C
Calgar
Guest
You said it, not me.Wow. The oxymoron of the century: “an unconscious choice”. Don’t try to kill me with laughter.![]()
It’s good that you ignore the questions you can’t answer.
You said it, not me.Wow. The oxymoron of the century: “an unconscious choice”. Don’t try to kill me with laughter.![]()
I cannot answer nonsensical questions, that is for sure. I cannot answer if you ask me what is to the north from the North Pole. If you don’t understand it, it is your problem. I would much rather get into a conversation with sensible people, so if you ignore me, I will be most grateful.You said it, not me.
It’s good that you ignore the questions you can’t answer.![]()
Ah, so calling my question “nonsensical” is your way of avoiding it? Or perhaps you simply cannot think that way?I cannot answer nonsensical questions, that is for sure. I cannot answer if you ask me what is to the north from the North Pole. If you don’t understand it, it is your problem. I would much rather get into a conversation with sensible people, so if you ignore me, I will be most grateful.
I think it is better described as a possible factitious consequence.Why do you believe that a person must be aware that their actions will result in prison for them to actually be sent to prison?
OK, thanks. I’m still confused about the moral commands and general revelation, perhaps you would help me with an example. Suppose a Catholic R and Baptist S believe condoms are a sin, while Catholic T and Baptist U believe condoms are not a sin. All act accordingly within their respective marriages, all are well educated, and all are unrepentant in their beliefs. Which, if any, have cut themselves off from God, or otherwise displeased God?Except on Christianity, God makes known his moral commands to everyone on the basis of general revelation, hence no one is without excuse and all do make a choice.
We need to be able to have some understanding of what the word “God” means so that we know what we are talking about and can have a reasonable conversation. The alternative is to use the word without knowing what it means, which would make the word “God” useless.
Second, your example is so far too vague to be persuassive. It is not clear that having different definitions would cut one person or another from God. Maybe Seri believes that the word God means “greatest conceivable being” and Dan thinks the word “God” refers to a person possessing the qualities of omnipotence, omniscence, moral perfection, metaphysical necessity, in-corporeality etc. This would hardly cause one of the other to be cut off from God.
Third, suppose, they did have very different definitions of God. Seri is an educated Christian who thinks that God is a GCB and and Dan is uneducated who just thinks God is really big and strong, but both believe in Jesus and want to follow his commands as revealed in the Bible and come into a loving relationship with him. Again, I see no problem.
Fourth, suppose, Seri is a Christian and Dan has never heard of God at all. Well, Dan will be judged on the basis of his response to general revelation, so thinking of God differently (or maybe not at all, may not hinder his chance at salvation.
I think you hate the “just because you cannot comprehend” response because it challenges your lack of faith. For some reason you think mysteries are contrary to reason, when they are really beyond reason. As for the scenarios you mentioned, I would be happy to explain the greater good from them if God was to reveal it to me; however, there is a story that I would like to share with you.You or God or anyone else are most welcome to explain why I am wrong. Stop the generalities get down to the details and be SPECIFIC. Show me what greater good was achieved by the Holocuast, and how would that greater good be thwarted if just one Jew would have been spared of the torture and the gas chamber. Show me what greater good came out from a thug who kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered a small girl. Show me how a random heart attack (induced by God) would have made the world much worse, if that kidnapping, rape, torture and murder never happened.
I am tired of “just because you cannot comprehend” type of nonsense. If you are so well-informed, share it. If you are not, then call God to explain. I already said, that I would accept God’s proof, in the matter. You play the same dance over and over again. You ask some questions, I answer them and then you ask the same question again. Boring!
"I’m nearly 80 years old. I’m about to depart.
"Looking back at my past, I can see that in my early youth, I chose a bad path which led me to ruin myself.
"My behavior was influenced by print, mass-media and bad examples which are followed by the majority of young people without even thinking. And I did the same. I was not worried.
"There were a lot of generous and devoted people who surrounded me, but I paid no attention to them because a violent force blinded me and pushed me toward a wrong way of life.
"When I was 20 years-old, I committed a crime of passion. Now, that memory represents something horrible for me. Maria Goretti, now a Saint, was my good Angel, sent to me through Providence to guide and save me. I still have impressed upon my heart her words of rebuke and of pardon. She prayed for me, she interceded for her murderer. Thirty years of prison followed.
"If I had been of age, I would have spent all my life in prison. I accepted to be condemned because it was my own fault.
"Little Maria was really my light, my protectress; with her help, I behaved well during the 27 years of prison and tried to live honestly when I was again accepted among the members of society. The Brothers of St. Francis, Capuchins from Marche, welcomed me with angelic charity into their monastery as a brother, not as a servant. I’ve been living with their community for 24 years, and now I am serenely waiting to witness the vision of God, to hug my loved ones again, and to be next to my Guardian Angel and her dear mother, Assunta.
“I hope this letter that I wrote can teach others the happy lesson of avoiding evil and of always following the right path, like little children. I feel that religion with its precepts is not something we can live without, but rather it is the real comfort, the real strength in life and the only safe way in every circumstance, even the most painful ones of life.”
This is in my opinion a perfect example of how a tragic event, which appears meaningless, can lead to a greater good. Maria Goretti was canonized a Saint by the Catholic Church, and I believe both Maria and Alessandro are together in Heaven.Signature, Alessandro Serenelli
I am more than happy to admit my lack of faith. And I do not “hate” this reply, I simply find it insufficient.I think you hate the “just because you cannot comprehend” response because it challenges your lack of faith.
Not enough. Each and every instance of “seemingly” unnecessary suffering must be explained if God’s “solution” is to be accepted as optimal. Every instance when a cruel person tortures some poor animal must be accounted for. Every instance when a drunken father beats up his child must be explained. To give a (maybe) plausible explatanation for one selected event is “nice”, but woefully insufficient.As for the scenarios you mentioned, I would be happy to explain the greater good from them if God was to reveal it to me; however, there is a story that I would like to share with you.
Very well, let us look at this example. Let us say that the story shows that the evil of stabbing and raping this poor girl actually led to both of them be accepted in heaven and consequently the possibly greatest good was the result. (Of course this is contradicted by the official teaching of the church that no evil can be justified by the end, no matter how great it is. So you are already on very shaky ground, because it is the church which teaches that the end cannot justify the means. Most people forget about this teaching.)There is a story about Maria Goretti, a little girl that was murdered by Alessandro Serenelli. He was going to rape her, but she resisted him to protect her virginity. Alessandro, then stabbed her 11 times. While this was happening she told him not to do it because he would lose his soul. Even during the time she was being killed she was thinking of his soul. Anyway, while in prison, Alessandro completely repents and changes his life, because of her love for him. Here is letter from him so you can hear about it in his own words.
No one is saying the “evil” in the event led to the greater good, but that the event itself led to a greater good, which is why God permitted it. This is not contrary to Catholic teaching.Very well, let us look at this example. Let us say that the story shows that the evil of stabbing and raping this poor girl actually led to both of them be accepted in heaven and consequently the possibly greatest good was the result. (Of course this is contradicted by the official teaching of the church that no evil can be justified by the end, no matter how great it is. So you are already on very shaky ground, because it is the church which teaches that the end cannot justify the means. Most people forget about this teaching.)
I don’t need to substantiate this because the outcome substantiated it for me. Plus the number of stabbings isn’t the only thing which contributed to the outcome so to focus on only one thing as if it was the only deciding factor would be ridiculous.But the problem is deeper than that. You must substantiate that those 11 stabbings were all logically necessary to achieve the greater good result.
The only thing that is unreasonable about the story is the way in which you “dissected” it. I provided you with a story in where a tradgic event produced a greater good, one that wouldn’t have happened - even according to the killer- and you’re doging this over the amount of stabs, simply because you think 10 stabs would have been better than 11 stabs?This example shows perfectly just how unreasonable is the idea of the “greater good” defense. If God would come to us and explain each and every one of those “seemingly” meaningless sufferings, and would also prove that every bit of those sufferings was logically necessay, and even if just one miniscule suffering would have been lessened, then the grater good would have become impossible - then and ONLY THEN - would the “greater good defense” work.
People who drive normally and as they should usually don’t get injured.If someone risks injury in an accident by choosing to get into a car - he does not choose that injury and does not choose that accident. I can’t believe that you all are unable to comprehend this.
People who drive normally and as they should usually don’t get injured.
If a driver chooses to speed, ignore a stop sign or red light, or drive drunk or drugged then yes, it is quite likely they will get injured or injure someone else. And often they will pay for their choice to do that - pay compensation to other people, or forfeit all or part of the insurance they would otherwise get, or get sent to jail.
I repeat my question - what is wring with that?
If an innocent person is injured whilst driving - how often does it happen for no reason? Usually it is due to fault - maybe a preventable mechanical failing in the car, or roads that were not maintained as they ought to be, or a fellow road user who
Is doing something they shouldn’t. Again, the parties responsible for the injury will be liable to rectify the damage done.
Injuries done to innocents are usually the result of human misdeeds, and so add to the guilt an punishment of the guilty.
And before you bring up natural disasters - a lot of the tragedies there fault from human error too - people choosing (or being forced) to live in areas that are prone to flood or
earthquake, or close to a nuclear reactor in the case of Chernobyl or Fukushima, or poor responses when things go wrong.
But the question isn’t about suffering in this life, but in the eternal life. Given that mortal sin (the kind that condemns people to Hell) is defined in Catholic theology as conscious and willful transgression of God’s law, why would a traffic injury to an innocent who is neither knowingly or consciously transgressing any law be an appropriate analogy?
For that matter, what makes you say that there is anything particularly unfair about a driver having an accident and being injured anyway? Unfortunate, heartbreaking, disastrous,
awful, yes. and much more besides. I really wouldn’t call it unfair if it happened to me though. Fairness wouldn’t even be something my mind connected with it if there was no-one else at fault.
Just like the criminal does not choose the sentence or which facility he will be sent to.If someone risks injury in an accident by choosing to get into a car - he does not choose that injury and does not choose that accident. I can’t believe that you all are unable to comprehend this.
At last a good observation. The criminal does not choose to get caught, does not choose to get prosecuted, does not choose to be sentenced and does not choose to be imprisoned. All those could be the logical and maybe even just consequences of his actions, that is not what I was disputing. He simply did not choose those consequences, he merely risked them. And since none of those consequences follow in an inescapble, logical manner, no one can logically say that he chose those consequences, just like the driver of the car did not choose to have an accident - he merely risked it.Just like the criminal does not choose the sentence or which facility he will be sent to.
Irrelevant. Read the post directly above.People who drive normally and as they should usually don’t get injured.
If the “evil” part is inseparable from the event, then this is mere semantics. If the “evil” part could have been left out, then it was unnecessary evil. You are in a lose-lose situation.No one is saying the “evil” in the event led to the greater good, but that the event itself led to a greater good, which is why God permitted it. This is not contrary to Catholic teaching.
You are getting obtuse. I will explain it one more time, and if you cannot understand it, then so be it.I don’t need to substantiate this because the outcome substantiated it for me. Plus the number of stabbings isn’t the only thing which contributed to the outcome so to focus on only one thing as if it was the only deciding factor would be ridiculous.
Ok, so instead of saying they chose the specific consequence we will say they chose the risk. So we say people choose the risk of going to Hell. Still very much a choice on their part, of course, so it is a distinction without all that much meaning.At last a good observation. The criminal does not choose to get caught, does not choose to get prosecuted, does not choose to be sentenced and does not choose to be imprisoned. All those could be the logical and maybe even just consequences of his actions, that is not what I was disputing. He simply did not choose those consequences, he merely risked them. And since none of those consequences follow in an inescapble, logical manner, no one can logically say that he chose those consequences, just like the driver of the car did not choose to have an accident - he merely risked it.
The difference is huge. If you cannot see that, I cannot help you. Of course the situation is not that simple. When people get into a car, they take a known risk. They are aware of the dangers, and they are aware of the probabilities. Based upon those values they can choose to take the risk or decline it. That is not true in relation to hell. There is no proof that hell exists, or even if it does, what are the conditions there. To say that people “risk” hell is just about as sensible as to say that the children take a risk by going into bed, because they believe that some monsters exist under the bed.Ok, so instead of saying they chose the specific consequence we will say they chose the risk. So we say people choose the risk of going to Hell. Still very much a choice on their part, of course, so it is a distinction without all that much meaning.
That is not disputed.And it remains the fact that someone who risks going to hell is as much to blame for their predicament if they end up there as someone who chooses to commit a crime is when they end up wherever - jail, the electric chair or whatnot. Or for that matter as someone who turns themselves into police and demands the particular punishment that is meted out to them, AFAICS![]()
So are you saying that criminals are unaware of the risks involved in breaking the law?The difference is huge. If you cannot see that, I cannot help you. Of course the situation is not that simple. When people get into a car, they take a known risk. They are aware of the dangers, and they are aware of the probabilities. Based upon those values they can choose to take the risk or decline it. That is not true in relation to hell.