That is the natural world we live in.Gadianton wrote: ↑Sat Jun 01, 2024 7:39 pmThis is a God of love who wants us to learn from our own experience, the good from the evil.Lies.And if God is a loving God then the only real explanation that makes sense
More lies. "Radical free will" covers half of one situation: A child being kidnapped, and God allows the kidnappers free will.A God who allows radical free will of mankind without constraints has to deal with blowback.
The child is the victim of the choice a kidnapper made.
The child had very little if any choice. We spent quite a bit of time talking about limited free will.
The ‘plan’ is that all things act and are acted upon in their natural state. God is not pulling all the strings.
But He’s allowed for the fact that natural consequences are going result from bad actions and natural events. It’s definitely a bitch from our perspective and view.
Only to the extent that he provided a plan in which moral agency was exercised. Cause and effect all the way down.
No. Evil has its results. God doesn’t condone evil. God condones love. Jesus taught love. In a natural world such as the one we live in God does not control the way people behave. People control the way they behave based of course on various factors. Some beyond their control.
It would be nice if everything was as simple as you would apparently like it to be. But it’s not. Many of the concerns you are expressing have been approached and talked about on this thread.
You’re beating a dead horse.
That is true.
You mean 8, right? If a child dies before the age of accountability there has to be some kind of fail safe, doesn’t there? That is, the world being what it is and if we’re going to believe in a creator that loves us rather than hates or despises us.
It all comes down to “God is Love”. EVERYTHING rides on whether or not that is true. He does love us so He sent His Son. That’s not just a trite phrase sung in a sacrament song.
I think the two do have a correlation. It’s not as if He’s off the hook. He was never on the hook. We accepted the plan. Some didn’t. He’s provided a way by which those that are on the hook can repent and change. It provides a way by which those that have been hurt or damaged by the acts of others in a natural world of pain and suffering can be redeemed and made whole,
That’s a big ‘ask’ to believe and act upon. I’ll hand you that.
I think it makes a lot more sense than taking either a nihilistic point of view or worshipping the god you created. But to each his own, right?
Gadianton wrote: ↑Sat Jun 01, 2024 7:39 pmNow, in contrast, my spider deity explains the world "boots on the ground" much better than MG's god. My spider deity doesn't care about people, he cares about the beings in his image, therefore whatever happens to people doesn't reflect on the spider. In other words, I'm covering for the stupid crap MG is trying to cover with his pathetic god.
I’m happy to let others decide whether or not to worship your god.
Yes it does.
Regards,
MG