sentientsynth said:Johnny, do you know what blasphemy is? Don't you see how you have just profaned God? You are utterly dispicable to me.
Actually, please show us just how Jonny has profaned God. I don't see it myself.
sentientsynth said:Johnny, do you know what blasphemy is? Don't you see how you have just profaned God? You are utterly dispicable to me.
This presupposes that violent and painful punishment is the only way to render "justice." And in my view, that presupposition is questionable. It also overlooks the fact that there might be any number of other ways for a loving God "ultimate being" to demonstrate love and "balance" or "justify" the order of the world.m_d said:Why couldn't a god that didn't send His Son down here be the ontological foundation for morality?
sentientsynth said:Because that God wouldn't be moral (just and loving.)
I have not blasphemed God. I was pointing out your fallacy of thinking. You said "If the FSM is not love (as the Living God is love), then she is disqualified from being the ontological basis for love." I was pointing out that since you base your definition of love on the attribute of God, then of course FSM doesn't qualify as the basis of love as defined by God. But if a believer based their definition of love on an attribute of FSM, then FSM would clearly qualify as an ontological basis.Johnny, do you know what blasphemy is? Don't you see how you have just profaned God? You are utterly dispicable to me.
To profane means to make common. Johnny has just put the Holy Bible on common playing ground as an inexistent message from the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Had this not come from a Christian, I wouldn't have responded in such a way.avatar382 said:Actually, please show us just how Jonny has profaned God. I don't see it myself.
Such as?Balder said:... there might be any number of other ways for a loving God "ultimate being" to demonstrate love and "balance" or "justify" the order of the world.
stratnerd said:Explanations are tentative… not the tools and methods
Just as an example, mixing Hindu, Buddhist, and Christian paradigms, you could have a loving creator God who creates a profoundly interrelated cosmos and sets up the "law" of karma, in which one's actions have repurcussions. In this universe, the loving creator God could manifest avatars who, like Buddhist bodhisattvas, vow to enter into any "world" that sentient beings generate through their karma and to work there tirelessly for their liberation. Here, karma would have a comparable corrective function to Christian "justice," but would not entail punishment for the sake of punishment as a means of obtaining "balance" in the universe. The bodhisattva avatars, by electing to incarnate among suffering beings everywhere (no matter how difficult) in order to teach and uplift, would lead self-emptying lives of love as ultimate transformative "gestures" of the divine.sentientsynth said:Such as?
So can we assume Stratnerd does not believe in the primordial soup that life supposedly sprang from in naturalistic views of the world? Since natural law is violated by 'man from dust' Stratnerd must believe in miraculous creation.HQ21: Of the Biblical miracles Stratnerd is familiar with, which one would he claim was a violation of natural law?
SA_HQ22. . . .(snip) . . ., a man from dust,
GuySmiley said:So can we assume Stratnerd does not believe in the primordial soup that life supposedly sprang from in naturalistic views of the world? Since natural law is violated by 'man from dust' Stratnerd must believe in miraculous creation.
Are RNA molecules alive?mighty_duck said:RNA molecule from primordial soup is quite different from a fully formed man from dust. Just like Anothony Flew concluded, if you wish to hang on to this God of the Gaps, its pointless to argue with you. He will continue to shrink as the gaps get smaller. Easier to concede this point, and get on to more interesting topics.
Like Evolution, which happens to be the topic of debate...
GuySmiley said:Are RNA molecules alive?
It's like you read my mind, are you sure you dont believe in the supernatural? (kidding, no response required)mighty_duck said:If your next question is "so you have nothing but faith that it happened naturally? how is that different from faith in God?"
Some dissection will be necessary, of course. In what ways you "mix" these three very different worldviews is of primary importance in order to maintain internal consistency within the hybrid.Balder said:Just as an example, mixing Hindu, Buddhist, and Christian paradigms,
Do you mean in the sense that all causes have effects per se, or that if you are evil you will reap suffering? Would you see these two as one in the same? On what basis is one action deemed "evil" and another "good"?you could have a loving creator God who creates a profoundly interrelated cosmos and sets up the "law" of karma, in which one's actions have repurcussions.
How does your world-view explain man's propensity to do what he ought not?Here, karma would have a comparable corrective function to Christian "justice," but would not entail punishment for the sake of punishment as a means of obtaining "balance" in the universe.
Why is nature uniform?mighty_duck said:It is therefore a reasonable conlcusion that abiogenensis was also a natural event.
sentientsynth said:Why is nature uniform?