PLAYER57832 wrote:suggs wrote:True. For example, I don't believe it is "just" to let millions pf people to live in squalor and poverty.
God obviously thinks it is cool, cos he's done bugger all to fix that. Maybe he's just warming up, maybe his plan is mysterious, after all , whats a few more millions of deaths -as long as its God's jutice, then it must be ok.
No, it means that he thinks the steps necessary to prevent it are worse than letting these things happen.
Remember the old stories of the wish? Someone asks for "peace on earth" ... and gets a world devoid of people. Someone asks for their son to come back to life ... and he comes back, exactly as he was just prior to actual death after a motorcycle crash.
We humans are notorious for wanting things that seem perfectly reasonable at the time, but are not. Sometimes , even our idea of "justice" can be arbitrary. Take that recent theme where a guy has to do all kinds of criminal stuff if he wants his son alive. Would most folks consider a gaurd wrong to shoot a bank robber? Would he shoot if he knew the guy was robbing only to save his son? What really is justice in this instance? Ask a hundred people and you will get close to 100 different answers.
Our ideas of justice are limited to what we can see and know. God's justice includes all. It can seem cruel to us, just as it seems cruel to my son when I tell him he cannot have a sucker right now, that he has to eat first. Of course, my son will learn before long. WE as humans, will almost certainly never fully understand why God does what he does. We can only believe that there ARE reasons.
OR, as you say, reject him. But ... make no mistake, the decisions are made with or without our consent. Religion just helps some people deal with them.
Blech. That has always seemed a disgusting argument to me. It cries out for eternal repercussions that do nothing for the here and now.



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