nicholsmon said:
Your questions reveal your blindness. Who is God? What is holiness? How do these things affect the universe and those who live in it? The answers to these questions give a clearer picture.
Perhaps I should have mentioned that in addition to being both atheistic and agnostic I am also an
ignostic. That is, that I consider the concept of God to be incoherent as often as it is self-refuting. That there is no coherent definition for a being laced in impossibility. In any case, I respond claims made by theists claiming to be speaking on behalf of said God. If a Muslim or Christian informs me that I am a wretched sinner worthy of nothing less than eternal torture then I rightly feel indignation with such passive support for barbarity. If I am told that I must by decree feel both
love and
fear for this said being and know that this being knows my every thought and every action, I think I can rightly comment that said beliefs are best shady and at worst born of nightmares. I am responding to what individuals believe about God and not the entire concept of God. When I am say I am anti-theist, or comment that hell is an unjust affair - I am pointing out my contempt for a world-view that includes sadistic permanent torture and a God that would approve of it.
I am saying that God is so much more than what you have imagined - without God there would be nothing; if God ceased to be, then so would everything. When we focus on stupid things like comparing sins, the fate of various sinners, and our own inability to come to God or even see our own sin, we miss the point.
You're glossing over the details. The details of which, if you are anti-torture are entirely necessary to explain. I cannot be told to ignore the fact that this God you describe might endorse eternal torture for our own nature, or for own inability to worship him.
We exist because God is Who He is. Should we not care about that? What do we owe to the One who, not only created it all, but also keeps the whole universe "running" by the force of His existence/will?
Why should I care about that? I'm an atheist. I am responding to claims about God.
Even if you think that the whole universe is some sort of cosmic singularity (I mean the violations of the laws of physics had to be huge, but only one time and never again, or we couldn't be here), you can't be certain. It is at least equally possible that the whole thing was created by some being totally other than - transcendent over - the universe. And if that is the case, what sort of being would that be? Should we not wonder and seek to find out? If God created it all, do we owe that God anything? Acknowledgment? Curiosity about Him? I think we do.
We would not owe any hypothetical God unflinching obedience or unquestionable adulation of his inherent 'prowess'. Only a masochist would argue that we should.
It is one thing to seek out whether or not a God exists, but another to surrender our intellectual faculties (that he endowed upon us) to scrutinize his possible agenda.