Why not? Are you and I not taking different views of the issue, and arguing them based on our reasons?sthitapragya wrote: Well, this is not debate.
Better than what? Better in what sense? How can one "come up" with something better than the truth about what one believes?You need to come up with something better. Otherwise there is no point in continuing further.
I wasn't "holding it against" you in the first place.And if these actions are all we have to judge god's character, you should not hold it against me if I choose to judge it as bad. He hasn't shown anything which can compensate for killing small children slowly and horribly. I really don't think there is anything that can compensate for that.
Now, you had put a charge of unfairness against God. I said I thought you had insufficient evidence for such a charge. I said that a truly "supreme" Supreme Being could surely balance any scale, and even-up any injustice. That claim is pretty near analytical to the word "supreme," actually; so it's hardly something anyone's in a position to deny, once the existence of a Supreme Being is conceded.
That doesn't follow logically at all. You may feel that way, but it doesn't make rational sense. You can't possibly claim you know that God cannot counterbalance pain and suffering, even of the most extreme kind. You can't possibly be claiming to have reason to know that no eternity exists. In short, you cannot possibly have reason to conclude that the pain and suffering you observe here are the end of the story.If you do, then you need to question yourself that if you can accept some excuse for kids dying slowly and horribly, you really have no right to object to abortions.
But I'll grant you this: that the pain and suffering that is in the world demand an answer. It may not be an answer that limited creatures such as we are can presently grasp, but the horrid injustices of this world must be answered. And Biblically speaking, we are told that they will be. So in the meanwhile, we are told to do all we can to mitigate the evil effects of sin in this world, and to turn to God for forgiveness for our part in these -- for you and I surely do have our part in them.
So we should desist from abortion, rescue those who are being marched to their deaths, and deliver women from as much from this folly, exploitation and collusion in murder as we possibly can. And that would be the logical thing to do.
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But let me change the topic just a bit, pull back to the 100-foot level, and sum up our conversation so far, if I may.
Our differences are not in the evidence we see: we see the same. Our differences are in this: that you do not believe there is any such thing as a God that can provide a solution for sin, and can establish justice and truth. I do.
It is not by accident that so many of the anti-abortion camp are Theists: they're living the logic of their view. And it is not by accident that secularism is so high among those who advocate for, resort to murdering children. In both cases, it's a product of their worldviews. Theism makes mankind responsible to God; Atheism makes it responsible to nothing.
That has always been our basic disagreement. And until that's settled, it's predictable that we will disagree about abortion. No problem.
Meanwhile, no ill-will.
Here's what I know about Atheism and abortion: Atheism has nothing to say about abortion, really, because nothing follows from Atheism about abortion. From an Atheist perspective, a woman is just as "good" if she raises her child lovingly as if she follows the procedure of Lady Macbeth and "plucks the nipple from his boneless gums/ and dash[es] the brains out" on the pavement. For Atheism, each is merely a choice, and neither is intrinsically evil. But thank God, most people cannot live as morally callously as Atheism would encourage them to do.
Now, let me add this, if I may: I don't think you are morally callous. In fact, I find it a moral stroke in your favour that you cannot bring yourself to be a thorough-going Atheist and give up your anger and frustrated sense of injustice against God. Good for you: it bespeaks that you are a morally-aware person, despite what Atheism may be suggesting to you. It may be rationally inconsistent of you, but it's nobly inconsistent of you to retain a moral "radar" about these things.
But now, on the other hand, you can hardly be upset with me, as a Theist, if it choose to take my Theism seriously, and speak against the same sorts of evils that frustrate you, can you?