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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
Why God allows evil
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<blockquote data-quote="Unofficial Reverand Alex" data-source="post: 73909425" data-attributes="member: 405139"><p>The whole section of "Love" isn't something I had thought about until I wrote this.</p><p></p><p>A lot of what I wrote is derived from Cold Case Christianity. It's a fascinating book, where a cold case homicide detective (self-described as an "angry atheist") starts looking at Christianity in the same way that he looked at countless cold cases; examine the evidence, test the witnesses, consider a vast amount of alternatives, and see what you get. It examines Christianity in a purely rational manner, and this examination led to the author's conversion. I highly recommend it to anyone.</p><p></p><p>But back to your initial question: It's hard to say if I "learned" anything, because theodicy isn't something that can really be "studied" like chemistry or history, but it was interesting seeing how God's loving nature explained so much of this, and tying it all together into a cohesive conclusion was satisfying. I'm very glad this is the topic I chose; I've never thought about it so in-depth, and I feel like I did a good job on the paper.</p><p></p><p>May God bless us all, especially the skeptics, the wicked, and the victims!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Unofficial Reverand Alex, post: 73909425, member: 405139"] The whole section of "Love" isn't something I had thought about until I wrote this. A lot of what I wrote is derived from Cold Case Christianity. It's a fascinating book, where a cold case homicide detective (self-described as an "angry atheist") starts looking at Christianity in the same way that he looked at countless cold cases; examine the evidence, test the witnesses, consider a vast amount of alternatives, and see what you get. It examines Christianity in a purely rational manner, and this examination led to the author's conversion. I highly recommend it to anyone. But back to your initial question: It's hard to say if I "learned" anything, because theodicy isn't something that can really be "studied" like chemistry or history, but it was interesting seeing how God's loving nature explained so much of this, and tying it all together into a cohesive conclusion was satisfying. I'm very glad this is the topic I chose; I've never thought about it so in-depth, and I feel like I did a good job on the paper. May God bless us all, especially the skeptics, the wicked, and the victims! [/QUOTE]
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