He'd probably respond with Proverbs 24:7 "Wisdom is too high for a fool to understand."
Yes but too bad that God knowingly created him as a fool so the fool is justified in being so.
He'd probably respond with Proverbs 24:7 "Wisdom is too high for a fool to understand."
I fully expect you to be struck by lightning soon sassafrassquatch.
Wow. That's a stretch.
Paul wasn't necessarily trying to offer a proof of whether there's eternal damnation, he was just setting up a comparison/contrast pair here (rom 6:23) of how sin results in death versus Jesus embodying life. You can't abscond with it to say specifically what sort of death is being discussed.
This is why I generally hate discussing Bible passages. They're taken out of context to prop up concepts that the writer probably wasn't even considering at the time.
Im just struggling with the idea that this infinite God, would let an arbitrary barrier of this split second of peoples lifetimes (in a cosmic sense) be the last bell? Like why can't he continue to fight for your soul in the afterlife? why does he give up in the afterlife?
I thought God was great because he was unquantiable, or infinite. We loosely define his infiniteness as love. well how does he suddenly stop loving us when we die just because we did what he programmed us to do?!
im tired of semantics games played by apologetics: [...poor to middlin' apologetic...]
am i going insane!??? how is this the most loving God? Am i the only one who reads this apologetics person as playing semanitcs and side stepping the obvious moral questions?
Might does not make right. The very fact that I can imagine a more loving God myself, makes we wonder how this is the most loving god possible?
I just feel like im loosing my mind. punishment should either A) teach a lesson. or B) protect people from dangerous parties. How is this all fitting into God pre ordaining who will be saved from the very start? why would he give up on that 1% chance of his children if he has all of eternity to try and visit them in hell.
why is it so much nobler to believe in the resurection 2000 years later without any appeal to the 5 senses? In fact God should know exactly what it would take for each person to be saved based on their skepticism that he created them with!? Why couldnt a person who came to believe by witnessing God/jesus in person during the afterlife come to "believe"?
i dont get this. I figure that logically, me hating God isn't an option! If he is so great and benevolent and powerful, what possiblie being could be dumb enough or hatefull enough to reject him? It seems more about him being able to prove to us he exists in the firstplace, never mind if we reject him or not. Its like his big goal is to prove his existence without ever providing proof!!!! ahhh im going insane!
if he exists and these are his laws then clearly he IS the benevolent one! I engage in testing the logical benevolence possibilities to test among the different religions in diff points in my life. honestly its only ever been christian variations, but thats not the point. the point is that the religion should stand on its own! if it has to quote its own book with, "if you dont like it, tough". then im not sure why i should believe the religion valid. I cant cite a made up paper i wrote to convince the science community of anything of importance..can i?
1. you cant believe in something to be true just because it "feels right":
"it just feels so right! we have to have a savior!?" "life would be pointless without a God, it just wouldnt FEEL right"
the feels right method of guide fails. If it were right, then that girl i had a crush on in 8th grade would be with me simply because...drum roll.... "it just FEELS so right! {nothing physical implied!}"
2. so if we can't get there on feelings... well then were do we go? to reason...
problem is exactly what you just said: we often just create logical arguments for what we already hold to be true to us.... so this often breaks down into:
"well theres both a descent proof AND refutation... FOR BOTH SIDES!"
3. So then from reason/philosophy we go to naturalism and the 5 senses... but then we are left with:
"is this really all there is?" if all there is is finite quantifiable stuff, then how does the concept of "love" and other unquantifiables exist in the universe? if love is just a chemical reaction...well how do i feel about the ramifications of this????
I guess i could reconcile atheism if i was certain of it (ok obviously not 100%). I guess atheism isn't THAT repulsive if i knew it was the truth. the butterfly effect would give me comfort: a butterfly flapping its wing can affect the path of a hurricane many years after the butterfly is dead many miles away.
I just can't commit to this one out of the fear of being wrong.
4. so then we go to just wild imagination...where literally the craziest shit of molding together string theory and God, aliens and god, chia pets and God, or any other crazy molten theory of religion that has no previous basis besides you thought it up and it seems to work???
So what am i left with??? Im coming to the sad realization that we basically know nothing...somehow a bunch of dead philosopher guys would disagree with me.... but im not sure if IIIII can ever know anything
in which case this horrible reality unfolds:
what if i am not sure enough to ever truly believe in Chirst, but too fearful of the consequences to be an atheist. so then i possibly get no everlasting life AND i didnt get to go wild in an atheist life........having a world view like this would seemingly torture me....
What is love? What is God? The meaning you attach to these words isn't the meaning given them in classical theism. It's obvious you don't understand what the apologist above was saying, but, before you dismiss him as merely playing semantic games, at least try to understand what he is saying and why. This way, if you decide to reject what he is saying, you can really reject what he's saying and not a straw-man.
What are the obvious moral questions? Can you give rational justification for why the moral questions you grapple with are obvious? Can you show that all other competing moral systems are inconsistent or subordinate to the questions you regard as obvious? If you can't, then in what sense are your moral questions obvious?
Is God not free to create vessels of dishonor and wrath in order to reveal his justice? Would you rather God not be just, or would you rather be ignorant of God's justice?
You wrote that the absence of God would be a form of torture, but God is omnipresent--you can't get away from him. However, you can choose not to seek to understand. The natural consequence of not seeking is not finding. And this is the justice of God: he allows those who choose not to seek understanding to remain ignorant.
The existence of God is clear from the things that have been made so that men are without excuse. One needn't see God in order to know God exists. Indeed, God is a spirit whom none have seen nor can see. The only way to remain ignorant of the existence of God is to deny that which is clear, and thereby deny the possibility of understanding. Once one has denied the possibility of understanding, there is nothing that can be said to convince him that understanding is possible; e.g., if someone thought it was possible that A=~A, then it would be impossible to convince him that necessarily A=A; it would literally take a miracle for him to change is philosophical position.
^I love this post.
You're right.
If it is clear that God exists, then it is absurd not to love God.
One cannot appeal to scripture without first showing the necessity of scripture; scripture, as special, redemptive revelation, assumes transgression, and so the law that is transgressed must be knowable apart from scripture.
Neither are feelings or intuition a source of truth; they are a source of data.
And reason can be a source of skepticism when it is used only constructively--i.e., when it's used to merely build upon uncritically held assumptions.
And empiricism always leads to skepticism, which is exactly where you currently are in your philosophical journey--toying with the absurd and flirting with nihilism. The denial of the possibility of understanding.
Is knowledge possible, and what is the nature of authority?
am i going insane?
knowing anything about God seems to be impossible. Feelings can't get us there, logic can't either. Imagination cant get us there, and 5 sense naturalism cant either.
seriously, how can we ever really get anywhere without making an irrational jump? believers keep telling me that "well obviously you eventually have to make a jump of faith..."
but if its just a "feeling"...a "faith"....then how can i know its the right one!?
It's true that you can't get anywhere without first making an irrational jump. Not only is this true with God, but it is true in any type of understanding. All assumptions are fundamentally irrational, but we have to make assumptions in order to reach conclusions. The freedom in making an assumption is that if you find the path you are on unfruitful, then you can always go back and make a different assumption and try a new path.
Criticalism is the presupposition that all knowledge is conjectural, and that no belief can be certified, verified, validated, confirmed or in other way be justified.
......
For the criticalist, the standard justificationist method of criticism, where any claim to knowledge can be criticised by asking for its justification, loses all force. If there are no justified beliefs, then we cannot choose between competing conjectures for being justified or unjustified. Further, this can be generalised to all expressions of doubt, possible falsity, or insufficient proof, since every conjecture is doubtful, possibly false and insufficiently proven. In other words, to effectively criticise a conjecture, it is necessary to actually form an argument or perform a test, not merely express uncertainty.
You have to take calculated risks, just as you might when you try to cross a stream balanced on random rocks scattered throughout the water. Think about it. The further the distance you have to jump, the more risk and the less likely it is for you to take that route. But each person has a different margin of risk they are able to accept. So you can't predetermine the "risk limit" up front. Some people will take bigger leaps... and might even succeed, depending on their individual characteristics and fortune... but the odds were definitely lower and those rocks were riskier.
You'll see the same behavior in thinking/belief as well. Some people need the rocks to be close together and are more concerned about avoiding error; others are willing to try to leap far distances because they like what's on the other side more than they fear the risks. and then you even get some people who don't see the danger and make jumps that might dump them in the water but still have thought them (illogically) to be easy jumps.
There could be a reasonable jump and an unreasonable. An example of a reasonable jump is 'I establish the premise that I have a hand in front of me because I see it'. Cannot completely deduce this, as this is merely a piece of factual information in front of me. Common-sense aside, we can conjure plenty of good reasons to believe in this.
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Logic is the study of objective patterns of reasoning. There simply will never be a time when we know for something to be true, yet cannot make a good argument for it. Such an attitude is incompatible with the sciences or philosophy.
Bridging the gap with 'faith' means simply believing in something because we want to believe in it, not because there is any good reason to do so.
This is the essence of the very essence of Fideism. Mere self-deception.
There have been philosophers who have achieved similar results as the fideists, namely attunement with ideas that gave a 'spiritual' meaning to their lives with no tomfoolery. Spinoza is the case in point.
If you look at the context two deaths are being referenced in this chapter: Christ's literal death and the believer's metaphoric death. (The metaphor being a changed life on earth, rather than something in the afterlife.) However in the case of Christ's literal death the passage has meaning relevant to our conversation. Christ paid our penalty for us. What is the penalty he paid? Death. Therefore death is the penalty for sin. If eternal suffering is the penalty for sin, then Christ would need to suffer forever to be a suitable substitute. However the penalty that Christ actually paid is death. This is the penalty we should assume is due everyone, because Christ is a suitable substitute.
Is God not free to create vessels of dishonor and wrath in order to reveal his justice? Would you rather God not be just, or would you rather be ignorant of God's justice?
You wrote that the absence of God would be a form of torture, but God is omnipresent--you can't get away from him.
And this is the justice of God: he allows those who choose not to seek understanding to remain ignorant.
The existence of God is clear from the things that have been made so that men are without excuse. One needn't see God in order to know God exists. Indeed, God is a spirit whom none have seen nor can see. The only way to remain ignorant of the existence of God is to deny that which is clear, and thereby deny the possibility of understanding. Once one has denied the possibility of understanding, there is nothing that can be said to convince him that understanding is possible; e.g., if someone thought it was possible that A=~A, then it would be impossible to convince him that necessarily A=A; it would literally take a miracle for him to change is philosophical position.
I think this is part of my issue with discussions of particular passages.
There are various levels of nuance with which a text can be read. What was the level of detail within the author's mind when he wrote this? We don't know the answer to that.
I remember when I was younger in the faith and ended up tearing apart verses as a Bible study leader and even analyzing the use of the word "the" rather than the word "a" in a particular verse and trying to read meaning into that... as if the writer had some special meaning for doing that. Later I realized that was a dreadful mistake. I was hinging more importance than warranted on a particular word choice or perceived "logical balance" in a particular passage.
But that balance, that particular need for that level of detail, was a requirement I (the reader) was foisting on the text. It was not necessarily inherent in the writer's mind at the time... even if such a reading might seem more pleasing to ME.
So you seem to fail to recognize how your perceived interpretation is really just a product of your own particular requirements for the text and not necessarily inherent to the text in question.
This reality of communication is what creates a lot of ambiguity at times over what the author intended in a passage, and why we have to be careful about noting our own assumptions when we view a passage.
True. God could do whatever he wanted. And if all structure / justice is descended from him (as the "source" of all), then it's probably a matter of us not being aligned with him, since he would be our source as well, rather than him not being "just."
It always left me wondering how people truly change, if they believe one thing. Can they ever truly believe anything else, without some sort of divine intervention to break the mindset?
We like to consider ourselves autonomous and able to choose freely between alternatives, but so often it seems that we are fated to believe one thing because of our natures and personalities and history and culture... unless something inexplicable changes us. Odd.
does Might make right? (im honestly not sure either way)
this leads me to this:
its one thing to believe in a God...
...quite another to then make the jump to a personable God
...and then ANOTHER jump to WHICH personable God...which one you end up believing in seems to have more to do with your personality, culture, and history as you point out.
I am not discussing "might" (in the sense of "might" begin a conscious application of power/potency). I am simply noting that if God is the source of all, if everything is derived from him, then his creation will reflect his essence.
(Just like a parent's nature reflects how they parent.)
If God defines ALL of reality, then whatever is "right" is whatever reflects God truthfully.
So if you're not aligned with God, you'd be "wrong."
(unless of course God defined you to be someone not aligned with him.Then you'd be "right" in your "wrongness." )
Do you mean "personal"?
I think we should remain acutely aware of how our understanding and perspective to things depends on what information has been accessible to us in our lives.
This is a foundational point of my belief structure. If God is universal, he must be discernable even without the conventional means.
Holy text, a published manuscript, is great... but if God is not going to be elitist, he's going to have to be just as accessible by people in any culture, over any time, of any literacy or intelligence, of any mental ability.
It can't be based on "what we know," since what we know is never ensured. Somehow our participation in any kingdom of God has to transcend/bypass specialized or localized knowledge.
This goes along with my "how is it someone fault to simply be what God created them to be? He created them knowing they would sen, so in effect he created that person to sin! The fundies respond that "its God, he can do what he wants to demonstrate his justice". To me that IS a "Might equals Right argument"..."he who has the power makes the ethics"...to those of us who find ethics as objective and independent of observation, creation etc. That is uncomfortable...So if you're not aligned with God, you'd be "wrong."
(unless of course God defined you to be someone not aligned with him.Then you'd be "right" in your "wrongness." )
1. I did mean a relational God...personable might of been the wrong word....sorry![]()
2. "If God is universal he must be discernible even without conventional..."-- this is my main criticism: why would God limit himself to a 2000 year old book...just because someone might be able to discern there is a God from i guess Nature...how does that person make the leap that the Bible is the correct version of his communication?
3. This goes along with my "how is it someone fault to simply be what God created them to be? He created them knowing they would sen, so in effect he created that person to sin! The fundies respond that "its God, he can do what he wants to demonstrate his justice".
To me that IS a "Might equals Right argument"..."he who has the power makes the ethics"...to those of us who find ethics as objective and independent of observation, creation etc. That is uncomfortable...
I too grapple with this concept. What confuses me and is the crux of my doubt on the topic of "God" is that if he is indeed a loving, benevolent force and has us, his creation in his best interest, how can he expect us in our limited knowledge and ability to understand the complexities of this universe, to understand this issue? We have the ability to think, analyze and doubt and I find myself doing this a lot. God encourages/forces/prods us to "live by faith" and just accept that there's a way we can't understand but to be ok with that.God is holy in ways we are not. I believe He's benevolent and kind, but there's another aspect of Him that makes Hell necessary? I grapple with this.
I too grapple with this concept. What confuses me and is the crux of my doubt on the topic of "God" is that if he is indeed a loving, benevolent force and has us, his creation in his best interest, how can he expect us in our limited knowledge and ability to understand the complexities of this universe, to understand this issue? We have the ability to think, analyze and doubt and I find myself doing this a lot. God encourages/forces/prods us to "live by faith" and just accept that there's a way we can't understand but to be ok with that.
How can I be expected to blindly accept that or be damned if I don't? For me, it's not a choice, it's an inability to understand. From what I've always been told and from all I can gather is that that isn't good enough and hell still awaits me and my heresy. If there is a god, I'm angry at him for that. That "system", if you will, isn't one of a humane beholder of justice.
I think this is part of my issue with discussions of particular passages.
There are various levels of nuance with which a text can be read. What was the level of detail within the author's mind when he wrote this? We don't know the answer to that.
I remember when I was younger in the faith and ended up tearing apart verses as a Bible study leader and even analyzing the use of the word "the" rather than the word "a" in a particular verse and trying to read meaning into that... as if the writer had some special meaning for doing that. Later I realized that was a dreadful mistake. I was hinging more importance than warranted on a particular word choice or perceived "logical balance" in a particular passage.
But that balance, that particular need for that level of detail, was a requirement I (the reader) was foisting on the text. It was not necessarily inherent in the writer's mind at the time... even if such a reading might seem more pleasing to ME.
So you seem to fail to recognize how your perceived interpretation is really just a product of your own particular requirements for the text and not necessarily inherent to the text in question.
This reality of communication is what creates a lot of ambiguity at times over what the author intended in a passage, and why we have to be careful about noting our own assumptions when we view a passage.