(An example in the bible is Genesis 1 borrows from Mesopotamian myth.)
Maybe I’d choose the parallels between Gilgamesh and Noah instead… And yes, it might not have been my original point, but, naturally, it is true that Catholic apologists do not exactly spend much time trying to prove that nothing similar to the events described in Epic of Gilgamesh myth ever happened.
Of course. Why the air-quotes around judgment?
I see. Oh, and the quotes are there to emphasise that I am citing that word.
So, if you agree that judgement can end with hell, do you think it is charitable or uncharitable to warn someone who acts in the way that increases probability of going to hell?
Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states:
“Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion;”
I’m afraid God is not bound by any UN document.
For example, preamble says “as a common standard of achievement for all peoples and all nations, to the end that every individual and every organ of society, keeping this Declaration constantly in mind, shall strive by teaching and education to promote respect for these rights and freedoms”. God is neither an “individual” nor an “organ of society”.
Telling someone that if he exercises that right and doesn’t come to your conclusion, he’ll suffer eternal damnation, is coercion, exactly as if God is saying “I will make him an offer he can’t refuse.”
If that’s “an offer he can’t refuse”, how comes it is refused so often?
Nice try but “lost” is a long way from “will suffer eternal damnation”. And just four fragments earlier, Pascal says “Let us weigh the gain and the loss in wagering that God is. Let us estimate these two chances. If you gain, you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing.”
I maintain he argues that disbelief merely equals no eternal reward, while belief equals reward. Which is the reverse of what many posters claimed he said (they have all gone very quiet, for unknown reasons).
And the “eternal damnation” threat isn’t consonant with his “The conduct of God, who disposes all things kindly, is to put religion into the mind by reason, and into the heart by grace. But to will to put it into the mind and heart by force and threats is not to put religion there, but terror.”
Well, we know that the main alternative of going to heaven is um, not very attractive.
That doesn’t have to be what people often imagine - even if going to heaven is simply spending eternity with God and going to hell is just staying away and having a whole eternity and nothing to do, going to hell is undesirable.
Now, of course, there are many variants of the same Pascal’s Wager. It is possible to leave the “wrong atheist” option at “no heaven”. It is possible to change the discussed consequences from “heaven” and “hell” to “has thanked God” and “committed an injustice by failing to thank God”. They are also valid. If you prefer one of them, that’s fine.
What about a Mafioso who tells you: “obey, and you will be rewarded, or disobey and you will be punished”. Is that a “warning” or a “threat”?
Why a “Mafioso” and not a “police officer”?
For that matter, why not “a crime victim, reminding the criminal that police will catch him”?
After all, the ones who make the argument are not going to have the power to send anyone to hell - a point that seems to be forgotten far too often.
So, yes, in our case it is certainly a warning and not a threat.