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Re: The Problem of Evil
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Anyway, no hard feelings. In an effort to continue on the discussion, you seem to believe in an all powerful all good god, how do you explain the amount of natural suffering that we as humans endure? |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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As for your wording as an all powerful "good" god, that can be taken out of context. I agree with my last post when I said someone can call god good, evil, or whatever. I just feel god has the right to be however he choses to be, my opinion of him is positive, but that doesn't mean everything he does is meant to be agreed with by everybody. Think of killing for example.. the word in itself is seen as evil by most people. But there's a lot of circumstances where the same people would approve of it to prove a point or to protect themselves, or even to punish those who do something equally bad. Every single freedom and right a person has in the world was gained by someone dying for it, and someone killing for it. It just depends on what side of the fence you're on. But yeah, for my opinion suffering read Genesis. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
I just want to ask this, since there are religious people posting.
And I've never got a straight answer to this - and I don't mean it sarcastically, or trying to cut down religion- and I just want to read/hear someone's standpoint who religiously believes in the western culture's version of God. So, if we're all created in God's image, why are there Black people, Asian people and Hispanics? If God is relatively white, and we're in his image, why are there other people? And hell, if God's something else, why are we white? And why does God allow other religions to exist? And if he allows them to exist, why does he care what we believe in, and tell us we'll go to hell if we use our own free will? If we have the free will to believe in whatever we want, why does he want to put limitations on our free will, and say "Well, you can do what you want, but as long as what you want is within what I say." The one fault I have with religious people, is that whenever they encounter something they can't respond to, they say "The Bible says so" or something to that matter. Remember when the world was flat, and earth was the centre of the Universe? Anyways. This reminds me of a joke, I'll post. "Catholicism views homosexuality as a crime. It's bad. It's unnatural. You know what's unnatural to me? Zombies. And I seem to recall a certain easter Zombie somewhere. You get on your knees, drink the blood, and eat the body of Christ? Just so he has enough time to sneak up behind you and eat your brain? But not the whole thing. Just the part that controls independent thought." |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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I'll answer your question from the Catholic church's point of view if no one else responds. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
Like I said, I'm not going to preach to you. Everything I've said dealt with the general idea of god.. Only specifics for some religons. I'm not trying to convert anyone, if you really want the answer read about it.. Suffering existing doesn't mean god doesn't exist according to my beliefs and many other's who may or may not believe the same exact thing as I do.
As for typhoid's question, I already answered it in an earlier post: Quote:
Free will is a bitch like that. This is why I say one can view him as good or bad or whatever they want, because its their will to do so. "But that doesn't make sense! Why allow suffering, why give us the option!" Maybe he did it for kicks, maybe he did it to make his ego bigger. Who knows? He's god, he's not meant to be your friend, he's not meant to hold your hand, he's meant to be your ruler, your king, and your father. He doesn't like people going against him, oh well.. he created us that way.. And I think the creation in his image is not based off of LOOKS alone. Its more based off of what he is.. A being with the ability to make choices himself. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
These are not nedcessrily my beliefs, but are instead what I believe to be legitimate religious/philosphical responses to Typhoid's comments.
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And Typhoid, if you truly did not want to "cut down religion", I'd advise not posting a "joke" that is in reality just an insult to those that believe. Thats like saying "I have nothing against black people" and then telling a n****r joke. Myself, I tend to think that those that are atheists tend not to truly be atheists. An atheist simply does not believe in God. Most that claim to be atheists tend to hate God for various reasons. I used to be in this category. Don't confuse anger with disblief. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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I wouldn't say "You don't respect me, so I'm going to set you on fire for the rest of eternity." And Strangler: Quote:
I just said I wasn't Catholic, or believed in any western religion. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
If you want a very satisfying and hopeful answer to the problem of evil, read these two pages: http://www.watchtower.org/e/20010515/article_01.htm and http://www.watchtower.org/e/20010515/article_02.htm. Actually the first page is just an introduction, you can skip it.
I'll give you some highlights (about 1/3 of the original page): When God created the first human, he produced more than just a body with a brain. Further, God did not create Adam and Eve to be mindless robots. He implanted in them the faculty of free will. And that was a fine gift, for "God saw everything he had made and, look! it was very good." (Genesis 1:31) However, was the fine gift of free will to be used without limits? In directions given to early Christians, God's Word answers: "Be as free people, and yet holding your freedom, not as a blind for badness, but as slaves of God." (1 Peter 2:16) For the common good, there must be boundaries. Humans were not created to be independent of God. God made mankind subject to his physical laws, such as the law of gravity. Similarly, he made humans to be subject to his moral laws, which are designed to result in a harmonious society. For good reason, then, God's Word urges: "Trust in Jehovah with all your heart and do not lean upon your own understanding."—Proverbs 3:5. What went wrong? God gave our first parents, Adam and Eve, a perfect start. Of their own free will, they stepped outside the boundaries of his laws. (Genesis, chapter 3) "Through one man [Adam] sin entered into the world and death through sin, and thus death spread to all men because they had all sinned."—Romans 5:12. The main issue - sovereignty. When Adam and Eve rebelled against God, they challenged his sovereignty, that is, his right to rule. Jehovah could have destroyed them and started over with another couple, but that would not have settled the issue of whose rulership is right and best for people. Granted time to develop their societies according to their own ideas, humans would demonstrate beyond any doubt whether rulership independent from God could ever be successful. God will soon intervene in human affairs. The vindication of Jehovah God's sovereignty by means of the heavenly Kingdom is the Bible's theme. Jesus made this his foremost teaching. He said: "This good news of the kingdom will be preached in all the inhabited earth for a witness to all the nations; and then the end will come."—Matthew 24:14. When God's rulership replaces man's rule, who will survive and who will not? At Proverbs 2:21, 22, we are assured: "The upright [who uphold God's rule] are the ones that will reside in the earth, and the blameless are the ones that will be left over in it. As regards the wicked [who do not uphold God's rule], they will be cut off from the very earth." A marvelous new world. Marvelous physical benefits will flow to obedient humans living in God's new world. There will be a canceling out of all the bad consequences of rebellion against God's rule. Imperfection, sickness, old age, and death will be things of the past. The Bible assures us: "No resident will say: 'I am sick.'" Moreover, the Scriptures promise: "At that time the eyes of the blind ones will be opened, and the very ears of the deaf ones will be unstopped. At that time the lame one will climb up just as a stag does, and the tongue of the speechless one will cry out in gladness." (Isaiah 33:24; 35:5, 6) What a thrill it will be to enjoy vibrant health every day—forever! What about the billions of people who have died? Those in God's memory will be brought back to life, for "there is going to be a resurrection of both the righteous and the unrighteous." (Acts 24:15) Yes, the dead will be restored to life. They will be taught the wonderful truths regarding God's rulership and be given the opportunity to live forever in Paradise.—John 5:28, 29. So........... I couldn't have said it better. Conclusion: evil is tolerated for a time, to prove once and for all that people are better off living with God. The world we live in now is not what God wants and He will change it soon. All suffering will be compensated for, even death. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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Every day you wake up you're offered the oppertunity to go out and read the bible, or go to church. And you're offered the oppertunity to repent. If you ignore this oppertunity your whole life, and you die and go to hell.. you can never EVER say that he didn't give you a chance. All you could say is that you didn't chose to accept it, and you got what was coming to you. God offers a hand, but you chose to ignore it or reject it. And yes, god created satan and hell. There's MANY examples in the bible of him being angered by people who disrespect him and immorality. But that's the thing, he's god... you aren't. He has the right to make such decisions if you agree or disagree with it. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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I wrote a lot more than that, is there anything else you'd like to comment on? |
Re: The Problem of Evil
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But in any case, the best defense for the existence of Satan I have read is C.S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
I understand you want to ignore my post, because it wasn't a direct response to other posts, but I really have to defend the Bible here.
Satan exists. The hell doesn't. At least not as a burning place for punishment. Satan was an angel who turned evil. He wanted to be worshipped like his Creator. Why can't he be symbolic for something that sinful humans have? Because Jezus, the firstborn son of God, was tempted by Satan, and Jezus was perfect, without sin. Satan was even in the heavens, talking with Jehovah God (read the beginning of the book of Job). The words (Hebrew and Greek) usually translated with hell do not mean a burning place of suffering. The Jews never believed in such a place, they knew that when they died, they just stopped existing (but they also knew that God could and would bring them back to earth one day). Sheol and Hades refer to the common grave of humankind. In the meanwhile, heithen religions did support the thought of a place of punishment, and a few centuries after Jezus died and the Bible was completed, teachings like a burning hell and eternal soul crept into christianity. And it's not like nobody knows this. People will even acknowledge that their religion doesn't practise what Jezus taught. I refer to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheol |
Re: The Problem of Evil
I'm not sure what you're trying to get at here Angrist. I'm well aware of all the teachings of the Bible, I've read it twice, the New American and King James version.
Now, from a philosophical standpoint, I'd like to stay away from the Bible, because we're going to get into the messy situation of where some believe it is the written word of God and others don't. But don't get me wrong, there is great philosophy in the Bible, it's just that these discussions become hard to respond to, because I certainly do not want to discredit what anyone believes in, but it is hard to have a true argument or something to respond to your Jehovah's article with without doing just that. Now, I never said hell was a burning place for punishment. And to call other religions heathen was not very nice (depending upon what definition of heathen you are using). |
Re: The Problem of Evil
Typhoid, Angrists posts are a perfect example of the power of faith.
If it is in the Bible it is true. Don't bother arguing about it, because there is no argument. There are no other possibilities beyond that which has been given down by God: His Word is law, and just as there will be no other God's before him, there will also be no other laws before His (natural or otherwise). There can be no discussion of Evil with Angrist outside of his religion, because his religion dictates both good and evil concepts. There are no questions left unanswered when it comes to this. Now I don't particularly care for this view of religion, because I do think it lends itself to closed mindedness. Also, citing bible passages as "proof" only works if the person you are conversing with has the same beliefs as you. If not, you might as well be quoting any fictional novel. I don't like to think that God answered all questions for us. In my mind, ideas and belief go hand in hand, and without examination and overcoming challenges there is no value to either. That is simply my interpretation, no offense meant to anyone. |
Re: The Problem of Evil
Isn't the definition of heathen anything that isn't your religion? So when christianity introduced teachings of other religions, those could be called heathen teachings.
Most christian people are aware of the teachings that do not come from the bible, like most of the christmas celebration. But please don't take it as an offense. As noted by Bond and the Prof, I cannot take part of this discussion, because I simply believe in the truth of the word of God. All I did was provide our/the explanation to 'the problem of evil', as was the topic of this thread. And I quoted the Bible, I haven't seen others do that. :) |
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