J
JapaneseKappa
Guest
The issue is as old as the Euthyphro dilemma. Does God hold himself to some external standard, or does God set the standard however he wants?The definition of God that i abide by doesn’t create his own laws but rather laws are a reflection of God’s intrinsic nature and its relationship with creation.
The dodge which you appear to be making is “God IS the standard” which is fine, but it is not without side effects.
For example, suppose God actually did commit a genocide. According to the “God IS the standard” position, this is fine. All we have to say is that “Committing genocides is exactly what God’s nature would have him do given the opportunity, therefore it conforms to the standard (i.e. God)” We can use that line of reasoning to justify ANY actions God might take, even apparently contradictory ones.
Second, we don’t actually know enough about God’s nature to establish practical standards of goodness. If you think back to arguments for the existence of God like this one notice that we are ranking things by “goodness” before we know anything about God. We cannot do that if we are going to turn around and define God as the same thing as goodness. If we do, we are either begging the question, or simply asserting things about God/goodness without proof.