Cary Cook
Member
There is no philosophical reason why the Supreme Being should be thought to be omnipotent, omniscient, omni-whatever, or even "good" in any meaningful sense.
There is no reason why an assumed God to whom we are accountable (Supreme Being or otherwise) would have inspired any particular body of scriptures to be his authoritative "word" to humanity. Belief in scripture as an expression of God's will is responsible for such travesties as the Crusades, Inquisition, Taliban, 9-11, etc. The God(s) of all Earthly scriptures is unjust. He rewards and punishes based on what one believes firstly, and how one behaves secondly. Belief (probability judgment) is an involuntary act. No just being, (God or otherwise) would reward or punish someone for what he honestly believes.
A person who wants to "get right with God" can easily get right with a just God simply by the effort to do so. i.e. by experimenting to see what can be learned of God, and by repeatedly asking for correction of errors.
Non-scriptural monotheism is not revealed; it is figured out.
There is no reason why an assumed God to whom we are accountable (Supreme Being or otherwise) would have inspired any particular body of scriptures to be his authoritative "word" to humanity. Belief in scripture as an expression of God's will is responsible for such travesties as the Crusades, Inquisition, Taliban, 9-11, etc. The God(s) of all Earthly scriptures is unjust. He rewards and punishes based on what one believes firstly, and how one behaves secondly. Belief (probability judgment) is an involuntary act. No just being, (God or otherwise) would reward or punish someone for what he honestly believes.
A person who wants to "get right with God" can easily get right with a just God simply by the effort to do so. i.e. by experimenting to see what can be learned of God, and by repeatedly asking for correction of errors.
Non-scriptural monotheism is not revealed; it is figured out.