L
lemondiesel
Guest
My apologies for the questioning threads of recently. My quest for faith has lead to many forks in the road, which I must wait until I can choose a direction to take.
My thread On Eternal Happiness (forum.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=517446) has brought about this thread.
Any thoughts (agreements or disagreements) or any critical analysis would greatly be appreciated.
First, assumptions based on characteristics commonly associated with God: that such a thing is omniscient and also forgiving.
Second, granting the premise of eternal happiness in some form.
On deserving eternal happiness, if the assumptions are true, God cannot punish anyone. I conclude this because an omniscient god would pre-know the completeness of my reasoning, and being a forgiving god would not create me if it did not intend to forgive me for becoming what it knew I would become. Therefore, granting the premise of eternal happiness, it awaits us regardless of our belief in God. If the assumption of forgiveness is not true, then God is sadistic.
I can return to the original dilemma by eliminating the assumption of omniscience and assuming there is at least one god powerful enough to create the universe. If the creator does not have total knowledge but has the ability to predict the future (such as through prophecies), then it can create the universe such that it will unfold just as it expects so long as it never intervenes. What, then, would be its motive for making itself known?
It might not be the creator making itself known, but another supernatural entity with less influence. An additional entity with a different plan would have a motive for making itself known: change the established order of things. If this additional entity revealed itself, it would force the creator to also reveal itself in order to address the unexpected changes. However, we would have no way of telling one supernatural entity from another. The first entity to influence us would win us over by default as long as we put our faith in monotheism.
If we put our faith in an interloper and inadvertently branch away from the planned path of existence, does that not put the premise of eternal happiness into jeopardy?
Conclusions: if the assumptions all hold, it does not matter whether I have faith in God. If God is not omniscient, then the faithful could be just as undeserving (if not moreso) as myself. If God is not forgiving, then it is sadistic and we shouldn’t expect a sadistic God to give us eternal happiness. If God is neither omniscient nor forgiving, what reason should we have to go on granting the premise of eternal happiness in any form?
Who brought humans into the world? Would the blame for the created imperfection not belong on the being who did?
My thread On Eternal Happiness (forum.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=517446) has brought about this thread.
Any thoughts (agreements or disagreements) or any critical analysis would greatly be appreciated.
First, assumptions based on characteristics commonly associated with God: that such a thing is omniscient and also forgiving.
Second, granting the premise of eternal happiness in some form.
On deserving eternal happiness, if the assumptions are true, God cannot punish anyone. I conclude this because an omniscient god would pre-know the completeness of my reasoning, and being a forgiving god would not create me if it did not intend to forgive me for becoming what it knew I would become. Therefore, granting the premise of eternal happiness, it awaits us regardless of our belief in God. If the assumption of forgiveness is not true, then God is sadistic.
I can return to the original dilemma by eliminating the assumption of omniscience and assuming there is at least one god powerful enough to create the universe. If the creator does not have total knowledge but has the ability to predict the future (such as through prophecies), then it can create the universe such that it will unfold just as it expects so long as it never intervenes. What, then, would be its motive for making itself known?
It might not be the creator making itself known, but another supernatural entity with less influence. An additional entity with a different plan would have a motive for making itself known: change the established order of things. If this additional entity revealed itself, it would force the creator to also reveal itself in order to address the unexpected changes. However, we would have no way of telling one supernatural entity from another. The first entity to influence us would win us over by default as long as we put our faith in monotheism.
If we put our faith in an interloper and inadvertently branch away from the planned path of existence, does that not put the premise of eternal happiness into jeopardy?
Conclusions: if the assumptions all hold, it does not matter whether I have faith in God. If God is not omniscient, then the faithful could be just as undeserving (if not moreso) as myself. If God is not forgiving, then it is sadistic and we shouldn’t expect a sadistic God to give us eternal happiness. If God is neither omniscient nor forgiving, what reason should we have to go on granting the premise of eternal happiness in any form?
Who brought humans into the world? Would the blame for the created imperfection not belong on the being who did?