Because "good" and "bad" are not relevant except to us. And we are not the reason the universe exists.
Why does God punish the "bad" then?
Because "good" and "bad" are not relevant except to us. And we are not the reason the universe exists.
Knight said:Why do bad things happen to good people?
Because there is no God.
Erroneous! The question is flawed. First of all, name one "good" person?
Erroneous! The question is flawed. First of all, name one "good" person? Secondly, what people consider "bad" events in their life may be God's blessing in disguise. Do you think Jonah wanted to be eaten by a fish? Do you think Lazarus' family wanted him to die? Do you think Jesus wanted to die? :think:
A disappointing set of responses, in my opinion.
This question, and related examples, are a serious challenge to theodicy. Indeed, I have met numerous atheists who claim that this is the matter that has "converted" them.
Epicurus' trilemma (actually probably by Carneades) states the issue succinctly.
1. if God is unable to prevent evil, he is not omnipotent
2. if God is not willing to prevent evil, he is not good
3. if God is willing and able to prevent evil, then why is there evil?
There are a number of possible responses here:
a) A deistic perspective; that there is no interventionist god.
b) Or, a dystheistic perspective; that god is not actually benevolent.
c) Or, as the world is actually evil. As Schopenhauer wrote: "This world could not have been the work of an all-loving being, but that of a devil, who had brought creatures into existence in order to delight in the sight of their sufferings."
d) Or, a evolutionary panentheistic perspective, that *we* have not morally evolved sufficiently to prevent natural suffering.
e) Or, there is indeed no god.
Why would you worship something/someone you can't begin to understand? On what do you base your belief, then?This. Yes.
Why do so many people insist on seeing God as just like us? Made in His image, yes - but not an exact duplicate. We cannot hold God to our puny human standards, nor can we even begin to understand Him or His reasons.
The devil.
Why would you worship something/someone you can't begin to understand? On what do you base your belief, then?
I know some very good and decent people who seem to live their lives with a dark cloud of misfortune always hanging over them, and some wicked people who appear to live charmed and happy lives, so I would say that we cannot expect, or predict, based upon the goodness or wickedness of people.Is there an implicit expectation that only good things will visit good people? Conversely, why would we expect bad to only visit the bad?
Anyone who claims there is no God is absolutely a fool. To make such a ridiculous claim, a person has to know everything about everything - and I mean EVERYTHING. Do you know everything there is to know about this world? This galaxy? This universe? Do you know everything there is to know about time, space, dimensions, other worlds that could possibly exist elsewhere, and the truth about other beings that exist somewhere out in this vast universe? I didn't think so. Because if you did, and still found that there was indeed no being such as God that existed, only then could you proclaim that there is no God. To declare that there is no God, a person is basically proclaiming to the world that they know EVERYTHING, and that's why they are called fools. Albert Einstein himself once said,Nailed it. That is EXACTLY what I was going to write, but then I checked the thread first to see if it had already been said.igod said:Because there is no God.
Of course there are already those calling us "fools."
It's easy to think you are a "good" person when compared to other people, like Adolf Hitler or Ted Bundy. But when we compare ourselves to God, we are all utterly wicked.There are plenty of good people. Some Christians, for theological reasons, pretend that if you aren't completely perfect than you aren't "good". i.e., if you stole a pencil when you were 10 years old, you are a sinner- and therefore can't complain if something bad happens to you.
The one thing everyone in this world desires is love. The idea of a perfect being completely made of love is attractive to most.Why would you worship something/someone you can't begin to understand? On what do you base your belief, then?
. . . aaaaw . . . another theist with cognitive dissonance . . . how sweet.Anyone who claims there is no God is absolutely a fool. To make such a ridiculous claim, a person has to know everything about everything - and I mean EVERYTHING. Do you know everything there is to know about this world? This galaxy? This universe? Do you know everything there is to know about time, space, dimensions, other worlds that could possibly exist elsewhere, and the truth about other beings that exist somewhere out in this vast universe? I didn't think so. Because if you did, and still found that there was indeed no being such as God that existed, only then could you proclaim that there is no God. To declare that there is no God, a person is basically proclaiming to the world that they know EVERYTHING, and that's why they are called fools. Albert Einstein himself once said,
"We know nothing about [God, the world] at all. All our knowledge is but the knowledge of schoolchildren. In the view of such harmony in the cosmos which I, with my limited human mind, am able to recognize, there are yet people who say there is no God. What separates me from most so-called atheists is a feeling of utter humility toward the unattainable secrets of the harmony of the cosmos."
Continue to pretend that you know everything, and you'll continue to be called a fool.
. . . in my opinion . . . compared to the god of the OT . . . AH and TB are saints.It's easy to think you are a "good" person when compared to other people, like Adolf Hitler or Ted Bundy. But when we compare ourselves to God, we are all utterly wicked.
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