really? Then specifically address my question of hiding Jesus' body in an unmarked grave and sending hallucinations to all the disciples and Paul. Would that make Him unworthy of worship?
Look, you decide every day that politicians or religious people or business people are deceptive and worthy of trust and fellowship. It's no different for God. Yes, God may have all the power. But having the power of a tyrant doesn't in itself mean you should or would follow one. God offers moral leadership. He sacrifices that if He is deceptive.
So you are saying that God deliberately sowed dispute, division, dissension, etc. I say it is due to God's unwillingness to mindcontrol people and use them as puppets. You don't seem to have a problem with that. Instead, you seem to think this happened! But, in using them as puppets, God deliberately had them write things that would lead to violence and misunderstanding! Wow! There's so much to say to that version of deity, but I think you've laid out the problems very well.And this does get me back to the nature of the Scripture and how God has chosen to allow it to develop. Your comparisons to eyewitness accounts aren't really applicable because I believe God has guided very directly how the Scripture has been developed over the years. Yes, there are translation issues and inconsistencies on a number of points, and this simply proves my point. God, fully in charge of how He wanted His Word presented, has allowed it to be presented in this way: subject to varied interpretation, dispute, division, etc. Yes, fallible men may have created these variations, but God *allowed* the end result. This would seem irresponsible and, yes, deceptive in a lot of ways.
I think we can know. Look at what God has to do in order to get the perfect, inerrant message! He has to mind control people. He has to violate the very principles declared on why He created people to begin with.I think it is entirely possible that He could have inspired the perfect, inerrant "message" but allowed fallible humans to present it. The question comes down to the "for some reason". We don't know, and can't know.
Is something good because God commands it or does God command it because it is good? If the latter we can indeed find God blameworthy.Similarly, if He chose to create in such a way that may seem deceptive, who are we to say that His purpose in doing so would necessarily be something we could find "blameworthy".
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