Iwannaplato wrote: ↑Mon Oct 02, 2023 7:38 pm
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Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Oct 02, 2023 3:27 pm
It's not even logically possible for the Source of all goodness, light and life to allow a choice about association with Him and with those values, without allowing the chooser to choose the opposite, as well.
God made people knowing what they are like and what some of them will choose and allowed the possibility of eternal damnation.
Of course. To allow somebody to choose is to allow them to choose. But God's desire is that nobody should make the wrong choice.
...the CS Lewis quote doesn't explain, in any way, why God could only manage to create a universe where some people were going to end up suffering for an eternity.
That was not its purpose. But that's not too difficult to explain anyway. Like I said, if people have a choice, then they have a choice. And that implies that some will choose wrongly.
But it does not suggest God
made them choose what they chose. If I foreknow that you will answer this message, that is not a case of me "making" you to do it, or of you not having a choice to do otherwise. Just so, God can foreknow what people will choose, without thereby becoming the explanation of why they choose it.
That was just me not assuming you believed in eternal damnation and checking to see if you did.
Well, I trust I've been clear. You could just ask, of course.
Should we tell people what they are choosing? Or would that be an arbitrary use of power, a threat? I would say not. I would say it's simply a warning to people that they are making a very important choice, and one the natural consequences of which are significant, to say the least.
When we warn people about cigarrettes, we did not make the cigarrettes.
Human beings? Well, we did, of course.
Oh, come on. We did not make tobacco. We did not make it attractive and unhealthy.
Tobacco may have many uses, or it may not have a legitimate one for humans at all. God does not decide for us what we will do with the creation he has made, and what we will not. In that, too, we have choice...even bad choice.
We did not make human nature such that we would desire them.
No. And God did not make human beings such that they would desire evil. Instead, He only made them free. But freedom and individuality have entailments; and one of those logical entailments is the ability to choose the morally right and the ability to choose the morally wrong.
He made us such that we desire to do things God doesn't want us to do. We're not tabula rasa when born.
Quite true.
Very much like animals we have desires and passions.
Don't go too far with that: we're LIKE animals. That doesn't imply that's all we are.
We certainly do have desires and passions. And since mankind is in a state of alienation from God, not all of the desires and passions we have are good. Christians say that we're born with a "fallen nature," meaning not that we are instantly evil (though it takes us remarkably little time to become that), but that we have the wrong kinds of impulses, and find it necessary to resist them. That's where morality comes in: human beings are creatures that do desire to do the wrong thing; morality reminds them that they are to follow the right thing, not their passions.
We're not computers choosing: we choose out of how we are made. He would have known that some people were going to choose wrong and that they would suffer for all eternity. Only a monster would let that happen.
Let's consider the alternative.
God could have made us incapable of bad choices. But then, we would also be incapable of good ones, or of any choices at all. He could have made us with no capability of volition different from His own; but then we would never have become persons or individuals...just automata. It is because we can choose God and the good, or reject God and the good, that we have the possibility of freely choosing the good, and freely choosing to love and know God.
Is that trade-off worth it? Many people would say it is. The cost of a reality with no individuality might well be too high. Not a few people have given up their lives for freedom -- even just for the future freedom of people they love, or for the good of their country. So it would seem that individuality, freedom, choice, personhood, are goods that actually can relativize the value of life itself. You may decide not; but I'm far from alone in seeing that they could be.
[God]can't just shrug and say 'hey I'm just warning you.'
Well, if you know the Christian message, then you know He didn't. Rather, He was aware of the wretched choice human beings were making, just as He is aware of all things. And so He made a way out -- at great cost to Himself -- so that human beings could make a better choice, if they were willing.
An omnipotent being cannot suffer a great cost. I assume you mean Jesus and his sacrifice.[/quote] Indeed I do.
But a deity, even incarnate, will never know the suffering of most humans, given what he knows.
Apparently, that's far from the case.
And Jesus, while having a bad end on earth, suffered much less than many trafficked children.
Do you know what it was that Jesus suffered? Do you understand what was involved in the crucifixion, beyond the mere physical suffering? Do you have some conception of what it is to know what perfect fellowship and unity with God the Father is, and then to have that taken away? Do you have a perception of what it means for the Holy One to be treated by God as if He were sin itself? For that is what the Bible tells us was involved, and no less.
And some of them are suffering this not because of other humans. He couldn't manage to make a universe without that either.
You're surprised that evil is so evil it takes victims? But it does. But there is no choice when there are no alternatives. And there are no alternatives to the good that are not horribly bad.
I think God could have managed to not have children born with painful diseases where they suffer for years. I think God could have managed, if he is omnipotent, to have not let babies be born in households with fathers who have already raped previous children. That's not about freedom.
Suffering is very, very bad. And evil takes victims. All the more reason to reject evil, and seek the good.
He also could have given people freedom but then temperments and desires that fit with what God likes.
And yet, if there was no time at all in which people had an alternative, then the one thing they could not do is
choose relationship with Him. There would necessarily have to be a period of time in which they could choose some alternate course. That need not last forever, of course -- but how long should it be? Only God knows. What we do know is that there had to be such a period of time.
It's just too horrible for people to face that he could make errors or actually be a problem. I think there are some solutions that the major religions, including your version of Christianity, don't really want to look at.
Oh, there are many versions of "religion" that actually insist on it. Gnosticisms of all kinds are good examples of that. They believe that the creator of the world was not "God," per se, but an entity they often call "the Demiurge" who is actually (depending on the variety of "religion") either incompetent or malevolent. It's a way they can explain the existence of evil to themselves.
But it's too easy, too facile. Things are more complicated than that. Freedom has paradoxes, like the necessity of the choice of something alternative to good, that are too subtle for an ideology like Gnosticism.
Abraham was ready to commit a sin.
He committed a few, actually, and the
Torah is not shy about saying so. Which one are you particularly disturbed by? Isaac? But he did not harm his son, and a substitute for the atonement was provided by God...all of which should remind us both of Something....