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Servant of Jesus
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What do you think God is telling us?Haha, no. But there are some amazing opinions that people hold as to the message of God.
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What do you think God is telling us?Haha, no. But there are some amazing opinions that people hold as to the message of God.
Cognitive dissonance is not a conscious process.
Anyone who truly doesn't believe in God, His commandments and His instructions as to how we should live our lives has no moral compass, no benchmark of what is acceptable behavior or not- other than those standards imposed by the society in which they live.
So in the mind of one who professes to be an atheist
anything goes-
So, whether it be consciously or not, most atheists cling to behavioral standards that are inconsistent with what their stated belief
I believe, deep down, they realize that there really may be a God who will eventually hold them accountable for what they have done.
Cognitive dissonance becomes more acute as an atheist grows older, and the inevitability of death looms closer, and they question not only where the ordered Universe came from, but also how their conscience; their knowledge of right and wrong behavior, could possibly come from anywhere other than God working within them.
So my advice is this- why fight it, why keep increasing the amount of stress and cognitive dissonance in your life. Why not embrace the living, loving God, who is ready at any time upon your repentance, to forgive your sins, and give you peace- for eternity.
Not so! And it's better for you to ask than to make assumptions for others.
There is no inconsistency whatsoever in saying that it's good to be kind to people, and rejecting the idea that the Christian God exists. Rejecting Christian metaphysics isn't the same thing as rejecting Christian ethics.
Why can't we dictate the meaning of our actions?I think the point is if there is no God all acts are ether all justifed, all unjustifed or all meaningless.
Is there something wrong with a series of subjective value judgments, from which morals can be derived?As there is nothing to base morality on, just personal choice and the experience in ones life. Hitlers morals were just as right as anyone elses. Relativism.
So the only reason you're kind to people is because god arbitrarily decided it was good?It is only good to be kind to people because there is something that makes it good, something to compare it to.
Except that one promotes my values and the other does not. Isn't that enough?If there is not God, there is no difference between kindness and murder, except a majoritys opinion overcomming the minorities opinion.
What "makes it good" is indeed a good question, but I don´t think you are really interested in an answer to that.I think the point is if there is no God all acts are ether all justifed, all unjustifed or all meaningless. As there is nothing to base morality on, just personal choice and the experience in ones life. Hitlers morals were just as right as anyone elses. Relativism.
It is only good to be kind to people because there is something that makes it good, something to compare it to. If there is not God, there is no difference between kindness and murder, except a majoritys opinion overcomming the minorities opinion.
I have a moral compass of my own. And I find it insulting to be told otherwise by people who are not in a position to know any better than myself.
Mark
Somehow I am missing your point. What is the problem with people like Hitler or Stalin? Why do you think that people who have repeatedly asserted that they have their own moral standard would stop acting on them when confronted with different morals?But that's just one of my points: when you rely on your own moral compass, there is no universal standard, and so if someone has a different idea of what is morally correct or not, how can you say that their standard is any better or worse than yours?
You may feel compassion for your fellow human being and live a decent life, as I happen to believe the vast majority of the people in the world do- but the problem is a Hitler, or a Stalin, etc. whose moral code is radically different from that of most people.
Unfortunately, benevolent dictatorships exist mainly in fairy tales.
You damn the acts of Hitler, because in your moral system - which you claim is from God - they are wrong.
I damn the acts of Hitler, because in my moral system - which is based on my understanding of history, society and biology - they are wrong.
So where is the difference?
I maintain that God's standard is a universal and unchangeable one- so, for example, adultery, murder, theft, lying, etc. are always wrong. If someone professes to be a Christian, but then says its alright to murder or commit adultery, they are not following God's standard.
So with Hitler- you, and most other people, may think that what he did was wrong, but a vast number of Germans in the 1930's supported his actions, and a neo-Nazi today would also say that Hitler was absolutely right- and should have finished the job.
So who is to say that your viewpoint is any more justified than that of the neo-Nazi? By God's standard, Hitler's actions would always be condemned as being absolutely wrong.
I maintain that God's standard is a universal and unchangeable one- so, for example, adultery, murder, theft, lying, etc. are always wrong. If someone professes to be a Christian, but then says its alright to murder or commit adultery, they are not following God's standard.
That is one of my biggest concerns with religious dogmatism. What if somebody believes that God commands them to do something that would otherwise be morally suspect (i.e. killing somebody else).Then you do not condone god commanding people to murder in the bible? Or condone your god outright murdering people?
But that's just one of my points: when you rely on your own moral compass, there is no universal standard, and so if someone has a different idea of what is morally correct or not, how can you say that their standard is any better or worse than yours?
No, you said that atheists don't have a moral compass. No shifting the goalposts, please.
My standard is the requirements of human life. (Which Hitler failed miserably.) This is an objective standard if that means reality-oriented, not whim-oriented. I very much can judge other people's moral standards.
You are simply mistaken if you think that all atheists are condemned to the sort of moral subjectivism where personal desires are thought to completely set one's own standard.
No shifting was done or implied. I wasn't saying that atheists don't live by a moral code- quite the contrary, I was saying that they do have an internal sense of right and wrong; do have a moral compass. I then suggested that this moral code is God-given; is evidence of the presence of God.
Of course, an atheist will vigorously deny this- but what is reality?
A compass is an independent device used to help a person stay on course- so a moral compass is also an independent "device" needed to keep us human beings on course.
So a true atheist (if there was such a thing) would have no God-given moral compass, no Ten Commandments; no independent way of keeping them on course.
An atheist may then think they should be going in a given direction, but if a Hitler comes along and says "no- this is the right direction", and points in a different direction, then how can anyone say who is right and who is wrong if there is no compass?
I bolded your two most important words "My" and "I". Your standard may be a requirement to preserve human life, but if someone else comes along and say "No- I believe in killing all the _________ (insert any number of recent ethnic groups), how can you say your standard is any better than theirs?
If atheists reject the God-given internal moral code and the Bible standards, then what are they using to define a standard? And why is any one standard any better than another?
So it is not about doing right, it is about being patted on the back for it? How you justify things?I maintain that God's standard is a universal and unchangeable one- so, for example, adultery, murder, theft, lying, etc. are always wrong. If someone professes to be a Christian, but then says its alright to murder or commit adultery, they are not following God's standard.
So with Hitler- you, and most other people, may think that what he did was wrong, but a vast number of Germans in the 1930's supported his actions, and a neo-Nazi today would also say that Hitler was absolutely right- and should have finished the job.
So who is to say that your viewpoint is any more justified than that of the neo-Nazi? By God's standard, Hitler's actions would always be condemned as being absolutely wrong.
But history is chock full of religious people, christians and others, doing awful things. So belief in god doesn't seem to make people behave better than they otherwise would - so again it must be asked what difference it makes which system you adhere to.I maintain that God's standard is a universal and unchangeable one- so, for example, adultery, murder, theft, lying, etc. are always wrong. If someone professes to be a Christian, but then says its alright to murder or commit adultery, they are not following God's standard.
The vast number of Germans in the 1930's were also christian. So again, what use is the christian belief when it comes to improving morals?So with Hitler- you, and most other people, may think that what he did was wrong, but a vast number of Germans in the 1930's supported his actions, and a neo-Nazi today would also say that Hitler was absolutely right- and should have finished the job.
So why wasn't he? Why did he have the support of the church?So who is to say that your viewpoint is any more justified than that of the neo-Nazi? By God's standard, Hitler's actions would always be condemned as being absolutely wrong.
But, despite some rocky moments, it is pretty civilized and interesting- you'd almost think that everyone here was a Christian, rigorously following Biblical standards of polite discussion.![]()