That is called cherry-picking. One can just as easily find a lot of reasons to believe that God is not All-Loving.
#753 Trailblazer
God died for everyone. What could be more loving?
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That is called cherry-picking. One can just as easily find a lot of reasons to believe that God is not All-Loving.
#753 Trailblazer
Because the nature being eternal would make it God and it would be a pantheistic creation.
How could molecules and atoms function so good without nature having an imagination?
God died for everyone. What could be more loving?
He had a three day inconvenience according to the story. That isn't dying. He even knew ahead of time it was going to be a short term issue. If, instead, he had chosen to not exist and then poofed out of existence entirely, then you might have a point.
God did not die, Jesus died, so Jesus gets the credit.God died for everyone. What could be more loving?
Personally, I believe in God. It's because I've had personal experiences that have no other satisfactory explanations. With regards to other people, I don't care if they do or do not believe in God. What I do care about is character, and that is a whole different conversation, and not related to belief or non-belief in God.Here is the question! What do you think?
Several things wrong here.
1. nature being eternal would not make it a deity (which requires having a consciousness).
2. being eternal would not mean it is a creation at all
3. I asked why you think that forming everything would require something to be eternal. That was not explained.
Why would their need to be an imagination if the basics particles have properties driving them to form things?
It sort of negates any claims of anything extraordinary in his love.Jesus was preaching to the spirits in prison and doing the harrowing of hell.
The third day was the right time for Jesus to come back to life.
Jesus ressurecting and his soul living forever doesn't take away from him dying for us.
God did not die, Jesus died, so Jesus gets the credit.
Nature being eternal would give nature creative powers.
So it would have to have a Creator?
Without most of the properties usually assigned to a God: consciousness, for example.Because an eternal nature would be like a deistic or pantheistic God.
There would need to be an imagination because those particles have to come from somewhere.
It would take it away if He had resurrected bodily, but since He didn't He still gets the credit.Jesus ressurecting and his soul living forever doesn't take away from him dying for us.
God in his heavenly throne cannot die but as a man God could die. Jesus dying for our sins shows that he is God because only an infinite being can pay the price of sin which has an infinite penalty; a sinner cannot pay the price of sin.
It sort of negates any claims of anything extraordinary in his love.
Let's see, he sacrificed himself to himself so that the he could forgive everyone else under the rules he set up. At most, it was a few days of hardship, much less than many people experience in life. And he knew it would work out in the end.
Hardly a real sacrifice.
It would take it away if He had resurrected bodily, but since He didn't He still gets the credit.
And it only has an infinite penalty because he decided it would. So his death wasn't real death--meaning non-existence, but a temporary inconvenience.
Again, all he really needed to do is say the penalty is void and it would go away. No need for the theatrics.
If the judge was the one that made the law condemning his son, had the power to rescind the law at any time, knew the penalty for himself was of limited duration, and made a big show of the whole thing, I would say it negated any expression of caring proclaimed.If a judge took the place of his son, would the legal system making those laws or the judge upholding those laws make his sacrifice any less loving?
The hardship was on the cross, not in the ressurection.
The bodily ressurection of Jesus doesn't take away from the terrible suffering he paid so that we could be forgiven.
The self sacrifice of Jesus was in dying on the cross not in the non existence of his soul.
A judge cannot say about a criminal, the penalty is void. It would be an insult to his justice.
God sits on His heavenly throne and there He will stay.God in his heavenly throne cannot die but as a man God could die.
If the judge was the one that made the law condemning his son, had the power to rescind the law at any time, knew the penalty for himself was of limited duration, and made a big show of the whole thing, I would say it negated any expression of caring proclaimed.
Even more so. At most a few hours of pain and suffering. That is less than many people have experienced without knowing it was going to end.