Isn't "Fear of the Lord the beginning of wisdom"?mighty_duck said:Is this really your view?
Most theists I've seen will play the God-is-Good card quite often as a reason to worship. Very few will admit they worship out of fear, at least in the modern world..
God isn't omnipotent. He can only do that which is doable. For example, He cannot travel into the future because it doesn't exist yet. He can not travel back into the past because it is done and gone forever. God can not make a rock so big that He, Himself can not lift it because God can not do the irrational. God is omnicompetent, not omnipotent.mighty_duck said:But couldn't an omnipotent God...
No it's not. Lucifer rebelled in heaven and then 1/3rd of the angels rebelled and followed him. Also, during the end times we find the following verse in Revelation 12:7,8 - "And war broke out in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon; and the dragon and his angels fought, but they did not prevail, nor was a place found for them in heaven any longer."...be able to create a world where we had free will, but not be able to hurt one another? Isn't that what heaven is like?
aharvey said:Isn't "Fear of the Lord the beginning of wisdom"?
:chuckle:mighty_duck said:Open Theists have a much harder time solving this conundrum. Nothing a few Post-Hoc explanations won't solve..
Agreed.God not being omni-benevolent is a perfectly good solution for the problem of evil. And there are enough instances in scripture to support a God who is not all good.
Yes.Is this really your view?
Well, I wouldn't say that I worship out of fear. I worship out of a spirit of adoption. God is my Father. But I try to always keep in mind the terror of the Lord.Most theists I've seen will play the God-is-Good card quite often as a reason to worship. Very few will admit they worship out of fear, at least in the modern world..
I agree. Some of the least convincing atheist arguments involve this square circle type thing.Jefferson said:God isn't omnipotent. He can only do that which is doable. For example, He cannot travel into the future because it doesn't exist yet. He can not travel back into the past because it is done and gone forever. God can not make a rock so big that He, Himself can not lift it because God can not do the irrational. God is omnicompetent, not omnipotent.
Heaven sure sounds a lot like earth... Next you'll tell me I won't be getting 72 virgins.Jefferson said:No it's not. Lucifer rebelled in heaven and then 1/3rd of the angels rebelled and followed him. Also, during the end times we find the following verse in Revelation 12:7,8 - "And war broke out in heaven: Michael and his angels fought with the dragon; and the dragon and his angels fought, but they did not prevail, nor was a place found for them in heaven any longer."
Sounds a lot like the reasons people followed Hitler..sentientsynth said:Well, I wouldn't say that I worship out of fear. I worship out of a spirit of adoption. God is my Father. But I try to always keep in mind the terror of the Lord.
God is like a lion. Beautiful, powerful, and wonderfully deadly. He's been good to me, for no other reason than because He wanted to. But to others, whose sins aren't covered by the blood of Christ, it is going to be very terrible to find themselves in His hand.
A world like that would foster an extreme amount of carelessness and immaturity in people. Adults have learned to live circumspect lives because of the consequences of past carelessness. If there were no consequences to reckless behaviour, every adult today would be running around like immature, bratty, impish, testosterone filled, 15 year old boys with no self control. No thanks. That's not a society I'd want to live in.mighty_duck said:In terms of omni-competence, couldn't God make a world where we wouldn't be able to hurt one another, but still retain our free will?
He did. It was called The Garden of Eden.Couldn't God create a world where natural disasters never happened?
Possibly. But we look down at such behavior today because it has harmful consequences. Not so in a world without suffering.Jefferson said:A world like that would foster an extreme amount of carelessness and immaturity in people. Adults have learned to live circumspect lives because of the consequences of past carelessness. If there were no consequences to reckless behaviour, every adult today would be running around like immature, bratty, impish, testosterone filled, 15 year old boys with no self control. No thanks. That's not a society I'd want to live in.
So God intended the world to be as you described above?Jefferson said:He did. It was called The Garden of Eden.
The immature behaviour itself is a harmful consequence. We are made in God's image and it is our honor and privilege to have the wonderful opportunity to mature towards God's level of maturity. A world without consequences would severely stunt that growth.mighty_duck said:Possibly. But we look down at such behavior today because it has harmful consequences. Not so in a world without suffering.
It's not our suffering God desires but our growth. And growth often requires pain. As the old saying goes, "no pain, no gain."So God intended the world to be as you described above?
And if he could make a world without suffering, why would he make this one, unless he was wanted us to suffer?
Is a parent that spoils their child a good parent or a bad one?That doesn't sound like an all-good God.
Hi Jefferson,Jefferson said:The immature behaviour itself is a harmful consequence. We are made in God's image and it is our honor and privilege to have the wonderful opportunity to mature towards God's level of maturity. A world without consequences would severely stunt that growth.
It's not our suffering God desires but our growth. And growth often requires pain. As the old saying goes, "no pain, no gain."
Is a parent that spoils their child a good parent or a bad one?
Even in the Garden of Eden, if Eve one day invented a coffee pot and carelessly spilled some boiling hot coffee on her hand, she would have blistered.
Oh for heaven's sake; no.mighty_duck said:Isn't that what heaven is like?
mighty_duck said:Why are natural disasters, horrible diseases, and droughts logically necessary? (If they aren't logically necessary then an omni-competent and good God would prevent them).
This relies on the assumption that disease and natural disasters do not bring about good. Indeed, a quick glance at scripture will reveal that human perceptions of goodness do not always reflect Godly perceptions of goodness. To argue that a good God would not allow such things to happen because they are not good assumes that humans possess an absolute perception of goodness.mighty_duck said:Why are natural disasters, horrible diseases, and droughts logically necessary? (If they aren't logically necessary then an omni-competent and good God would prevent them).
If human suffering is in and of itself a good thing, then that is one sadistic God.Johnny said:This relies on the assumption that disease and natural disasters do not bring about good. Indeed, a quick glance at scripture will reveal that human perceptions of goodness do not always reflect Godly perceptions of goodness. To argue that a good God would not allow such things to happen because they are not good assumes that humans possess an absolute perception of goodness.
Where did I say that? That was a Jefferson interpretation.Toast said:mighty_duck, do you believe there should be no consequence for sin (hurting others) ?
That doesn't help much.Toast said:Lol, and here the debate comes around full circle to where we were in the beginning. MIghty_duck, God couldnt have given people the ability to love one another without the ability to hate one another. If we didnt have the ability to hate one another, we would be like robots. Love has to be freely given, otherwise its not love.