Dancing Mustard wrote:If this 'God' was so intent on letting souls be saved, then couldn't he just erase all memories of evil, magically prevent all future evil-acts, and give us all a clear and comprehensive tutorial on how to go about freely repenting were we minded to do so?
Sounds like a fairly limited God who can only go about getting rid of evil by either letting us do our own thing, or by nuking everybody who ever touched the stuff. I'd have thought an omnipotent being would have been able to be a bit more subtle than all that fire+brimstone stuff.
You're a lovely man Nate, but I can't help but think that all this "Here's what I imagine God's plan might be; but despite being all powerful, he's still bound to go about fulfilling it in the most convoluted and inefficient way possible" is a bit straw-clutchy really. Also, is it in the bible, or is it more speculation?
DM, don't underestimate the Holiness of God, and don't underestimate God's willingness to forgive. God is so perfect that He cannot bear sin at all, this is not a shortcoming, it's actually part and parcel of perfection, utter separation from evil. And perhaps I didn't make the whole 3rd option thing clear. God has provided, through the death of Christ, the opportunity for any individual to be free from sin, it's just that you have to actually let go of "me doing something" and make it "me realizing I can't do anything and trusting". If you refuse to take the way of escape that God has offered to you at no cost to you, why would you blame Him for nuking you? I'd nuke you too if I offered you a chance to be saved through the death of another and you ignored it.
As for me making it up, here's what I can say absolutely from the Bible (if you want chapter and verse, let me know)
1. God is all powerful
2. God is all knowing
3. God desires all men to come into a relationship with Him.
4. God will not force us into relationship with Himself.
5. Man is despicable and cannot do anything good in and of himself
6. Man bears the responsibility for the broken relationship, and for the existence of evil in the world, which includes death.
By the way, DM, seeing as you are not all knowing, for you to decide that it's convoluted or inefficient means absolutely nil. Nothing personal, sorry.
heavycola wrote:No one has really answered this yet, I suspect because it is unanswerable. Omniscience is an absolute quality, it can;'t mena one thing to you and another to someone else. It is what it is. If god is omniscient then free will is bullshit, for the reasons neo put forth.
if god knows what choices we are going to make, if those choices are pre-made, then free will is an illusion.
We've been around this before, I think. I'll leave my former example standing. Absolute knowledge on God's part does not change the fact that we freely choose. God knows our minds better than we do, He knows all the intricacies of our thoughts, even when we're not aware. After all, he created us. So, for him to know all the possible options, know exactly which one our limited minds will choose is not difficult. But he still allows us the freedom to do whatever we choose. He doesn't force us into anything; He simply knows the choice we make before we do it.
joecoolfrog wrote:Nate
Correct me if im wrong but briefly you are saying;
1) One can lead a good and fruitful life,be a credit to their community but be barred from heaven if not accepting Jesus.
2) One can be a immoral murderous rogue but providing they accept salvation they will be saved. Now I see no time frame here so one can be a monster for 70 years and then repent
on ones deathbed ( not difficult to be pious and sincere for a day or 2 if the time of reckoning is fast approaching )
Frankly it doesn't add up does it, an omnipotent God could easily judge a persons overal life in a milisecond and that would guarantee that only the worthy entered heaven. Of course that would close a lot of second/third chance loopholes and mean less pennies for the church coffers, better marketing I agree but not the best way to sort out the truly deserving. However if we stretch a point and accept that this dogma is purely designed to give everybody countless opportunities to repent and be saved, how then does this gel with the zeal of the religious right with regard to Capital punnishment. After all if leeway is given to all and sundry on the entry qualification to heaven then why no opportunity to repent on lowly earth and be saved from execution.
The1exile wrote:MR. Nate wrote:You're rating a person with a good life as somehow more deserving of heaven.
Yes.
You're missing God's holiness. This "overall life" judgment damns everyone to hell immediately. That's it. End of story. God's perfectly Holy, none of us are. If only the worthy were in heaven, it's just God and the angels. That's why Christ died, to offer us the opportunity to get into heaven despite the fact that none of us deserve it.
The1exile wrote:MR. Nate wrote:It's pretty clear in scripture that no good deed or deeds is enough to get into heaven, but everyone who has ever done a single thing wrong is unable to stand before a Holy God.
And this is justice? I don't buy it.
MR. Nate wrote:God's standard is absolute perfection. Since none of us can reach that standard,
...because, in your view at least, he knows we won't be and/or he made use so we wouldn't...
MR. Nate wrote:he allows us into heaven if we admit we are not holy or perfect, and accept Christs death as the substitution for our punishment. Of course, if we do this, we'll be grateful enough to God that we attempt to do things that are right, but the key is to always remember that no one can earn it on their own.
So you're saying that traditional "goodness", rather than being the aim of christianity, is merely a helpful byproduct?
I find that I would have to refer you back to the murder on the deathbed thing, and find that not just.
You and I are sinful beings, so to us, sin is no big deal. But to a perfect, Holy God, every sin is despicable. Which disobedience to you tell your kids is OK? None, if you didn't think it was a big deal, you wouldn't have told them not to do it. God knows we can't meet that standard, but, as I've said several times, He's provided a way for us to be saved from judgment anyway. Fair is nobody getting into heaven, so you're saying it's not fair that some people who "deserve" it don't get in is simply not possible. No one deserves it. Not you, not me, not anybody. And yes, actually, traditional goodness is not the focus of the Christian life, people don't convert to christianity in order to lead good lives. They convert because they realize they want to enter into a relationship with the God of the Universe. After that, they realize that God is perfect, and wants us to be like him, so they try to clean up their lives, but that is not the goal.
The1exile wrote:MR. Nate wrote:So no matter how good or bad a person is, accepting their own depravity and turning to Christ cleanses them. To a certain degree, however we can see how sincere that decision was based on their actions after that. IF a person claims to have repented, but continues to live a life in rebellion to God's standards, we have to question whether that decision was true or not. Turning to Christ is a life changing decision, it impacts your actions, your words, even your thoughts. If a person has truly committed themselves to Christ, they are going to change for the better.
Again, I just can't see justice in this. There's no consistency and it all goes down to Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus, which is imo the stupidest tenet of xianity.
That's wrong, it's not outside the church, it's outside of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. The church is just a collection of people who are striving to build their relationship, not the arbiter of who is saved and who is not.
The1exile wrote:MR. Nate wrote:And, by the way, which philosopher who killed God actually thought the world was beautiful? It seems to me that everyone who does the hard work of working out the effects of a godless world comes back with a handful of despair and little more. I think the beauty you see in this world is by focusing on the flower while refusing to acknowledge the prison around you.
I find I can I consider the world beautiful, or think that the universe is beautiful, without having to subscribe to a belief system. Love and altruism ftw. God ftl.
Read the philosophers that agree with you, you'll be surprised.
stuart133 wrote:The way i look at this is that there probably is a god or more likely gods, not all powerful but with supreme power over the universe. I think that they set in motion the events to create this universe, the big bang or whatever, and then they sat back and watched the show, including all inhabited planets. Maybe they might spice things up a bit by throwing a meteor at a planet every so often but really they have little control over the peoples of the universe. Also at the end of life that is it, there is nothing. The gods are not perfect, they commit what we would consider crimes and they are unlike those that we believe rather blindly.
Welcome to CC. I hate to be mean, but all I can say is that's a nice opinion. Got a particular reason for that, or is it simply something you came up with on your own?