natasha levchenko
Member
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
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why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
That he doesn't care would appear to be the obvious answer. In the Bible he is said to have created evil, so why expect such a being to object to evil and its variations when they arise? It seems to be in keeping with his character.why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
Free will.
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
If god does exist he either allows it to happen or cant' stop it.
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
Actually he allows either to oppress the other.why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
We may choose our actions based on our desires, but we don't choose our desires. Why would God create strong people who want to oppress the weak in the first place?
why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
I take issue with a god that allows innocence to be corrupted because it removes their culpability. Children just coming into the world don't have enough know how and allowing them to be corrupted slowly removes whatever free will they had as they get older. Kinda like god throwing us into a world full of demons and being surprised when we become evil. Seems like we aren't given a fighting chance.why does God allow the strong to oppress the weak?
Nobody comes into the world pre-programmed for oppression. Or for anything else.
Unless someone is violent or otherwise unethical or immoral because of clinical mental illness, their actions come from their choices, and their choices from either their decisions, or their wants and needs based on their psychological reactions to the environmental factors of their upbringing, or combinations thereof.
But I simply don't believe that God creates certain people inherently evil or inherently good. We are all only potential until we begin making decisions, and only liable when we make decisions as adults.
But how does any of this really answer the point I raised? "Free will" only speaks to half of the problem. A person's free will can only ever allow them to choose between the options they want to do. Protecting free will only enables evil if people had evil desires in the first place. As you pointed out, these desires can be traced back to things beyond our control. How can God not be ultimately responsible for them?