exploring said:
To say god doesn't judge is to say god doesn't relate to humans.
Nonsense. To say God doesn't judge is to say God doesn't judge. To say God doesn't relate to humans is to say that God doesn't relate to humans.
God can relate, without judging.
exploring said:
If god isn't going to change our lives,
Great. Now we've got a third thing.
1. Judging.
2. Relating.
3. Changing our lives.
Three seperate, distinct and different things.
Since you don't seem to understand that, I'll illustrate, even though this illustration has nothing to do with my view of God, so don't try to literalize this as actually being about God, it's about the difference between "relating," "judging" and "changing our lives."
My brothers and I go to a competition. My parents go with us (relating.) I say, "Do you think I'm better than my brother?" My parents say "I love you both the same, even though you're different." (Not judging.) When it's over, my parents say, "Guess what? I just bought us a new house!" (Changing my life.)
exploring said:
then all he is is a less simple than necessary explanation for the world:
"All he is.." Really, now?
Let me tell you, although that may apply to the example in my previous post (the example of the profoundity of life) from
my perspective, the "explanation of the world" is the
least of my thoughts.
EDIT: To expand on this, honestly, from my experience as well as my reading and reflection, if I had to answer "all he is," without once mentioning judging, and without once mentioning the necessary explanation for the world, and if I had 90 years to focus on only that one task, and all the tools needed to write down "all he is," and all the knowledge at my fingertips, I think I'd not scratch the surface of the vastness of that concept.
To simplify the concept into judging, or into, an explanation for the world, is astoundingly oversimplifying.
I'm going to try to create an analogy for what you seem to be saying.
You: "You can't believe in the universe without believing the universe judges you."
Me: "I don't think the universe judges me."
You: "Without that, the universe is just a bunch of rocks going in circles."
Me: Jupiter! Saturn's rings! Comets and black holes! I cannot begin to list everything the universe is!
exploring said:
not believing in him won't make any difference to our life or afterlife.
Oh great. Another concept.
Judging is not the same as relating.
Relating is not the same as changing our lives.
And changing our lives isn't the same as
the belief changing our lives.
And the afterlife is another concept altogether -- one which not all theists even believe in.
A belief
can change your life. Forget theism. In fact, let's even put morality aside, although morality certainly has an important role in the discussion.
There's a box. I believe it contains something I want, so I open it. I believe it contains something that will hurt me, so I don't open it. All of this occurs -- without me believing that someone is judging me.
See. How simple. It's possible to believe something, and that belief to effect me, without that belief involving someone judging me.
What I've been trying to tell you, by the way, is not only with respect to
my own beliefs, but with the
great variety of beliefs out there. Huge and vast variety.
I don't mean this as an insult, but you seem to have a very narrow idea of what theism is all about. My experience has told me that there's a vastness that I can't possibly describe. The reasons people believe are virtually without limit. The ways in which one may relate without judging is virtually without limit. The ways one may change lives without judging (perhaps even without relating -- I'm open to many ideas) is without limit. The way a belief may change our lives, without judging or relating or without the
object of the belief changing our lives, is virtually without limit.
Charlie