It doesn't mean there''s no bad stuff. It just means that it's only bad according to us.Cybrweez wrote:If there is no God, there is no bad stuff.

--A
Moderator: Fist and Faith
No. Not if what God does goes against my morality. If he's doing wrong, he's doing wrong.Cybrweez wrote:My point Fist, if there's a God, He determines bad stuff, regardless of your opinion. If there is no God, there is no bad stuff.
I don't even know where to begin, so I won't bother.Fist and Faith wrote:Cybrweez, you have no idea what it's like to not believe.
I know, I thought that's what I've been talking about? But that's where irrationality comes into play in my mind. If God exists and created all, He is the authority, whether you like it or not. Sorry to say, its not snotty in any regard. To say, God may exist, and created everything, but no, He's not in authority, just sounds silly doesn't it? I guess you can believe He created everything, and then said that creation has authority over Him? Or they are equal? That's the options.Fist and Faith wrote:And we don't believe God is the authority on right and wrong, even if he does exist and created the universe.
You are saying God is the authority of what's right and wrong. I assume you mean that anything he does is, by definition, right. I'm saying that's not true. It's wrong to kill the firstborn children of a group of people because that group is persecuting another group. It's wrong to allow Satan to kill Job's children and servants just to prove to Satan that Job's faith in God is strong. He is not the one to look to for a model of good behavior if he does those things.Cybrweez wrote:fist, I'm confused how you can think God did wrong things? What is wrong? What you don't like? That's fine then that you would tell him so, but what would that mean?
Nor do I. I just say not to model God's behavior.Cybrweez wrote:God must be true to Himself, sure. I don't see any inconsistency there.
Hi, Ali!aliantha wrote:Rus, you give lip service to the idea that you hold dogmatic beliefs, but you never follow that line of thinking to its logical conclusion.
You too are picking and choosing what you want to believe. You have the same smorgasbord of ideas before you as everyone else in today's world. Your personal decision is to believe what someone has told you -- that X doctrine is The Truth. I could rudely point out that your choice conveniently doesn't require you to do any thinking for yourself -- you just have to do what you're told (and yes, what you're told to do is hard, are the strictures are onerous but the rewards in the next life are worth it, etc.). But I'm not going to be rude. I'm not going to accuse you of taking the intellectually easy way out. Because your choice is as valid as anyone else's here. And that's especially true if the Christian doctrine of free will is correct.
I've got one more point to make this morning. I've heard a fair number of analogies here about God the Father and how we, as his children, must follow him and do what he tells us in order to live correctly. But again, the analogy isn't followed to its inevitable conclusion: the number-one job of a parent is to raise the child to maturity -- and then let go. At some point, you have to let the kid make his own way in the world. If you only have little kids, and/or if you grew up in an authoritarian household where even young adults are under Mom & Dad's thumb, it might be hard to grasp this fact. But you see it all the time in nature; for example, birds kick the nestlings out when they're old enough to fend for themselves. They trust -- and human parents who don't have their egos tied up in their kids trust -- that they have taught the kids everything they need to know to survive, and now the parents need to step back. Christianity, otoh, requires its followers to be children forever.
There is nothing personal in this; I am in no way "better" than you. It is another matter entirely, though, that I declare a particular belief to be true. That is not arrogance; I am not exaggerating my own worth; it is a claim to be established as true or not.exaggerating or disposed to exaggerate one's own worth or importance often by an overbearing manner <an arrogant official>
You missed my point. I wasn't talking about picking and choosing *now*. I was talking about your decision to follow Orthodoxy in the first place. Of all the choices out there -- to be Catholic, Protestant, Baha'i, Muslim, Neopagan, an atheist, and on and on -- the one that most resonated with you is Orthodoxy. So you picked that one. That choice requires you to follow certain rules, so you do. I get that part. What I'm saying is that your choice came at an earlier point.rusmeister wrote:Actually, the whole point is that I do NOT pick and choose. having found the Authority, I accept what it tells me, whether I like it or not
We're having this conversation because you insisted that God is the authority on right and wrong. An authority that we must all accept. I'm saying that's not true. I am not saying that I am that objectively correct standard. All are free to disagree with my morality. Just as we are free to disagree with that of the God you believe exists. Just as we are free to disagree with it even if we do believe that God exists. God does not determine the bad stuff for those who do not believe he does.Cybrweez wrote:I see, there is no absolute right or wrong, but I'll hold God to my standard. Ok, but my point is, so what? What is your standard? To anyone, especially a God that created you? It means nothing, literally. I might think white people are superior, and God, being good, would encourage their dominance, and enlsavement of others. If He doesn't, I'll tell Him He's wrong.
Different things entirely. Anyone can disagree with the rules of the mathematical system we use if they want to. But when they try to give me $2 for a $10 bill, they're gonna have a problem. And if you try to program a computer to send a rocket to Mars, but have that computer operate with an answer to 2+2 other than 4, you're not likely gonna get to Mars. 2+2=4 is a matter of experience. It's verifiable.Cybrweez wrote:Another thing I heard yesterday, when someone was told they were narrow minded b/c they believed Christianity was true to the exclusion of all others. He mentioned how narrow minded his kindergarten teacher was, when she asked him 2+2, he could've answered infinte numbers, but she would only accept the number 4. How narrow minded.