Originally posted by Kevin Seitzer
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Originally posted by B-Fly View PostI'm not particularly fond of G-d as He is represented in the story of Job. He's supposedly omnipotent and omnibenevolent and yet he permits an innocent man to be tortured to answer a challenge from Satan? Why? To prove that He (G-d) commands devotion even absent the supposed self-interest the pious have in earning G-d's protection and blessings? I guess I agree that one should be a good and humble person for its own sake and not because one believes it will necessarily be divinely rewarded. That's the positive message. But that's 'props' to Job, not to G-d. G-d is essentially torturing the poor guy to settle a bet.I'm sorry, man, but I've got magic. I've got poetry in my fingertips. Most of the time--and this includes naps --I'm an F-18, bro. And I will destroy you in the air. I will deploy my ordinance to the ground.
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Originally posted by eldiablo505I have yet to see an adequate Christian response to the problem of evil."Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"
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Originally posted by heyelander View PostReading this over... I sometimes don't think you are too far off. I don't believe g_d sends plagues or whatever to punish us. He's not killing soldiers because we have homosexuals in the country, but the sins of not keeping nuclear plants up to date, or wells up to code, or deforestation, or climate change or over population or whatever are visited on us. I can't attribute earth quakes, sometimes **** just happens, but perhaps we do pay for ours and others sins.
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Originally posted by B-Fly View PostI'm not particularly fond of G-d as He is represented in the story of Job. He's supposedly omnipotent and omnibenevolent and yet he permits an innocent man to be tortured to answer a challenge from Satan? Why? To prove that He (G-d) commands devotion even absent the supposed self-interest the pious have in earning G-d's protection and blessings? I guess I agree that one should be a good and humble person for its own sake and not because one believes it will necessarily be divinely rewarded. That's the positive message. But that's 'props' to Job, not to G-d. G-d is essentially torturing the poor guy to settle a bet."Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"
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Originally posted by OaklandA's View PostWhat is this supposed to mean? That the thousands killed by the tsunami were killed because of their own sin? Or that thousands of innocents were killed because of our sin? What exactly are you suggesting?
I am suggesting that none of us truly know the true ramifications of sin. We do know that evil leaks on us.
What I am suggesting is that since death is not final (Bible). Maybe death is more like a caterpillar changing to a butterfly. Maybe in God's world death is not as big a deal as in ours. Maybe what we do in our life is more important than how long we live it.
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Originally posted by OaklandA's View PostI guess I don't view things like "keeping nuclear plants up to date, or wells up to code" as sins - they have nothing to do with religion."Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"
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Originally posted by OaklandA's View PostI guess I don't view things like "keeping nuclear plants up to date, or wells up to code" as sins - they have nothing to do with religion.
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Originally posted by Gregg View PostWhat I am suggesting is that since death is not final (Bible). Maybe death is more like a caterpillar changing to a butterfly. Maybe in God's world death is not as big a deal as in ours. Maybe what we do in our life is more important than how long we live it.
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Originally posted by eldiablo505You remember correctly, but that's not what I meant. I was referring an actual verbal answer to the "how can a benevolent God permit evil to exist?" question."Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"
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Originally posted by Kevin Seitzer View PostHuh. It's interesting that we take the story of Job very differently. First of all, I don't see the question of "Why?" ever answered in the story. It's true that at the beginning of the book there is this interchange between God and the Accuser where God goads the Accuser regarding Job, but that's never addressed in the conclusion, so it can't have been the point of the story. I take it as a rhetorical device to set up the consideration of the most awful situation possible for a human--when even God himself seems to have turned against him.
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Originally posted by Kevin Seitzer View PostI know. But what I see in the Christian scriptures is the call to respond to the problem of evil with action. That's a valid and important response, even if it's not a philosophical answer, and I think ultimately it says something at a philosophical level, too.
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Originally posted by OaklandA's View PostIf you are referring to things like greed and laziness, then I think they are called out in most religions."Jesus said to them, 'Truly I tell you, the tax collectors and the prostitutes are going into the kingdom of God ahead of you.'"
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