Oncedeceived
Senior Veteran
I'll be back in a bit to respond to this and then we will go on to our specific subject yet to be decided.So this is super frustrating. For some reason I can't insert quotes today so I will have to respond as best I can without them. I will try to wrap some things up so that we can move on to some of the other things on our list
On the fine tuned universe I feel you missed the point, a computer simulation necessarily includes a bunch of assumptions that we can't verify without another universe to examine and so it remains speculation.
On design you seem to be saying that your definition of design does not include intent. If you have a criteria for what design is then we can examine it but if you are just going to claim that everything is designed then it is a vacuous term and can't be used to support anything.
Evil god: I read that article and the author makes the same mistake that most people do. He asserts things about the nature of good and evil and about the gods that are not proven. But even if you allow him his unfounded premises it still all falls apart.He says that we can't explain gradations of good but of course we can in the exact same way that gradations of evil can be explained on the good god hypothesis. Likewise this idea that the evil god has a mixed nature and this somehow is logically inconsistent is plain false. First your good god has the same problem of having created and allowing evil (for a purpose sure bUT still did it) second having a nature that intends evil but contains some elements of what might be called good is not a logical inconsistent position.
Then as if realizing that the argument has not been a good one he punts to Pascal and his horribly flawed wager. If you actually want to argue that pascal has a point we can follow that up later. For now just ask you self what force pascals wager has in light of the thousands of God and hell concepts that have been advanced over the course of human history. Do you choose based in the best heaven to go to or on the worst hell to avoid?
On slavery, Egyptian and otherwise
Yes Egyptians kept slaves, probably Hebrew ones you seem to be saying that this justifies the killing of the firstborn . So to be clear had I been alive at that time and kept a Hebrew slave (and was cruel to them) you as God would be justified in killing my three year old son as a punishment for what I did. Correct ?
On other slavery questions. The bible does not condone kidnapping and I never said it did, I said that slave owners in the south used the bible to support their owning of slaves, if you disagree you need to read up on the history a bit.
Finally and most importantly I wonder if you are deliberately misreading the bible. When I cited the passage where God says to buy slaves from the nations around you, the part that says don't buy or take Hebrew slaves because you can't treat Hebrews ruthlessly and as such you are only allowed to buy foreigners as slaves, your response was (who is doing the selling). Can you see that this in no way responds to the issue? On what basis do you argue that God does not condone slavery in light of the passage where God flat out says to buy slaves ?
I find this same lack of critical reading in your response to the question of judges. It says god was with them and they went down and failed to drive them out, in a section that was all about using military means to drive people out of the land the Israelites were supposed to get. And you claim to see no evidence of warlike conflict. you seem to be saying that trying to drive a people group out and failing is somehow conflatable with being too scared to engage, I am not sure what to say. Maybe ask yourself if you are really reading what the passage says or if you are trying to force it to fit your theology .
You asked me a bunch about morality and the basic thrust was if there is no absolute standard how can anything be judged moral or immoral. Basically when humans disagree about morality we need to discuss it and come to a conclusion. We may need to revise those determinations as we learn more about our world but that is the basic idea. I would point out that theism has the same problem. You claim god is the fondstion for all these morals but then admit that his morals are different from yours, that humans simply can't understand him. Basically on your worldview moral is whatever god says it is but he has not bothered to communicate it to his creature (well he did in the law but even though Jesus tells you to follow that you don't and of course the law doesn't cover all the modern questions of morality, also I notice that although you said my wait was over you only cited new testament passages about the law instead of the old testament as the question asked).
To drive the point home I am going to go back and type your definition of lying word for word...
"Nuances of sin can be quite enticing. Yet we objectively have a standard in which we rely on to tell us that yes it is lying if you intentionally deceive someone without using words. Yes, we objectively lie if we ask others to lie for us. And yes, it is possible to lie by omission. All objectively immoral based on a moral standard ingrained within us. Can people lie by omission and call itmoral? Yes, is it. No. "
So based on your definition of lying, one that god has put on your heart , god is a liar.
He sends spirits to lie on his behalf in numerous places in the bible and as we discussed earlier in thessalonians deceives people himself .
We also seem to disagree about predestination . You still seem to claim that God can predestin things and still allow free will but haven't supported that in any way except to say that the bible teaches predestination and also the bible teaches free will. The idea seems to be that because the bible can't contradict itself that this proves that the two are not logically inconsistent. You can see I hope that this is not a valid argument. If you can show that free will and predestination are a paradox (Thanks for pointing out my misuse of that) and not a contradiction please do so.
Finally I wanted to make a quick response to this article you linked about eve. First his argument does not engage with the one we have been having really in any way. The author assumes eve has moral knowledge and culpability . The article does make a great point about the serpent not being Satan though, I have argued that exact thing in other threads. Best of all though it makes testable claims! It says that snakes are experts at taking advantage of rhetorical opportunities in a way that will trip up humans. Since you seem to believe that the Genesis story is a literal one I would love to hear if you agree with this assessment and how it compares to your experience of snakes in life generally.
A couple extra questions . ..
you seem to now be arguing that God has predestined everyone for heaven, did you mean to do that? Remember that Jesus collects all those that the father gives him and looses not a single one but they all get sanctified. So if this is your position you are saying that literally every human soul ever created gets to go to heaven.
You said that you don't have the relevant expertise to adress the flood. What is your educational background (I am an education undergrad and special education masters in deaf and hard of hearing , a certified asl interpreter. So I am not an expert in anything outside of those areas but I find I am still able to research and talk reasonably on many subjects outside those areas), what areas would you say you are sufficiently qualified to comment on without relying on experts?
I know I missed a bunch of stuff, I will try to get to some of it when the site lets me cite again. Also I have not yet read the article about Jewish genetics
I like our conversation too, it is always interesting to me to find out about what others believe and you have been very courteous .
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