C
Contarini
Guest
The world has finite resources. That’s undeniable.God knew us before we were born…yet He made this earth with only enough resources for SOME of us, knowing that we cannot create something out of nothing?
God has a long track record of not saving people from the consequences of their folly. That is not to say that He never so intervenes, but He usually does not do so.
That’s a vague term. Some “population control methods” are downright wicked (abortion), or morally dubious (artificial contraception, which I believe is not intrinsically evil but should not be embraced uncritically). Others are morally indifferent (late marriage, if it does not promote unchastity, which admittedly it often does; spacing births by natural means). Others are downright virtuous (adoption, for instance–I recognize that you may not see this as a population control method, but in some cases it may be a substitute for having one’s own children).Let’s put it this way…I do not believe that we should be trying to control humanity, by beginning to use population control methods.
That the earth is limited is pretty obvious. Otherwise it wouldn’t be the earth–a rough sphere about 8,000 miles in diameter and 25,000 miles in circumference.Whether or not you believe that the earth is limited,
God made us through human agency. Invoking divine agency to abdicate our responsibility is not a sound approach in any respect.has nothing to do with the fact that God created this world for us…He created all of us. Without Him we would not exist. Do you think he would make us and not provide a way for us to survive?
Of course not. But I don’t think human suffering should be caused (unless absolutely necessary for some legitimate reason) or even permitted if there is a good alternative. We should certainly not be indifferent to it.Do you believe that human life has no value if it suffers?
I have hope in the resurrection, yes.Do you believe that our lives are eternal?
Yes.Do you believe that God is the author of human life?
No. And therefore I do not think that my parents ought to have conceived a child minutes or hours or days or months earlier than they did, because if they had done this I would not exist.Do you believe that you should never have existed?
Tell me this: should a child resulting from rape or incest, or just plain old fornication or adultery, never have existed? Surely you agree that that child is loved by God too. And yet you would hardly justify the actions which led to that child’s existence, much less condemn the rapist or adulterers if they had chosen to refrain from those actions.
I know that at some point we will reach the limit of earth’s resources. It might not happen for thousands of years.Do you know with all certainty that there is no hope in the future for us to find ways to renew our resources or find new ones and what will happen in the future if we stop procreating?
Rhetorical question of the “have you stopped beating your wife” variety.Do you believe there is no hope?
But human life is not quantifiable. The life of one human being is of infinite value. Therefore, you can’t say that more lives are better. Nothing is greater than infinity.Without life there IS no hope.
Edwin