S
SteveGC
Guest
Yeah…you bet…He can do lots of things without our help, gear. But that just so happens to be the way He does things…with our help.An almighty God would be more than capable of creating whatever children He wants without your help.
Everyone has some sort of “god”, gear. Yours is probably some version of secular, existential philosophy…probably a mosaic of various concepts and beliefs, some you latch onto and come to agree with, others you reject…all very subtle…but still all very much a source of your beliefs. Hence, I could just as easily say “strange how whenever someone gives you ‘the word of their varied influences throughout their lives of the existence and purpose of man’, it always exactly lines up with the beliefs and opinions of the person giving it.” It really is a senseless argument. Your beliefs and opinions did not originate from within you exclusive to exterior influence, gear…nor more than mine did, nor anyone else’s. It’s just that you get an easy target because I happen to have a solitary Creator that guides my beliefs, as opposed to a much more multi-headed philosophical outlook that non-believers have…but both of those are sources of our beliefs and opinions.I think they’re right: it’s strange how whenever someone gives you “God’s word”, it always exactly lines up with the beliefs and opinions of the person giving it.
Didn’t rank them. But if I did, I would indeed put “killing my children” at the top. You’re exposing your desperation here to find loopholes, it seems.I think it’s also strange that your God would rank “quit havin’ sex outside marriage” and “be open to life” above “stop killing my children”.
Yes, rare cases of killing in self defense or in protection of grave evil acts against humanity can be seen as an evil allowed over a worse evil, but only by those who misunderstand what the underlying concept is. In a just war, the divine teaching is that grave and certain evil acts must not go unchecked, and that the use of deadly force to check that evil is subject to many precursory moral examinations. If those strict criteria are met, and they rarely if ever are, then the use of deadly force is not a “lesser evil”, it is a righteous act in the defense of righteousness.And the bit at the end about God not choosing one evil over a worse one is contradicted by the idea of “just war”.
You like playing this gotcha game, don’t you? I can understand…if you have no real solid belief system, the only thing you really can do is look for holes in other people’s beliefs. No, the Church is not beyond MY rationality and logic…perhaps yours. The Church’s role is partly to make God more understandable to all of us. But God Himself does not fit into our rational and logical minds very well…not because He is irrational and illogical, but because our fallen nature prohibits us from seeing Him the way we once were capable of…but someday we will all see.Ha! So the Church is beyond rationality and logic?![]()
I’m not worried about the secular idea of consistency. I say that trying to have a child isn’t an evil act because God says it isn’t. Do I see your secular logic about it being better to contracept than risk a miscarriage? Yes, I can see how you would believe that, or atleast how you would like to force us to concede that point, but even on the secular level, it makes no sense, for you would have the entire world cease to procreate just to avoid possible natural death during pregnancy. I know you don’t think that to be a rational idea. And again, if you’re trying to call us on our religious hypocrisy of it, it doesn’t hold water because you first have to have some sensible understanding of God before you critique His teachings and His plan for creation.And I know you say you’re not worried about consistency, but if an embryo really is a person, then how can you say that trying to have a child isn’t an evil act?
So, I’ll take that as a “yes, there COULD be billions of versions of the personhood defintion, but it’s acceptable to just have a handful of definitions”. That fair?Well, everyone can and does come to their own conclusions about what to value and what not to value. We share lots of things in common, so there tends to be commonality in our value judgements as well.