Stop paraphrasing, Gary. You aren't any good at it, obviously.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2026 5:00 pmSo if someone doesn't pay taxes and they were required to, then it would be their fault for not paying them. Is that correct?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2026 4:54 pmReally, Gary, you should go back and read what I wrote. Your paraphrase is once again, wrong.Gary Childress wrote: ↑Thu Mar 12, 2026 4:52 pm
So if I don't read the Bible and don't want to go to Hell,Will the cliff kill you if you decide to drive over it? Will your death then be the cliff's fault?will God "force" me to go to Hell regardless of my not wanting to go to Hell?
But I'll answer, even though it's off point. If a government tells people to pay taxes, and promises jail, that does not mean that the taxes become legit or fair. All it means is that the government (whether government or taxes are good or evil -- that's another question) is going to impose certain consequences, known to the taxpayer beforehand, if the tax payer refuses.
Now, you can like that the government can do that, or you can hate it. Personally, I hate it. I think the government takes too many taxes. But I'll be well aware in advance what the consequences for refusal are. And I freely get to choose whether I'm willing to face those consquences or pay my taxes.
But what one can't say is, "I didn't know," and "I didn't choose to accept the consequences of refusing."
However, consequences of rejecting God are not like taxes. Taxes are arbitrary. They could be other than they are, and they are imposed at the whim of the governing power. But the consequence of rejecting the Source of all goodness, life, health, light, joy and peace...are all the opposites, obviously, and can be nothing else, logically, automatically, naturally.
And having been warned, most people still choose the wrong thing. What can be said about such an attitude? Certainly they are not experiencing "force," far less the kind of level of force of which the Supreme Being would be capable of.