Yes and of life and purpose for existing.Because god loves us so much he's willing to watch us die horribly.
Yeah..... you people have a different concept of love than i do.
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.
Yes and of life and purpose for existing.Because god loves us so much he's willing to watch us die horribly.
Yeah..... you people have a different concept of love than i do.
Christians say that no one does wrong or feels hatred in Heaven, right? (If anyone did wrong, then there would be pain in Heaven, which there isn't.) That being the case, according to you all, we have no free will in Heaven, do we? So that makes the "free will" argument kinda moot.
Actually it's your argument that is flawed, christians tell us about their god who wants us to think of him as our father, who loves us so much, but when something horrible happens they switch over to a deist god who sits back and watches.
Sorry you can't have it both ways, a loving father would have done something.
Answer this question for me, if you knew that your children were going to be murdered by a madman and you had the power to stop him before it happened... would you? Or would you let it happen because you didn't want to violate his "free will"?
Non-sequiter.
It is god who has the power to stop men from murdering is it not?
No, but I can explain why its wrong from my worldview. I am asking, from an atheistic worldview, what defines this event as 'wrong'? The presupposition is that it IS wrong - I'm asking what this presupposition is based on.Are you actually arguing that the murder of 32 people isn't horrific?
No, but I can explain why its wrong from my worldview. I am asking, from an atheistic worldview, what defines this event as 'wrong'? The presupposition is that it IS wrong - I'm asking what this presupposition is based on.
I think we will have free will in heaven so it does not make the argument moot. I think God has the ability to be evil and choses to not be evil.
But Christians on Earth do evil, too. If they choose to do evil on Earth, but don't when they're in Heaven, they've obviously lost their free will.
Just because you don't accept God's Word as true does not preclude or dismiss it as the authority of my worldview - the Christian worldview. The Bible is my final, self-attesting authority and is therefore my presupposition.First tell me this: Why is it wrong from your worldview? ("God said so" doesn't count as an answer)
Just because you don't accept God's Word as true does not preclude or dismiss it as the authority of my worldview - the Christian worldview. The Bible is my final, self-attesting authority and is therefore my presupposition.
The question is to you (or any who care to answer), what authority are you presupposing when you state this incident is 'wrong'?
So what are you saying about what I said? I was responding to what you said. Repeating yourself is not going to help. As I indicated I disagree with you.Quote:
Originally Posted by elman
I think we will have free will in heaven so it does not make the argument moot. I think God has the ability to be evil and choses to not be evil.
I already addressed this. For future reference, it's a big pet peeve of mine when I have to repeat myself for people.
Just because you don't accept God's Word as true does not preclude or dismiss it as the authority of my worldview - the Christian worldview. The Bible is my final, self-attesting authority and is therefore my presupposition.
The question is to you (or any who care to answer), what authority are you presupposing when you state this incident is 'wrong'?
So what are you saying about what I said? I was responding to what you said. Repeating yourself is not going to help. As I indicated I disagree with you.
Just because you don't accept God's Word as true does not preclude or dismiss it as the authority of my worldview - the Christian worldview. The Bible is my final, self-attesting authority and is therefore my presupposition.
The question is to you (or any who care to answer), what authority are you presupposing when you state this incident is 'wrong'?
Of course god has something to do with it, he watched while it happened and didn't lift a finger.
Yes, yes we know that God created all evil in the world.
But he loves us so much......![]()
I could have swore this was the 'Philosphy' forum. How do you KNOW murder is wrong? Are you implying that all humans know this by intuition?So the only reason you believe killing is wrong is because God said so?
I'm certain that you have another reason for why killing is wrong besides 'because God said so'. If you don't, then, well, that's kind of scary...
Evil is a unfortunate but necessary implementation of free will and even though evil or good is a option to a human being that option falls on the individual's own consciousness in choice and not that of God.
The choice lies in that of man alone.
This is getting comical. Again - I have defined my presupposition. You assert your presupposition without defining it. You also presuppose everyone has your presupposition. What moral standard are you presupposing?The only reason you can think of that murder is wrong is because god said it was?
If god never said that murder was wrong would you still think it was wrong?
Well from what I'm told here, god sees all and knows all, so he knew and saw that this was going to happen and he did nothing to stop it, just watched.
This is getting comical. Again - I have defined my presupposition. You assert your presupposition without defining it. You also presuppose everyone has your presupposition. What moral standard are you presupposing?
This is the essence of PHILOSPHY - metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics. Every worldview attempts to answer these to make sense of the human experience. You (and others) continue to presuppose ethical standards without explaining their authority, how they are derived, and why anyone knows this standard exist. Any argument to be made has to start there. You don't agree with my presupposition. Fine. Explain to me why I and everyone else knows murder is wrong from an atheistic worldview. It's that simple.![]()