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A. I didn't say that God had to create. I suggested that all things were created without malicious intent. Human suffering is largely a result of not being informed and/or indifferent to how life operates and to how our actions affect those we share this world with. Natural disasters, disease, and whatnot are not evils in and of themselves. They're not pleasant, but then they likely serve a greater purpose. I don't know and won't pretend to.
B. What I do know is that existence is omnipotent over all existing things. The laws that govern us are intrinsic to God, thus God is subject to be who God is and create according to those laws. My contention is your insistence that existence (God) should be able to create anything not subject to that which is intrinsic to God, and inherent to God's quality of being ... namely the laws that govern all things.
God is bound to be who God is. That's one point where we differ in understanding. We are bound by the same inherent laws that bind God. God is law, principle, and truth (what is real). It is law (God) that holds everything together in the cosmos, which then enables life on earth. Take away the inherent law in existence (God) and we'd be left with chaos unable to foster life.
Take away that part of God's being (law) and there would be no universe at all. It is through the laws inherent to God's being that life was able to be formed. Without law there would be no known existence for humans to perceive. God is subject to himself, which would still make God omnipotent and unlimited in power. Take that away and maybe then you could suggest that God is not omnipotent ... that's not the case, however. God is omnipotent even unto himself.
The law of polarity is one. Everything has a pair of opposites. Opposites are identical in nature, but different in degree of vibration, which then corresponds on all levels of being (physical, mental, and spiritual).
It is a constant complaint among theological scholars that it is impossible to keep a non-theist on the subject if it is moral ontology. No matter what we do they are going to turn it into a epistemological debate. Why is this? I think I know why but wandered if you do.Define your God's morals because I have defined them well. Morality is relevant to mankind not to god.
You spoke earlier about moral absolutes yet absolutes do not exist although I know you use circular fallacies to conclude so.
My faith and God existed long before Christianity as a covenant existed so I have no problem. Christ added no new moral precepts, he only amplified and clarified pre-existing ones. Men since they were endowed with a soul have had a God given conscience so there is no gap "before Godly morality" existed.Let's review the Categorical Imperative where absolutes are taken into account. You love absolutes yet they existed before Christianity.
It is a goal and a precept to meet legitimate needs. It is not a requirement or expectation that anyone will ever do so perfectly.Is it an absolute moral obligation to help others?
What? God condemns rape. He insists we should resist such acts. There is no verse that states we should help everyone with anything. I thought you were going to be sensible so I did not point out the technical faults in your statements but unfortunately it is necessary. You will find no verse that states what you claimed. This is silly.If so then whyshould you not help the rapist with his deeds?
God is not an adherent to his moral dictates given to humans. Humans (just as children are by us) given moral duties that reflect their weaknesses and lack of capacity. We cannot see the future, we do not know a persons heart in totality, we cannot place a person in heaven, we did not create the lives we take, we do not have sovereignty over creation, we do not know how history will play out. So we are restricted in our actions. God has perfect knowledge, absolute sovereignty, he created al life, he knows a person heart fully, can place them in heaven, and knows what impact his actions will have. He obviously will have less self imposed restrictions than we will. This is common sense and a dichotomy we practice with children every day.If you say God is a source of absolute morality then take into fact how you deemed the acts of genocide by him immoral or do you think killing virgin daughters and genocide are just?
What the heck are you talking about?You are either two things.......
An Intellectually dishonest and moral person.... or
A genocidal third party murderer.
You are not God, are you? You do not make reality by declaration do you? I take a third option that leaves God with the attributes he has and us with ours and the moral truths and dynamics that apply. You should try it some time.Please take your pick and do not beat around the bush as you have only two options
It gives me great pleasure to post partial agreement, maybe. Normally the cause of an effect could be necessary but the effect must be contingent. I would agree with you in every other case. However God is special. There was no time when he did not exist, and so there was no time when moral law did not exist. I find no reason to conclude he at some point created moral law. As Craig and many others say God is morality. He is the locus for all moral truth. It is part of who he is. If he existed then the law existed. Morality is God. So if God is a necessary being then moral law is not contingent.If you are referring to causation then the above is demonstrably false, whether or not any God exists. You seem to be confusing the terms necessity and contingency. If a thing is contingent then it is not logically necessary. Nothing distinctly conceivable implies a contradiction if denied, and the statement A causes B is contingent because it isnt a necessary truth. For example, without the benefit of experience and experimentation (as per your last sentence), there is no way of telling whether a leaden object placed in water might be buoyant while an object made of cork might sink, and there is no logical contradiction implied by their doing so.
What's the opposite of AmbiguousGuy?
I'm sorry, but I still find you to be wandering in a bunch of words. At least, I really can't make sense of what you are saying.
You are saying nothing in response to the argument Ive given you, other than to confirm the contradiction. It isnt part of my argument that there was any malicious intent, and to say suffering is a result of how life operates is stating the obvious! And to suppose that disasters and disease serve a greater purpose is to nonsensically say that disaster and disease is a good thing!
Your first sentence in that passage makes no sense at all. And as Ive already explained, the laws that govern us are caused by God; they are not intrinsic to God, since he can change or amend them. The only attributes necessary to God are the ones Ive already given you, which define the concept of a Supreme Being.
If there is a God then we are bound by his laws, by which he sustains the universe, but God is the cause of them and is not bound by his own laws of the universe. Think about it! For if that were the case he would be finite, mortal and imperfect, just like his creation!
For the umpteenth time, there are no laws inherent in God; the laws of the universe are given by God, but he is not subject to them because laws affecting the natural world are contingent whereas God is a necessary being. And yes, without those God-given laws the world couldnt operate, but that would make no difference to Gods omnipotence since that state of affairs could only come about with Gods will.
Note that in my responses I am only assuming God exists for the sake of argument.
Physical is a polar opposite to spiritual. You are a physical being and a spiritual being. You're mentality rests somewhere in the middle.
You asked for specific morals. I can't supply an entire list. Here are a few. killing without justification is wrong.
Laws are not caused. They are inherent to existence. That is where your points fall flat. Prove that laws are NOT inherent to existence. The rest of your post is based on what you think God should be and not based on reality. Existence exists and has always existed as something. You said a great deal of nothing in your post, cottage. Somehow I envision you doing the following while reading my posts: :ignore:
It gives me great pleasure to post partial agreement, maybe. Normally the cause of an effect could be necessary but the effect must be contingent. I would agree with you in every other case. However God is special. There was no time when he did not exist, and so there was no time when moral law did not exist. I find no reason to conclude he at some point created moral law. As Craig and many others say God is morality. He is the locus for all moral truth. It is part of who he is. If he existed then the law existed. Morality is God. So if God is a necessary being then moral law is not contingent.
Without justification according to whom?
There most certainly is a contradiction in denying the truth of a true thing. If God exists then rape and murder are actually wrong and necessarily wrong. To deny that fact is to contradict our selves. As it always does, it comes down to only the question of whether God exist or not. If he does then his morals are necessary concepts that the denial of is a contradiction with reality.If there is not a single moral law that is demonstrably necessary then every single moral law is contingent. For example, to state that murder and rape are not wrong may be obscene and thought of as morally reprehensible, but there is no logical contradiction implied in denying any supposed moral truth. So if God is said to be moral truth then it has to be shown what is obectively and necessarily true of morality, that is to say why no contradiction is implied by its denial.
There most certainly is a contradiction in denying the truth of a true thing. If God exists then rape and murder are actually wrong and necessarily wrong. To deny that fact is to contradict our selves. As it always does, it comes down to only the question of whether God exist or not. If he does then his morals are necessary concepts that the denial of is a contradiction with reality.
This is conditionally true even if I had no evidence what so ever any God or any moral existed. It is just as true even if I have no way to prove objective moral values exist. The same way Pluto's physical characteristics were no less true regardless of our former ignorance of them.
I think it a very reasonable conclusion to believe objective moral values exist based on the fact the human race overwhelmingly believes they do and that the awareness of an objective moral realm is no less valid than the awareness of a physical realm, but this is unnecessary for my claim.
God ultimately. However we as a race define what is justifiable concerning killing another human being anyway. Adding God simply makes the justifications theoretically based on truth...
A theist loses nothing by his theism. Theism gains immeasurably over atheism in even category.
We evaluate justification with or without God but including God founds that justification on truth.
Theistic morality can certainly be corrupt, however the reasons I gave are not why, but if you wish to see true diabolical corruption look no further than the atheistic utopias of the last century.Sure. That's why theistic morality can be so corrupt and evil. A guy plasters "GOD" onto his personal justification and thereby removes all his personal responsibility.
What truly is scary and has killed more than anyone who ever claimed to be a Christian all added together is the moral insanity that uncouples morality from an objective foundation. This allows it to be plugged into any place an extremely fallible race in it's insanity desires, or at least the most powerful elements of that race. This has produced the refusal to execute guilty murderers and killed hundreds of millions of innocent lives in the womb. It has made a sexual practice that is done by 4% of us and that produces 60% of the aids cases, a sacred right. Not to even mention the Stalin's Pol Pot's and mao's of the world. To make it even worse modern moral ambiguity is so baseless that this is called progress. Well you can have it but I will insist it be called what it is as it consumes us.Scary stuff.
First in the four hundred years of the inquisition only 4000 people died. The atheistic Stalin called that, breakfast. Regardless without God no justification is even possible for condemning the inquisitors. There exists no criteria available to determine whether the inquisitors opinions were actually right or your preferences are unless God exists. Your having to amputate your head to save your big toe.Except for the 'rational debate' category. Anyway, I don't worry about whether the Inquisitor gains or loses. I worry about his victims. God save us all from a man who wields his sword in the name of his God.
There are no traditionally admitted morally accountable people as Christians. In the land of admitted guilt we are king.Yeah. Those who fear to take personal responsibility for their decisions often claim the backing of "God's Truth".
If no moral law is necessarily true, then no argument to God can be made to any such law. This is what you said previously: So if God is a necessary being then moral law is not contingent. There is no moral law, since every example, and without exception, can be denied without contradiction. Therefore any supposed moral law is contingent and may be either true or false.
Theistic morality can certainly be corrupt, however the reasons I gave are not why, but if you wish to see true diabolical corruption look no further than the atheistic utopias of the last century.
What truly is scary and has killed more than anyone who ever claimed to be a Christian all added together is the moral insanity that uncouples morality from an objective foundation. This allows it to be plugged into any place an extremely fallible race in it's insanity desires, or at least the most powerful elements of that race. This has produced the refusal to execute guilty murderers...
Regardless without God no justification is even possible for condemning the inquisitors. There exists no criteria available to determine whether the inquisitors opinions were actually right or your preferences are unless God exists.
There are no traditionally admitted morally accountable people as Christians. In the land of admitted guilt we are king.
That is why the 19th centuries great genocidal leaders first had to get rid of God to devalue human life to the point where taking out 20 million of them meant nothing.
Not only even this. Hitler presented Nietzsche's book to both Mussolini and Stalin. Two committed suicide after killing millions and another died insane after killing millions. Nice work, idiots. Now your promoting the same insane ideas he had.
I am not sure if I understood this. It appears to be another semantic technicality. I see only one possible point here. Are you saying that it is illogical to for instance praise God for being good because he had no choice?
Let me restate my claim and you can clarify a bit based on that.
I claim morality is an intrinsic characteristic of God inseparable from his being. If his being is a necessary one then the constituents of that being would be necessary as well. Now if you were claiming that produces some conflict with claims about law then you may have a point but I made no claim here about law. If God exists then his moral nature is necessary and dictates what is good from what is evil. So far I see no conflict or contradiction. That might modify what is meant by law but I see no reason to consider law meaningless. Anyway I will wait for clarification.