Wiccan_Child
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- Mar 21, 2005
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You claimed that, because God is eternal, the punishments and rewards he gives out are therefore eternal. You made a 'A implies B' claim, despite the fact that there is no obvious way A implies B. In your own words:I'm not phased by anything you say. Why should your assertion of a logical fallacy on my part be any different? God tells us in scripture that His rewards and punishments are eternal. What needs explaining?
"God is an eternal being, therefore any punishment or reward He imposes upon a person will be eternal as well."
How does the former imply the latter?
Hah, of course. A self-professed Christian disagrees with you? Then they clearly belong to a heretical cult that parodies and mocks the True Christian Faith, which you yourself are obviously a member.Then they're not being honest.
For a religion claiming to be one of love and peace, there sure is a lot of backstabbing.
Unless you're proposing that this 'relationship' is passed down by natural means (genetics, culture, etc), I can only surmise that God himself plays a hand in this. Why, then, does he continue to plonk newborns into a 'sinful' relationship? Even if I've got my surmise wrong, why doesn't he do something about it? As an omnipotence, he is able to just poof the sinful nature out of a person. Why doesn't he?
Because humans were not created to be sinful in the first place. They were created to live in full fellowship and in paradise with God. So why not make it that humans inherit that perfect relationship through birth? It's not as crazy as it sounds. Humans inherit a lot of things through birth from their parents. Not all of it is good though.
Because that would be unfair. It works both ways: no finite series of finite deeds is worthy of eternal punishment or reward.
And those finite sins are forgiven through Jesus Christ, which restores us to a right relationship with God. If this restoration results in eternal life, then why should the punishment against an eternal God not also be eternal?
Well, I have only ever objected to infinite punishment for finite crimes. Finite punishment for finite crimes? Sure, that's reasonable. That's why the idea of purgatory appealed to me when I was a Christian: the punishment fit the crime.I don't think it's that people will go to Hell that bothers you, I think it's how long God has declared they will be there. If universalism is true, people will be there for an indefinite period of time. Universalists don't agree on how long this purifcation takes.
No: an indefinite period of time is still finite, we just don't know its precise length (typically because its endpoint hasn't been specified yet). An eternity is an infinite period of time.But can't we just say that eternity is an indefinite period of time as well?
But what, exactly, is so bad about it? A couple of our ancestors ate forbidden fruit, and that's justification for condemning all humans to an eternity of suffering? If God hates it so much, why doesn't he just snap his fingers and poof our 'sinful nature' out of us?Depends on what your standard is. Imagine how utterly repugnant one sin must be to God, if the punishment He administers for sinning against Him is Hell.
I do not worship your god because I do not believe such a being exists, not least because of the theological inconsistencies. He could be depicted as the most benevolent being in the universe, guaranteeing all humans entry into eternal paradise (Christians and non-Christians alike), I still wouldn't believe in him. Not without supporting evidence and/or rationale.It doesn't matter how you look at it. You are going to find a way to convince yourself that God is a monster and not worthy of your worship.
They do not. The Wiccan gods are not depicted as all-just, all-loving, etc. Nature is harsh, and my gods embody nature. Thus, my gods are as harsh and as loving as nature.A point you have already made clear by your association with other gods. How do the gods of Wicca handle sin? Or do they even address the issue?
'Sin' is not a Pagan concept.
I never said that. I said that no series of finite crimes is worthy of infinite punishment. If the only alternative is no punishment at all, then so be it, but I don't see why this should be the case.
Okay. So according to you, people can do whatever evil thing they want and it doesn't matter. There is no punishment for evil.
Loving? The entire world would demand a social reform if our judicial system sent each and every criminal, from juvenile thieves to mass murders, to the torture bed, or the concentration camp. No one would ever dream of calling such a barbaric system 'loving'. We'd become no better than the KGB, complete with gulags.
God has a law and since God is holy and righteous He must uphold that law. Would you think a human judge were loving and kind if he released a criminal back into society to commit more crimes against society? No. You'd demand that judge be removed from the bench, because he's not doing his job and protecting the people he's sworn to defend. God by sending people to Hell, keeps His chosen people safe from evildoers. It's actually very loving.
Because they never claimed they would rise from the dead. Where in the Qu'ran does Mohammed claim that, after his death, he would rise? Moreover, what evidence is there that Jesus really did resurrect?
Do those faiths promise a teacher that will enlighten people to the "truths" of those faiths? We know the claims of Muslims and Ba'hai and others are fake, because their leaders are all dead and buried. That isn't the case with Jesus Christ. Jesus told His followers that God would raise Him from the dead three days after He died. And whaddya know. Jesus rose from the dead. No one's seen Mohammed or any other religious figure that claimed to be from God. Hmm? Wonder why that is.
Aye, but it does obfuscate just what the truth is. The general theme of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection are not particularly different in each compilation, translation, and interpretation, of the NT. But other things are not so clear: did Jesus travel to the Americas, as espoused by the Mormons? Did God take six days to Create everything? Is God pro-gay, anti-gay, or neither?Sorry this doesn't work. All Bible translations say the same thing, they just say it differently. Compare any of them you want. Compare the ESV to the NASB to the NLT to the NRSV to the KJV to the NKJV. They all deliver the same message. Jesus Christ born, lived, died, and resurrected to pay for the sins of mankind. The plethora of interpretations does not invalidate the work. I'm sure there's a plethora of interpretations regarding any religious document. That by itself does not invalidate the truth of the work.
And, since this is a thread concerning homosexuality, the latter is most important to this discussion.
And my point is that it doesn't. Wicca, for instance, merely says "Do what you want, just don't hurt anyone". There is no notion of 'salvation', either by works or by faith.
My point is that other faiths espouse works righteousness, by doing works you will be saved. Christianity is different in that it is the work of another that saves us.
They aren't. There is no concept of 'salvation' within Hinduism, since there is nothing to be saved from. There is, however, the concept of samsara and moksha: samsara is the continuum of birth, death, and rebirth. One can either continue to progress through this cycle and experience physical pleasure, or one can be released from samsara via moksha, and thus ensure everlasting happiness.
Prove me wrong. How are Hindus saved again?
You have to simply achieve enlightenment. Desire is the root of suffering, so abstain from desire.What is their punishment for not behaving well? Reincarnation isn't it? Look at Judaism. They believe following the law will save them. Look at Buddhism. To attain enlightenment you have to do what, again?
Perhaps, but I am not trying to convince you of anything. I'm simply relating my experiences with other Christians.
It's pretty funny that a Wiccan is attempting to tell me what all of Christendom believes. I don't care what all of Christendom believes. That's not my standard for what is true.
Nevertheless, some people believe it. They believe that one cannot be saved if one still identifies as homosexual (even abstaining from same-sex sex isn't enough).My views on what is fair are not in play here. It doesn't matter what I think is fair. How is what I personally think is fair, binding upon God? He is the creator, I am the creation. What right do I have to dictate to my creator what is fair? Job tried that. Didn't work out too well as I recall. Being a homosexual Christian will not send you to Hell. To say otherwise is to deny the power of Christ's blood to forgive and cleanse sin. God can not send a soundly saved Christian to Hell. It would be a clear violation of His promise.
Fair enough.Call it what you want. It's an expression of absolute shock.
Oh, I can accept that, I just don't see any reason to. But I don't have to believe the Bible to read it, so I don't see where you're going with this.
Sorry. The first four are: "In the begging God." If you can't accept that there is a God, don't bother reading the Bible.
Indeed. But I still object to the punishment, and find it ludicrous to call such a entity (who imposes itself as judge, jury, and executioner) 'loving', 'fair', 'just', etc.No because a gun manufacturer would then be in violation of the law. Parents can't do anything they want because they would be in violation of the law. God has laid down a law too, and anyone who violates it is punished. That's justice. You just disagree with the punishment. That's not God's problem and your disagreement is not binding upon Him to change His punishment.
Then why doesn't God save everyone? If he's omnipotent and wants everyone to be saved, what's the problem? Like you said, we don't have a choice in the matter (so much for free will).Simple. He is the law giver. Who is the government to decide who should and should not do something? Nobody has freewill when it comes to salvation. That's Arminianism and it's heresy. Humans are born in sin with a sinful nature. That sinful nature dictates our actions. Nobody can choose salvation. Nobody chooses to be saved, because there is not one who seeks after God or seeks to do good. All have turned away from God. God had to come down here to us, gather us to Himself and save us. There is not one line of scripture that supports the idea that people choose salvation, but it's all the rage in modern-day evangelicalism.
So we have to literally walk through the physical manifestation of Jesus where, on the other side, God awaits? We have to swim through a physical swimming pool filled with Jesus' blood?Sorry, but there is no slew of metaphor there. Those are all litereal statements.
So why haven't I received it?The wages of sin is death. If you go back through the OT you will see that when people committed sins, the high priests had to offer a sacrifice to cover the sins of the people. The only sacrifice that would suffice as a sin offering were animals that were perfect and without blemish. This was a foreshadowing of Jesus, who would be the sacrificial lamb, perfect without defect, who would take on the sins of the world and pay for them with His death upon a cross. Now no one knows how blood cleanses sin, but that's apparently how it happens.
So a person is saved when they are given the divine revelation that Jesus Christ is in fact the messiah that has saved them from their sins. This revelation is a gift from God.
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