@kellyjay saidUgh. Barely breathing (COPD) but otherwise fine.
Breathing, I hear that is a good sign. 😉 How about yourself?
Good to see you, bud.
@earl-of-trumps saidOuch, sorry to hear that!
Ugh. Barely breathing (COPD) but otherwise fine.
Good to see you, bud.
Its always nice to be seen. 🙂
@ghost-of-a-duke saidHe just takes a lot of mulligans
If God is indeed infallible and incapable of mistakes, how do we account for the regret He shows in the following passages? Why was God, as an infallible deity, unable to foresee what would come of his decisions? Why the need for regret?
"And the LORD was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart." Genesis 6:6 (RSVA)
“I regret tha ...[text shortened]... ing, for he has turned back from following me and has not performed my commandments.” 1 Samuel 15:11
@ghost-of-a-duke saidYes, that's the point of the suffering fawn. I think the problem of "random pointless suffering" is essentially the same problem as the "problem of evil". In the axe murderer example, if I cannot think of committing the act then my cognition is constrained, if I can't think of committing any harmful act then I can't think at all. My ability to do harm means that there is risk to potential victims who we can imagine as innocent. If a potential victim can't be harmed then I couldn't be an axe murderer. That we can be harmed entails that we can be harmed randomly and pointlessly. I'm sorry, but I'm not seeing a huge problem for omnibenevolence here.
I have my doubts sir, but while you ponder on it I have (to be on the safe side) issued instructions for the removal of all axes from your neighborhood.
For me, the arbitrary and pointless suffering of the fawn you reference 'becomes' evil when a supreme being who has the power (and alleged heart) to prevent it fails to act. (Especially when such an act has no bearing on our autonomy as conscious agents).
Alvin Plantinga produced an argument called the "free will defense". He takes a similar line of argument:
The argument from evil is based on the following:
1) God is omniscient
2) God is omnipotent
3) God is omnibenevolent
4) There is evil in the world
The claim is that this entails a contradiction. Plantinga argues that there is a hidden assumption that God's omnipotence allows him to create a world where agents are both morally free and do no harm. Omnipotence is not normally assumed to allow the omnipotent agent to perform logically contradictory acts such as drawing a square with the same area of as a circle using only a straight edge and compasses in a finite number of steps. This means that it is not possible to create a world where agents cannot do harms and are morally free.
My argument is somewhat stronger as Plantinga is attacking the argument that it should be logically impossible for a God with the above properties to create a world containing evil, or at least the potential for evil. I'm arguing that it is necessary for God to allow evil into the world if agents are to have any freedom at all.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvin_Plantinga's_free-will_defense
@deepthought saidHow then do we account for the interventions God has made (according to the Bible) in human history, apparently putting our freewill in jeopardy? Is his Omni-benevolence and desire to stop evil intermittent, random, limited, here today gone tomorrow? Take Exodus 6:6 for example:
I'm arguing that it is necessary for God to allow evil into the world if agents are to have any freedom at all.
"Say, therefore, to the sons of Israel, 'I am the LORD, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will deliver you from their bondage I will also redeem you with an outstretched arm and with great judgments.'
Where was God at other dark period's in our history?
@ghost-of-a-duke saidIf He didn't intervene what happened before the flood would occur again. Evil is within our nature, He has come to change our nature within us, which is the new life in Christ, being born again.
How then do we account for the interventions God has made (according to the Bible) in human history, apparently putting our freewill in jeopardy? Is his Omni-benevolence and desire to stop evil intermittent, random, limited, here today gone tomorrow? Take Exodus 6:6 for example:
"Say, therefore, to the sons of Israel, 'I am the LORD, and I will bring you out from ...[text shortened]... outstretched arm and with great judgments.'
Where was God at other dark period's in our history?
@kellyjay saidWhy is divine interference intermittent?
If He didn't intervene what happened before the flood would occur again. Evil is within our nature, He has come to change our nature within us, which is the new life in Christ, being born again.
In another thread you said 'allowing us to act as we will is what is going on' and now seem to be justifying God intervening in our lives. Which is it?
@ghost-of-a-duke saidThere would be no choice if all acts of disobedience we're not allowed, and we would never see the fruit of wickedness and evil if they were never allowed to play out. Adam and Eve wanted to know good and evil. We are experiencing it and are witnessing the fallout now.
Why is divine interference intermittent?
In another thread you said 'allowing us to act as we will is what is going on' and now seem to be justifying God intervening in our lives. Which is it?
@ghost-of-a-duke saidIt's not interference, it's intervention, and it's not intermittent.
Why is divine interference intermittent?
In another thread you said 'allowing us to act as we will is what is going on' and now seem to be justifying God intervening in our lives. Which is it?
God will allow you to do as you please, that is until He decides you've gone too far, then God intervenes. That's in the negative sense.
Then there are times when God doesn't intervene. It all has the appearance of being a crapshoot, but God is sovereign and nothing is out of control.
@kellyjay saidAdam and Eve is a story kelly. We evolved as a species. The evidence for this is overwhelming. (Let's face it, it's conclusive). No Adam and Eve, no original sin, no fallout to account for the broken world we're living in now.
There would be no choice if all acts of disobedience we're not allowed, and we would never see the fruit of wickedness and evil if they were never allowed to play out. Adam and Eve wanted to know good and evil. We are experiencing it and are witnessing the fallout now.
@secondson saidHow is it not intermittent?
It's not interference, it's intervention, and it's not intermittent.
God will allow you to do as you please, that is until He decides you've gone too far, then God intervenes. That's in the negative sense.
Then there are times when God doesn't intervene. It all has the appearance of being a crapshoot, but God is sovereign and nothing is out of control.
There to take the Jews out of Egypt, not there to save them from the concentration camps. Was that not going 'too far' for God?!
@ghost-of-a-duke saidAre concentration camps different from other times of captivity?
How is it not intermittent?
There to take the Jews out of Egypt, not there to save them from the concentration camps. Was that not going 'too far' for God?!
@kellyjay saidAre you not familiar with the huge numbers who were killed in those concentration camps?
Are concentration camps different from other times of captivity?
Yes, very different.
If God's intervention is not intermittent, where was He?
30 Jan 20
@ghost-of-a-duke saidVery familiar, the question remains. The blessing and curses remain if we are talking about one or millions. This does not become an issue if the number of people is great or small, why would it?
Are you not familiar with the huge numbers who were killed in those concentration camps?
Yes, very different.
If God's intervention is not intermittent, where was He?
@kellyjay saidAre you trying to say that the victims of the Holocaust were cursed?
Very familiar, the question remains. The blessing and curses remain if we are talking about one or millions. This does not become an issue if the number of people is great or small, why would it?