A
Al_Moritz
Guest
Of course it is. But what does this have to do with the point MindOverMatter and I were making?It** is** a heresy to affirm that God never intervenes miraculously or answers prayers.
Of course it is. But what does this have to do with the point MindOverMatter and I were making?It** is** a heresy to affirm that God never intervenes miraculously or answers prayers.
āa great **self-sufficient **process of developmentā is hardly consistent with divine Providence, the injunction to āGive us this day our daily breadā and the occurrence of miracles in answer to prayer.Of course it is. But what does this have to do with the point MindOverMatter and I were making?![]()
. . . sigh . . .āa great **self-sufficient **process of developmentā is hardly consistent with divine Providence, the injunction to āGive us this day our daily breadā and the occurrence of miracles in answer to prayer.
A sigh can signify anything from hope to despair - but it doesnāt address the issue!. . . sigh . . .
I think at some point you are going to have to accept that there is a difference between God answering a prayer and God doing a botched job of creation. There are many flaws in physical things and there are many things that can go wrong. This makes sense if we live in a naturally evolving system. There are many things about organisms that only makes sense (especially in respect of Gods moral intentions) in a naturally evolving reality. But it brings Gods moral competency into question if God directly designed the universe by fiat to be that way, and even worse, over millions of years!!! The existence of things such as disease and viruses does not make sense in terms of direct benevolent design, but it does make sense in terms of natural evolution, a process in which viruses and errors are potential or unavoidable by-products. This makes sense if for some reason God deemed it more fruitful and a greater good that the universe should naturally evolve. God does not create the virus directly as a species; but rather it evolves by chance.A sigh can signify anything from hope to despair - but it doesnāt address the issue!![]()
Emphasis mine.Everything comes from God - including evil! But evil is an inevitable consequence of finitude and independence.
Hope you are sitting down.I think at some point you are going to have to accept that there is a difference between God answering a prayer and God doing a botched job of creation.
Youāre violating the ontological structure of reality with that. āThose naturesā cannot express themselves by ābecoming other naturesā. Itās completely illogical.True, but if you agree that it has happened at least once, then isnāt it more reasonable to think that if God is going to make a system of secondary causes with specific natures then surely he would allow these natures to express themselves without restriction or intervention?
For the same reason that laws that govern nature are not absolute. Those laws were created by God for a reason, and they have limits for a reason. They were created to reveal order. They have limits to reveal that there is a greater power at work in the universe than what physical laws can produce.Otherwise what is the point of creating physical laws, quarks, atoms, and all the other complex natures that comprise the physical if he is going to interfere with their natural ends?
Again, thatās a direct contradiction of Darwinian claims. As I pointed out above, evolutionary theory claims that one nature, through chance mutations, actually becomes another nature.It seems to me that God created a system that he intended to evolve naturally according to its nature.
Youāve mentioned that before but you didnāt provide any detail. ID is scientific research. It doesnāt make any theological claims. It cannot, by its nature, be a heresy.This ID evolution thing seems that it might be heading in the direction of a heresy.
ID says nothing like youāve parodied it here.But implying that God created an insufficient process that always needs a push here and there, that makes God an incompetent creator. And that indeed heads in the direction of a heresy.
Ok, if reality is flawed, then it is not fulfilling its purpose.There are many flaws in physical things and there are many things that can go wrong.
It makes sense in the atheist view because they think that nature can evolve without God knowing about it, or without Godās will directing every aspect of the universe.This makes sense if we live in a naturally evolving system.
Letās get into specifics ā what are you talking about? Do you have a better plan for the universe than God has?There are many things about organisms that only makes sense (especially in respect of Gods moral intentions) in a naturally evolving reality.
Youāre assuming that there is only one interpretation of the facts that is reasonable - namely, the evolutionary story.But it brings Gods moral competency into question if God directly designed the universe by fiat to be that way, and even worse, over millions of years!!!
The existence of evil and suffering does make sense because God brings a greater good from them than would otherwise exist without them. You cannot fully judge the value of anything until you assess it at itās final end and how it fulfills its final purpose.The existence of things such as disease and viruses does not make sense in terms of direct benevolent design, but it does make sense in terms of natural evolution, a process in which viruses and errors are potential or unavoidable by-products.
This is where youāll run into the heresy that Catholic-evolutionists like Kenneth Miller have fallen into - namely, the āignorant and powerless god of evolutionā.This makes sense if for some reason God deemed it more fruitful and a greater good that the universe should naturally evolve. God does not create the virus directly as a species; but rather it evolves by chance.
In order for you to explain the difference, you would need to tell us:I think at some point you are going to have to accept that there is a difference between God answering a prayer and God doing a botched job of creation.
Why? Atoms rearrange and express various different holistic attributes or forms according to their new arrangement. Whatās the problem?Youāre violating the ontological structure of reality with that. āThose naturesā cannot express themselves by ābecoming other naturesā. Itās completely illogical.
I have not spoken of a system that expresses itself purely within the context of chance. That is not the theory of evolution. However, chance is a part of the natural process. Do you deny the existence of secondary causes? Do you deny that some things happen by chance, and others by necessity? Do you deny the laws of physics?Chance is not a process. It is not a natural law. Youāre actually damaging your own position by claiming that development of natures by chance actually reveals a āsystemā.
I donāt think you even know what the theory of Evolution is, much less what I am defending.Chance is not a system. Itās luck. Thatās what youāre defending.
It depends on what you mean by forms and natures.Why? Atoms rearrange and express various different holistic attributes or forms according to their new arrangement. Whatās the problem?
Again, chance is not a process. You cannot have a natural law that says ālucky mutations might happenā.However, chance is a part of the natural process.
Youāre subtly changing the argument to causality. What kinds of ends can be predicted by chance occurrences? Can you tell the difference between that and designed outcomes?Do you deny the existence of secondary causes?
What part of evolution happens by necessity?Do you deny that some things happen by chance, and others by necessity?
God does not directly create natural or moral evil. He permits the potentiality of evil. There is a difference, and the difference can only be fulfilled by an evolution of secondary causes which involves chance.The existence of evil and suffering does make sense because God brings a greater good from them than would otherwise exist without them. You cannot fully judge the value of anything until you assess it at itās final end and how it fulfils its final purpose.
I am not assuming anything, I know that God would not directly create a virus or a brain cancer; these things are errors that arise naturally within a system of secondary causes. There is a difference between permitting evil for a greater good, and doing evil for a greater good.So we need to be careful about assuming that we know what is best for the design of the universe and that our design for the salvation of souls is better than Godās.![]()
Are you really that desperate? God does not directly create species, and certainly not species of deadly viruses. This is not against Church teaching.This is where youāll run into the heresy that Catholic-evolutionists like Kenneth Miller have fallen into - namely, the āignorant and powerless god of evolutionā.
God is not surprised in the sense of gaining new temporal knowledge, but neither is he the direct cause of suffering and physical disease in general. We are not Pagans.So, weād have a god who was āsurprisedā that a virus occurred.
He permits the potentiality of physical and spiritual evil to occur. He does not create evil. It seems to me that you are the one in heresy.God deemed it more fruitful and a greater good that there is suffering in the universe.
Before you was telling us that you can detect Gods design and plan in nature by the scientific method!Science cannot tell us āhowā God created things.
Philosophy cannot tell us that either.
Its a waste of time having a discussion with you. You are determined to have it your way or no-way, even to the point of contradicting your own philosophical position.The only way we might be able to know how God creates things is by direct revelation.
So, we shouldnāt bother asking scientists for help on that ā or asking philosophers.
Precisely what I have always emphasized too ā if you had ever cared to follow my argument.ID says nothing like youāve parodied it here.
But more importantly, we can take a look at what St. Thomas teaches ā¦
Summa Theological Part 1, Q8
I answer that, God is in all things; not, indeed, as part of their essence, nor as an accident, but as an agent is present to that upon which it works. For an agent must be joined to that wherein it acts immediately and touch it by its power; hence it is proved in Phys. vii that the thing moved and the mover must be joined together. Now since God is very being by His own essence, created being must be His proper effect; as to ignite is the proper effect of fire. Now God causes this effect in things not only when they first begin to be, but as long as they are preserved in being; as light is caused in the air by the sun as long as the air remains illuminated.
Notice again ā God preserves all things in being, continually.
And this does not follow. Sustaining, continually preserving, the laws of nature to do their job as intended is not the same as constantly intervening in the sense of meddling in nature. After all, what are natural laws for if they cannot act naturally? And biological ID claims meddling in nature.God āintervenesā in nature continually.
Seconded.Its a waste of time having a discussion with you. You are determined to have it your way or no-way, even to the point of contradicting your own philosophical position.
A crucial point.We are not Pagans.
Then where does it come from -** ultimately**?!?Emphasis mine.
The Catholic Church does not teach that āEverything comes from God - including evil!ā I donāt care how that is white-washed.![]()
The existence of evil and suffering does make sense because God brings a greater good from them than would otherwise exist without them. You cannot fully judge the value of anything until you assess it at itās final end and how it fulfills its final purpose.
God deemed it more fruitful and a greater good that there is suffering in the universe.
He brings greater good from the evils that have occurred as a result of sin, than would otherwise have been brought forth.
Unless He is impotent rather than omnipotent, i.e. controlled by what He has created!Perhaps he will reveal His secrets to us. But thatās the only way to know how He did it (and continually does it).