TheOriginalWhitehorse
Well-Known Member
Guys, the new thread is established. It's called, "The ACLU branch of the interreligious conflict thread."
Let's rock-n-roll!
Let's rock-n-roll!
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
I am not a Christian. Thus, if your statement was true, I would support the idea that "if it feels good do it and without conseqences , without remorse , without any punishment here and now or in the sweet by and by."pmarquette said:When we depart from Jesus , we start a sliding scale from definite good and evil to " if it feels good do it " and without conseqences , without remorse , without any punishment here and now or in the sweet by and by....
Lewis' trilemma is, unfortunately, missing very many other extremely viable options, which exactly why it is a false trilemma. Those simply aren't the only options - in fact, the most probable options aren't even presented.McCravey said:I think it may be possible for C S Lewis's statement to be correct on all three options.
Christ was the only begotten Son of God (as he demonstrated)
He was a lunatic (in the eyes most of those in this world, his words and teachings were different from this world's wisdom)
He died as a sinner for the sins of all of us (liers and otherwise)
tcampen said:I am not a Christian. Thus, if your statement was true, I would support the idea that "if it feels good do it and without conseqences , without remorse , without any punishment here and now or in the sweet by and by."
But here's the rub. I do not support such a form or morality, for it would lead to chaos. I recognize moral absolutes, not because they were handed down by an omnipotent, supernatural being or beings, but because they are without exception. I believe it is evident good must necessarily be good for its own sake regardless of whether a god told us what is good and evil.
In short, I and other 80% of the world that is not Christian appear to be proof that your hypothesis is false.
Wisdom Seeker said:I'm a Christian, but I don't believe in the kind of Hell that some people do. Just had to say that because someone said that a person can not be Christian if they don't believe in Hell. That's like saying that you can't love God unless you're afraid of the Devil. Or that you can't obey the laws of the land if you aren't afraid of going to Jail. I kind of think that a love for God doesn't need fear to exist.
Anyway...I get where you're going. And I don't have an answer for you. I can only say that some religions think that anyone that isn't a member of their particular denomination and observant of all their church doctrine is going to Hell. And others think those denominations are going to Hell. Some religions think that you have to work to show yourself worthy. While still others believe it's by faith alone. I don't ascribe to the attitude that you have to align yourself with a religion to go to Heaven. But I do believe that loving God will get you there. And just to throw a monkey wrench into this discussion. Do we know for sure that the God of Muhamed or the God of Buddha isn't the God of Jesus? What if it's the same God? What if all the dogma taught by Christian churches isn't correct? It's possible that God is God is God. And that the people tha worship God in non-Christian religions are worshipping the same God. There are certainly a lot of similarities among varrying religions. Ever wonder about why that is if religions other than Christianity are wrong? I do.
Why does your God allow demons? He could easily smite them. So God must want people to be influenced by demons.Christianity is the only religion that offers atonement for sin. Men make religions according to what suits them, and that's where these other religions come from. And there are demonic influences as well.
Blessings,
Whitehorse
Truer words have never been said.Men make religions according to what suits them
Natro said:Why does your God allow demons? He could easily smite them. So God must want people to be influenced by demons.
Truer words have never been said.
I never said the creator is exempt from this process, just that there is a great deal of difference in thought regarding the creator(s) him/her/themselves. Furthermore, it seems evident that any determination of right and wrong by fiat alone simply cannot be right. Saddam Hussein made such determinations, and was acceptable to those who accepted that he had the ultimate authority to make such decisions simply be virtue of who he was. But only by recognizing a standard of morality independent of the Saddam can we determine whether Saddam's claims of right and wrong are correct. (BTW, I am in NO WAY comparing Saddam with any concept of God, just trying to illustrate a point.)Whitehorse said:Then who determines what is good and moral, and why is the Creator exempt from this process?
tcampen said:I never said the creator is exempt from this process, just that there is a great deal of difference in thought regarding the creator(s) him/her/themselves.
Furthermore, it seems evident that any determination of right and wrong by fiat alone simply cannot be right. Saddam Hussein made such determinations, and was acceptable to those who accepted that he had the ultimate authority to make such decisions simply be virtue of who he was. But only by recognizing a standard of morality independent of the Saddam can we determine whether Saddam's claims of right and wrong are correct. (BTW, I am in NO WAY comparing Saddam with any concept of God, just trying to illustrate a point.)
When there is a claim God took some sort of action, and that that action was good, then how do we test that claim?
We must have an independent standard against which to test that very claim. That appears to me to be the reasonable approach.
Whitehorse, what you propose is blatent circular logic. I'll break it down for you:Whitehorse said:Exactly!!! This is why we cannot depend on man to make these determinations. So it seems we agree that God must be the standard. Now, how do we know which God? THat is likely to be a long treatise, so I will save that one for tomorrow.
"When there is a claim God took some sort of action, and that that action was good, then how do we test that claim?"
Excellent question. I would say by His own law. And as you wisely pointed out, this requires a careful thought over which God truly is God.
Amen. And that standard would be God.