placebo said:
As an atheist I agree. However, as an atheist living in the USA I'm trying to understand how intelligent people such as yourself rationalize the actions and make sense of your Christian God.
Ironically, one of the biggest admirers of Yaweh of the Old Testament was the ultra-athiest Frederick Nietczhe. I could look up one of his quotes on what he though about Yaweh, if I have time. On the other hand, he despised what he thought was the different God of the New Testament as being weak and womanish.
As late as 1975, statitistic on religious beliefs on the US and Germany showed around 90 percent of the people believing in God or a Higher being. Only around 6 percent that described themselves as athiests. Intelligence is not the prime factor in whether or not one believes. What is of primary importance is whether or not one decides that the totality of reality may be trusted to be ultimately meaningful and purposive. The existence of God provides a grounds for such a trust. While undoubtedly many athiests can believe that the absoluteness of their moral principles are justified, ultimately without God, there is no real grounds on which such a belief can be based. To believe in god, then, means that one decides that his subjective experience of himself as a moral being is not without foundation.
placebo said:
Are you equating God with the inanimate forces of nature? I assumed that he was much more than that. My understanding was that he is the Supreme Being- conscious, omnipotent, the basis of the ethical system of man, and on and on. If He is, and one of His laws is that "Thou shall not kill," and then he breaks his own law by murdering millions then of course it is legitimate to ask if God is wrong for committing murder.
No, I am only comparing God to the inanimate forces of nature in terms of an analogy. To state that God is a murderer, is to unduly anthropomorphize the infinite. Only in the second person of the Trinity can God be truly be seen with human attributes. The laws themselves were made for the benefit of man, and not for God, who both creates and destroys.
For instance, the genius of the Ten Commandments is not that they are a comprehensive code for human behavior in and of themselves. Clearly, for example, there is not enough mention of the equal status of woman with man in them. However, because these laws were given to us with the absolute authority of the Most High, the idea is presented for the first time in history that God is personally interested in the welfare of his human creation. In this way, morality is invested with the authority of being absolute.
placebo said:
God apparently does not know himself which is the best path. His words say, "Thou shall not kill," but his actions betray his words as he slaughters millions. If God is omnipotent and omniscient then he surely could have solved his problems with Man without violating his own laws! How can Man know what path to follow when the message is so confusing?
If the real nature of reality is truly based on a nihilistic contradiction, and reality is in fact is merely aimless, meaningless, puposeless, and groundless existence of no inherent worth, as Nietszche has suggested, ultimately there could be no such thing as a best path. Morality is nothing more than an oranic will to power based in our evolutionary biology. Our innermost longings for ultimate meaning can never really be fulfilled in such a world in which reality contradicts our hearts desires and even itself.
But if God exists, then this is not the ultimate state of affairs. the world is as iti is because the world is not God. Yet through our choices, through our struggles with our own natures, with external reality, and with God Himself, if God truly does exist, then we can trust that there are answers to the very difficult moral problems that face us. Through our struggles, and our choices we may find these answers.