Well, you're not a sort of aggressive, arbitrary, dogmatic, angry and arrogant Atheist, like Dawkins or Harris...at least you seem much more reasonable than they.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Tue Jan 02, 2024 12:40 pmMy kind of atheist is anyone who is not a theist.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Dec 31, 2023 6:08 pmWell, Will, I don't have any reason to think that they are your kind of Atheist.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 11:24 am These 'proud', 'angry', 'rebellious' men are not your ideological "Atheists"; they are people who, like you, think that religions are false; they just happen to apply it to one more religion than you.
That would position you as an agnostic, rather than as an Atheist; and I'm a little puzzled as to why anybody would prefer the term "Atheist" to "agnostic," since the latter is so much more accurate. However, on we go...I can't speak for others, but the conclusion of my studies is that there may or may not be a god.
Well, Will, nobody denies that the Bible was written by men; the question on which they disagree is whether or not it was ONLY written by men, and not by men under the direction of God. Nobody denies, for example, the literary features or the human concerns of the Book; the question, though, is whether the substance of the message it presents is divinely inspired.What is quite clear though, is that every text which claims to be the inspired word of a god, is very clearly the work of people, and in all cases I am aware of, people who had no idea how the world actually works.
Oh. Well, fair enough, then.I'm not proposing such a dichotomy. Nor am I suggesting that it isImmanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2023 2:03 am...the dichotomy of "Does God prefer some moral imperative because it's good, or because He's God," proposes a dichotomy between "God" and "good" that would have to be justified by the proposer.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2023 2:03 am...impossible for "good" and "what God prefers" to be the same thing.
I was under the impression you were perhaps referring to the old "Euthypho Dilemma." But if you were not proposing a dichotomy between "God" and "good," then I suppose you weren't. My apologies for missing the point.
Well, goodness has two components, at the least. If one of them goes missing, so does the other one. I mean that goodness requires both mercy and justice.In that case:Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 11:24 am"Tortured"? I wouldn't say that. Not all unpleasantness or even suffering is "torture."Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Dec 26, 2023 4:52 pmWell, according to your objective morality, the vast majority of human beings will spend eternity being tortured, but that is the price of freedom. It is hard to imagine a subjective morality that could be worse.It is still hard to imagine a subjective morality that could be worse. No godless morality could countenance eternal "unpleasantness or even suffering", and if that is what your God 'prefers', I would suggest the onus is on you to explain how that is good.Will Bouwman wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 11:24 amWell, according to your objective morality, the vast majority of human beings will spend eternity being subjected to "unpleasantness or even suffering", but that is the price of freedom.
Mercy is good, because all of us are failures, morally speaking. To use the Biblical wording, "All have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God." A perfectly fair and righteous Judge, therefore, would give us exactly what we deserve -- eternal separation from Him, at the very least; and He being the Source of all goodness, light, life and health, would then be also severing us from all of the same. Call that "torture," if you will; but "torture" is a kind of gleeful punishment, a kind of sadism, and there's none of that in God. However, for us, the effect would be quite unpleasant, to say the least; and even if we had asked for it ourselves, and had insisted upon it, separation from God is one awful penalty to pay.
So then, the next obvious complaint is that God is being TOO just, TOO fair. He's applying a harsh and unrelenting standard to creatures it will only destroy, creatures not capable of rescuing themselves from their dilemma or stopping themselves from earning the strict result of justice. Even if separation from God is what we ask for and deserve, it's a hard outcome. So mercy is also a feature of goodness without which goodness cannot exist. But how can God be merciful to evil-seeking and undeserving creatures, without undermining that first principle, absolute justice?
The answer comes this way: God Himself takes our penalty, and offers us forgiveness...mercy...and a way of escape from what perfect justice requires. The penalty gets paid, but not by us; yet not in an arbitrary or imposed way, and not in an indiscriminate kind of mercy that forces compliance and deprives its object of volition and identity, nor in any corrupt way that undermines justice. The penalty is paid, and we are freed; but the penalty is executed, as well. So both mercy and justice are upheld, in a perfectly good way.
That's the Biblical message: God is just, and God is merciful. The way is open for man to come into right relationship with Him. All that remains is for man to choose it.