S
Spock
Guest
I tried before to suggest that we should attempt to find common ground, by defining basic terms (existence, evidence, love, good, evil, and so on) in a mutually acceptable fashion. Those terms then could serve as a starting point to allow meaningful conversations. Those threads all fizzled out very quickly, which is unfortunate.
However, there is another obstacle, which is even more serious. During conversations it will inevitably pop up that we are not supposed to issue judgmental comments regarding God. Usually they are in the form of “who are you to criticize God?” or “how dares the pot question the maker?”. These comments are always the last resort, when there is no rational answer.
It is insisted that God, being the law-giver, should be exempt from the laws he allegedly issued. For humans it is morally unacceptable to wantonly kill, pillage or commit genocide. Posters say, that such behavior is acceptable when God commits, commands, or allows it. The generic principle is, of course, boils down to “might makes right”. God has the big stick, and therefore whatever he says / does / commands / allows is fine and dandy. The irony comes in is that those posters still insist that there is a universal and absolute moral code, which does not apply to God. So why is this moral code universal or absolute, if there is exception to it? Don’t you see that you contradict to your own definitions? If something is universal or absolute, it cannot have exceptions!
I don’t think that this post will change your minds. As before, these attempts to rational discourse are futile. If some of you would start to think about it, it would be great. But I don’t hold my breath.
However, there is another obstacle, which is even more serious. During conversations it will inevitably pop up that we are not supposed to issue judgmental comments regarding God. Usually they are in the form of “who are you to criticize God?” or “how dares the pot question the maker?”. These comments are always the last resort, when there is no rational answer.
It is insisted that God, being the law-giver, should be exempt from the laws he allegedly issued. For humans it is morally unacceptable to wantonly kill, pillage or commit genocide. Posters say, that such behavior is acceptable when God commits, commands, or allows it. The generic principle is, of course, boils down to “might makes right”. God has the big stick, and therefore whatever he says / does / commands / allows is fine and dandy. The irony comes in is that those posters still insist that there is a universal and absolute moral code, which does not apply to God. So why is this moral code universal or absolute, if there is exception to it? Don’t you see that you contradict to your own definitions? If something is universal or absolute, it cannot have exceptions!
I don’t think that this post will change your minds. As before, these attempts to rational discourse are futile. If some of you would start to think about it, it would be great. But I don’t hold my breath.