Purely a language construct denoting respect .. rather than "it".
The French language, for example, has everyday objects with gender.
You do realize this contributes to gods being more symbolic and less literal, yes?
And you don;t think male gods had to do with gender roles for humans? It is aparent that gods in many cultures were designed after humans. This surely counters the Abrahamic belief of humans being created in the image of God, but looking at all the evidence that is not accurate. The evidence is both science, like biology, archaology, and cultural stidies that reveal the God of Abraham was a tribal war god among many other gods. We can't look at the Genesis creation myths and believe it is literal, or about Yahwah.
Not at all .. your definition of evil is not as defined in scripture.
Ancient texts will have their own perspective on evil from modern societies. Did you know that in the social sciences the word "evil" is not used? The social science observe and descibe human behaviors and idenitify abnormalities. The more extremes of human behavior are colloquially referred to as evil, like serial killers and criminals without remorse for the harm they cause. Your fellow Muslims who behead people for minor infractions or suicide bombers are examples. Do you find anything in the Quran that says Muslims should behave this way?
..not until they are accepted by people as such.
You may make a claim that scripture is all deluded or fraudulent.
If I did (which I haven't) that would mean I need to show evidence that those who wrote, edited, and translated the holy books had an intent to decive people.
I'm sure these ancient people were sincere in what they wrote. The same wiith Baha'i's Baha'u'llah, the Mormon's Joseph Smith, the guy who wrote the Urantia book, or the Gita, etc. I have no evidence that any of these people intended to decive others, so I don't make that claim.
I know for a fact, that billions of people do not think so.
Which does nt mean the books they assign meaning to are true and valid at face value. That people believe their holy books are true and valid is irrelevant to whether they are true. Theists often cite the numbers of people who believe in a holy text, and this is a logical fallacy called argument by popularity. By your statement above the Baha'i are correct. the Mormons are correct. The Hindus are correct. The Urantia believers are correct, and all because there are people who believe their texts are true.
This is why critical thinkers need more, because even you believers don't accept the beliefs of other theists. Even you would need more evidence to accept that Mormons were right, yes?
Modern govt. employs "political correctness" in this day and age, in order to maintain law and order in a diverse society.
Like not beheading infidels for not wearing a head scarf? yeah, it's terrible that non="politically correct" governments lets women get away with crimes against God.
If this isn't what you mean, 1. do you condemn Muslim theocrasices that execute citizens for religious violations, and 2. what DID you mean by "political correctness" and how does it maintain law and order?
This says nothing about whether scripture is true or false.
You say that all scripture is false until proved true, relying on the fact that empirical proof cannot be provided.
That is your tough luck. If there is no empirical evidence then no rational mind can conclude these texts are true.
As I have exlpained, in logic and debate any proposition is by default UNTRUE until it is shown to BE true, or at least likely true. Since you admit there is no empirical evidnce to show that scripture is true then why assume it is? The answer is for personal reasons that are not rational.
That is OK, just admit it. But when you claim God exists, or that the Bible is true you are then obligated to back up what you claim. To avoid this obkligation a person avoids making claims in debate. Truth claims imply the statement applies to all people. If you limit the scope of a claim you give yourself wiggle room.
I say that it's true, and you should prove to me that scripture is all one big conspiracy.
Straw man fallacy. I have no evidence that the Bible was created, edited, and translated, and then spread over centuries as part of some elaborate conspiracy. This is why I have made no such claim as you write above.
What I do is assess whether the texts correspond to real and true things, and these anceint books make references to many things that do not reflect reality or real and true things. These are magical references and to believe them are real and true requires a lot of evidence, and there just isn't any. Remember, that many people do believe these stories is irrelevant.
Naturally, you cannot, any more than I can prove it is true.
Thanks for admitting you can't demonstrate scripture is true, so I take it you will no longer post claims that require us to interpret scriptures literally?
The discussion is not about evidence .. it's about answering the question of why God allows evil in this life.
False. the title is "Legitimate reasons not to believe in a God" and the reasons are: a lack of credible evidence.
Your suggestion here implies a God exists. You haven't demonstrated any gods exist, let alone the one you think exists.
At best your suggestion here is a speculative discussion about why a God would allow evil, assuming it exists. You suggestion isn't about a real God allowing evil, and thast is because no gods are known to exist outside of human imagination. And why assume any odf this? Because you are reading ancient books literally, and assuming they represent a reality that evidence does NOT support.