Zakath is either playing games or is being sloppy by implying that Bob never clearly indicated the source of the standard for absolute right and wrong.
Here are some exerpts from Bob's posts:
“If God created the universe and life and instilled humans with a conscience which reflects His own righteous standard,”
“I pointed out in post 1 the common theistic belief that “a conscience… reflects [God’s] own righteous standard.”
Your severe misstatement of my position confused conscience with God’s righteous standard.
: I pointed out in post 1 the common theistic belief that “a conscience… reflects [God’s] own righteous standard.” In post 2, I wrote that “absolute right and wrong would require a standard that transcends every man and every society.” In post 3: “Absolute morality can only exist if a moral authority above mankind exists. …and the collective conscience of mankind, though damaged, still provides strong evidence of these absolutes.”
I have previously answered that the absolute moral standard is God’s righteous nature, which is “God’s own righteous standard,”
I follow God, and He is the standard you ask for. Of course I had indicated this in my first post, and repeated it later, that the absolute standard is “God’s nature,” which is “His own righteous standard,” and I stated in 4b that our “conscience… reflects God’s ‘own righteous standard.’”
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Technically, Zakath may have an argument that the words in quotation were never precisely used as stated. This is called "nit picking". But one would have to be stupid or blind (or disingenuous) to say that the point had not been made.
Here are some exerpts from Bob's posts:
“If God created the universe and life and instilled humans with a conscience which reflects His own righteous standard,”
“I pointed out in post 1 the common theistic belief that “a conscience… reflects [God’s] own righteous standard.”
Your severe misstatement of my position confused conscience with God’s righteous standard.
: I pointed out in post 1 the common theistic belief that “a conscience… reflects [God’s] own righteous standard.” In post 2, I wrote that “absolute right and wrong would require a standard that transcends every man and every society.” In post 3: “Absolute morality can only exist if a moral authority above mankind exists. …and the collective conscience of mankind, though damaged, still provides strong evidence of these absolutes.”
I have previously answered that the absolute moral standard is God’s righteous nature, which is “God’s own righteous standard,”
I follow God, and He is the standard you ask for. Of course I had indicated this in my first post, and repeated it later, that the absolute standard is “God’s nature,” which is “His own righteous standard,” and I stated in 4b that our “conscience… reflects God’s ‘own righteous standard.’”
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Technically, Zakath may have an argument that the words in quotation were never precisely used as stated. This is called "nit picking". But one would have to be stupid or blind (or disingenuous) to say that the point had not been made.