Well, that's true, for sure. It's funny how men are derivative of the Supreme Being, and everybody has their own purposes and agendas; and yet people who think about God (though not very deeply, obviously) do not expect Him to have a will and purposes of His own.henry quirk wrote: ↑Sat Jan 16, 2021 4:41 pm this whole an all-knowing, all-good deity would not allow for evil spiel makes no sense to me
it assigns characteristics to god that aren't, in my deistic view, necessary for god to be god, and it ignores that god is a person with his own purposes and agenda
But the "good-God-can't-allow-evil" thing does have a (rather shallow) intuitive appeal. Until we think more carefully about what an environment, or a humanity, keyed to only do the best thing would actually BE like, we might think we're speaking common sense. But when we careful parse out what such an arrangement would do to things like freedom, choice, volition, personhood, identity and will, -- to say nothing of mercy, hope, truth, love, and charity -- we see what serious considerations count against it.
Thank God He has not done that.