attofishpi wrote: ↑Wed Mar 12, 2025 1:17 pm
Now I'm going to take you back to our earlier conversation:
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 11, 2025 3:10 am
attofishpi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 11, 2025 12:45 am
By "one life" are you suggesting one
lifetime? You can't possibly know that.
I think we can. Science tells us the system we're living in is entropic, so it's not going to last forever. And we do not see any unambiguous evidence of people having more than one life, so we have no reason at all to suppose it.
Do you see a problem here with you answer? Christ just proved the power of GOD in ability to resurrect - thus, can certainly reincarnate we mere humans.
Is that what He promises to do, though? Has he promised in His Word to reincarnate people, and to give them multiple cycles in which to prove themselves? In fact, does He say that proving themselves -- in the sense of doing works to show they're 'good enough people' -- is what He wants them to do? Decidedly not: we are told instead that without His salvation, there isn't one of us that's getting to God. And I believe that.
So, no, I don't see a problem with the answer I gave, since it's the one Christ gave. I see a problem with contradicting what Christ says is going to happen, though. And He says we have one life, and then the Judgment.
I've made the point to you before, that it wouldn't be fair of GOD to judge all as equal based on the conduct of only ONE life incarnation.
Yes, it would, of course. That's the advantage of omniscience, I would say: God knows what we started out with, what we did with it, what we could have done with it, and what we ought to have done with it.
I know a lady who lives alone. She's mentally handicapped, severely limited in abilities, and highly vulnerable. But she's also a very sweet, caring and generous-spirited person, one far better than many "privileged" people I know. Will her one life be better or worse, in God's eyes, than theirs, or than mine?
Your question, then, amounts to,
"Would you think it unfair of God to reckon her conduct better than your own, since she started from lower down and did all she could with all she had?" And my answer is,
"No, not a bit unfair: God is the Judge. I have not the slightest question of His ability to assess all my advantages against her disadvantages, all her achievements against my own, and to reckon her life better than mine. He will do what is right, and I will bow to His judgment."
Yet, as to my "privileges," you could possibly consider that my circumstances may not be even as exalted as your own. Or maybe more exalted. You really have no means to assess that, just as I have no means to assess yours.
But God knows. That's why He's the Judge, and we are not.