fhansen
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- Sep 3, 2011
- 15,978
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Yes, it can be difficult for some to understand illogical conclusions.Well, I said that some people don't understand this, didn't I?.
He's the author of justice, and sets the standards for all His creation, which man is meant to recognize. This is how we may know that a particular act is unjust; this is the source of our moral outrage for injustices recently committed in the Middle East, for example,I guess if you judge God...and if you think he must conform to our human standards of justice, you could come up with that conclusion.
No, we believe God judges based on what we've done with what we've received. This is the essential message of the Parable of the Talents; this is the principle behind Luke 12:48; this is why Baptism wasn't necessary for the thief on the cross, for example.Ok, I 'll now take my turn at accepting your premise for the sake of the discussion. You say that for God to create some people for damnation (which by the way is not necessary for Predestination to be Biblical) is unjust of God. But you have no problem, I take it, with billions of people not figuring out what God wants of us in this life and so wind up in hell.
If you think the first is impossible of God because it's unjust, so is the latter!
As a result, you should be a universalist. If you don't reach that conclusion, you are not being consistent in your argument.
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