I don’t want to derail the thread, but this is a related question to your above post.
Is charity good because God wills it so? Or is it good because God approves of it?. If God wills it, then He could equally will cruelty as good. If God approves of it, then that implies another standard by which it is deemed good.
To the last sentence, I don’t believe the premise is self evident, nor am I convinced that it would be true. It is good because God approves of it, but God’s approval, in itself,
is the Standard by which He also
wills for us to abide by it. God
does approve of it and always has, and presuming He has been honest in His revelation to us (and that’s what trust is all about) there is every reason to think He always will…had God been a totally different Being (a useless what-if question) who did not approve of charity, things may have been different and that hypothetical deity may have created humans to be cruel–in which case that would be their purpose, and they ought to fulfill it…but that’s not the case. I’m thankful that God approves of charity, that He wills us to be charitable, but if a different hypothetical deity had decided to do otherwise with his creation, it would not be my place to tell a creator what function and purpose his creation–especially his creation made totally on his own, with absolutely no raw materials that belonged to anyone else–should fulfill.
It’s not a complaint, it’s a rebuttal to the Christian truth claims.
It is a rebuttal only in the perspective of those who think it’s a valid point. We don’t. Why do some people find it a valid rebuttal and others don’t? An honest person, on either side, might cautiously avoid assuming what’s going on in someone else’s brain and say “I don’t know why that is.” An arrogant person, on either side, might say “Because the people who don’t agree with me are in denial or simply aren’t good at logic.” I choose the first answer, and in good faith I presume you do too.
The atheists on all the theodicy threads are not complaining about God, they offer the evidential problem of evil as a counterfactual to God’s traits.
But saying that the problem of Evil is somehow “counterfactual” to God’s traits (I have yet to be the least bit convinced that it is) wouldn’t disprove the
existence of God, even our
specific God, at all. Atheist complaints on theodicy threads would not prove, at all, that Christian revelation did not come from the actual Creator of the Universe. They would, at best, give those who agree with the Atheists (and we do not) reason to think that a God who would give that revelation had to be giving us false information about Himself (whether deliberately or otherwise). For example, if an Atheist says “God couldn’t possibly both be good
and allow there to be an eternal Hell” there is nothing about that statement,
whatsoever, that proves that God doesn’t exist, or that He didn’t reveal Himself specially through Jesus and the Resurrection, etc. It just doesn’t prove that. It’s a non-sequiter. All it would indicate,
if we accepted the premise (again, we do not) would be that this God, if He exists, lied or was mistaken by telling us two contradictory things about Himself, only one of which could be true. It would suggest that
someone is wrong about God’s traits, but it would not prove that He Himself never claimed such traits, so that mistaken
someone could just as easily, though perish the thought, be himself. Of course we don’t believe that, and would find it blasphemous; that’s partly because we are not convinced by your premise (I long to see more Atheists realize that just because they are convinced of their premise doesn’t mean anyone who disagrees must have an intellectual fault), but even if we accepted your premise whole-heartedly, the
most it would logically demonstrate is what I have said. Therefore, it is first and foremost a complaint/critique about God.
If you want to intellectually compel us to believe that God never said these things about Himself and that we only made it up (for which, so far as Christianity is concerned, you would have to prove, to our satisfaction–since it’s us you hope to convince–that Jesus never vindicated Himself by a Resurrection and thus His followers who passed down His teachings weren’t really learning from God), which is what you and R Daneel assert is your point, you would have to use a totally different argument than this one…of course, that would have nothing to do with the OP.
Blessings in Christ,
KindredSoul