J
jinminn
Guest
I think some just aren’t satisfied with the answers. Is this a sin? You ‘refuse to accept’ apologetics of countless other faiths which you find unsatisfactory, correct? As I’ve pondered this, I can’t get away from thinking that if god knows who I am genetically and what formed me environmentally, then he appreciates that my level of satisfaction will differ from that of another.You refuse to accept that it is your failure to understand which undermines you, because if you do, then your whole fallacious argument goes down the drain with your straw-man.
Or, another way to think about it… god would realize that perhaps I am not intelligent enough to grasp these complex metaphysical explanations and have mercy on me nonetheless in the form of a simple explanation that I find satisfying.
At the end of the day, it comes down to satisfying, convincing answers. Some have those, others don’t. Do you disagree? I think too often in these discussions we resort to assuming that there is a flaw in one side or the other (caricaturized as either complete idiocy of believers or stubborn pig-headed pride of unbeliever). I think it is not so.
Perhaps, though if we cannot define god in any humanly meaningful terms, how can we know that we’ve accurately described him? Since god is unchanging (back to your comment above about immutability and Anselm/Aquinas), if we ‘update’ our terminology to better portray revelation… what was our concept of the revelation before the update? Given that revelation is a revealing of god to humans, have we been worshiping the correct concept of god prior to this update and shift in terminology/understanding?Your understanding of freewill and freedom is a straw-man that you have accepted…Once you understand Gods freedom within the context of perfection, you will see that it is your straw-man that is flawed and not the concept of God. But you do not want to understand.
Most believers, to be fair, don’t think about such academic metaphysical explanations and so updates are of no consequence. One is left with two alternatives:
- God really does exist and we’re just adapting our minds to understand him better and better even though our understandings are changing while he has remained the same
- God does not really exist and all philosophical/theological endeavors are simply trying to keep his/her characteristics within the bounds of a logical/plausible entity
With all due respect, if we cannot define a coherent concept of justice that can be understood by humans, how do we really know we’ve defined it correctly? How do we know we’re even capable of grasping it? At this point, we really do begin to require separate words for the language of theology.According to your strawman version of justice.
And perhaps this is the hangup… we throw around these words like the omni-max characteristics and when individuals cry ‘foul!’ because those descriptors are not manifest in the world according to their typical meanings… we’re berated and informed that it’s our concepts which are flawed, not the god being described.
Well of course the theologians won’t believe that they believe in a square-circle. It doesn’t mean no one else thinks this about them.You haven’t shown me anything to make me think that the concept of God is a square triangle. You have given a false representation of what educated faithful Catholic theologians believe. This is called a strawman.
What you are discussing are deductive arguments against god. HERE is a summary. They may or may not succeed, but at the least fellows brighter than you and I have been considering them as legitimate and not dismissing then all as just strawmen…