Yes, but "reconcile" it with what?Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:53 pmMaybe an atheist doesn't believe in God because he can't reconcile a tragic event that happened to him.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 11:42 pmThat is often the case.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 9:52 pm
Resentment and rebellion often come from some kind of traumatic situation. It often involves being unable to reconcile what happened with the idea of a benevolent God.Well, I wouldn't blame a child for having a child's level of understanding. If "Atheist" meant "child," I'd agree with you, because children can have simplistic ideas like, "If the world is bad, it must have been made that way by somebody who hates me." But I would blame an adult for failing to think more deeply, and for refusing to entertain the realization that the world could also be the way a good God did not wish it to become. If the Atheist simply refuses to entertain that thought, then it's decidedly his own fault, for weak thinking. We all need to grow up sometime.I don't blame atheists, given the world we live in.Well, hope comes in degrees. One can say, "I hope to win the lottery." That's one kind of hope. Then there's the kind of hope one means when one says, "I hope to be in Boston on Sunday." That's quite different, because the latter is based on reasonable expectation, and the former only on wild speculation. It's the latter that is the kind of hope that a person ought to have, if God has already spoken on the matter. And that hope is also called "faith."But I can't blame the religious for hoping that everything will be fine or work out in the end either.
Is it only with the simplistic supposition that whatever happens can only be God's fault? But why should we suppose that? Why can't we suppose that the world is out of kilter and not morally in step with a good God? Doesn't it seem obvious that it is? And why can't he think outside that childish paradigm?
That could be seen as a credit to God, a refusal to think a supreme being would design such a world or allow such to happen.
Well, only if he's also open to the idea that God doesn't want the world to be in this state -- which is exactly what the Bible also says is the case.
Would you rather God created a world of robots or a world of free agents? If He created a world of free agents, and some of them have used their freedom to choose the wrong, then is that God's fault, or theirs?God is ultimately responsible for everything if God created all that is.
Yes, He could have prevented it; but only by preventing them from having free will, too. So again, which one would you want: a world of good robots, or a world of free agents, real persons, individuals, capable of relationship and choice? Which is the genuinely good world?At the very least, s/he/it could have also prevented
Yes. None of those would be coherent suppositions. To say "The Supreme Being and Creator of all is limited" would be a contradiction, surely. And it would mean that the limitations themselves were actually the Supreme Being, since they would impose a restriction on God. So I agree...that idea isn't coherent.it unless perhaps God isn't omnipotent and omniscient. Or maybe God had to design the universe in a particular way because somehow God is limited to what God can do. But that begs the question of who or what then created those limitations.
But neither does it follow that if the world contains evil, then God must be incompetent or evil. The world may well not be what God desired the world to be, but be rather the habitation of free agents. And though God does want free agents, He has no desire they should use their freedom in all the ways they sometimes do. But preventing them would also prevent them from being free agents. And the creating of genuine individuals, genuine persons, genuine souls, is the surpassing good that relativizes the temporary triumphs of evil.