Who's left?

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_EAllusion
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _EAllusion »

Runtu wrote:I find it hard to worship a God who believes that honesty and sexual fidelity are situational and that, when God says so, everything is negotiable. In fact, I don't even want to worship a God like that.
The problem is when the believer asserts that our judgement of what is right and wrong in ordinary circumstances can be used to evidence the idea a good God exists, but the reverse is illegitimate. It's inconsistent. If you can't judge God's actions or inaction as inconsistent with benevolence because a morally perfect God might have good reasons beyond your ken, then it just as equally follows that you can't judge God's actions or inactions as inconsistent with malevolence because such a being could just as easily have bad reasons beyond your ken. Maybe that event you think was a wonderful miracle from God was done for evil reasons. God is just beyond your moral judgment at that point. Therefore, you can't believe that God is good.

And if you could believe that God is good, your understanding of what that entails wouldn't inform your ability to anticipate God's behavior. That means arguments like, "I know God isn't lying to me because God is good" go straight out the window. God, after all, can have good reasons for lying to you beyond your understanding just the same as allowing Tay-Sachs babies to suffer. An assertion of God's goodness becomes empty because we don't know what that means. This is a serious theological problem because believers routinely hang ideas about what God will or won't do on the claim of his benevolence.

It's hard to worship a terrifyingly powerful alien with inscrutable purposes out of anything other than pants-wetting fear. So congrats to mentalgymnast for his defense of God rendering him the equivalent of Cthulhu.
_Runtu
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Runtu »

EAllusion wrote:The problem is when the believer asserts that our judgement of what is right and wrong in ordinary circumstances can be used to evidence the idea a good God exists, but the reverse is illegitimate. It's inconsistent. If you can't judge God's actions or inaction as inconsistent with benevolence because a morally perfect God might have good reasons beyond your ken, then it just as equally follows that you can't judge God's actions or inactions as inconsistent with malevolence because such a being could just as easily have bad reasons beyond your ken. Maybe that event you think was a wonderful miracle from God was done for evil reasons. God is just beyond your moral judgment at that point. Therefore, you can't believe that God is good.

And if you could believe that God is good, your understanding of what that entails wouldn't inform your ability to anticipate God's behavior. That means arguments like, "I know God isn't lying to me because God is good" go straight out the window. God, after all, can have good reasons for lying to you beyond your understanding just the same as allowing Tay-Sachs babies to suffer. An assertion of God's goodness becomes empty because we don't know what that means. This is a serious theological problem because believers routinely hang ideas about what God will or won't do on the claim of his benevolence.


Again, very well said. This is quite in line with Joseph Smith's statement that whatever God commands is right, no matter what it is. Basically, all bets are off because, no matter what happens, because it's from God, it is good. And the goodness of God thus becomes an assertion based on nothing else.

A serious problem indeed.
Runtu's Rincón

If you just talk, I find that your mouth comes out with stuff. -- Karl Pilkington
_EAllusion
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _EAllusion »

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_SteelHead
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _SteelHead »

God is god because he is good and just hence everything he does, though it might appear as evil, is by definition good.No circular logic involved.

Now go kill some women, children, suckling babies, ox and asses for god. That would be good.
It is better to be a warrior in a garden, than a gardener at war.

Some of us, on the other hand, actually prefer a religion that includes some type of correlation with reality.
~Bill Hamblin
_Gunnar
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Gunnar »

SteelHead wrote:I have a mancrush on Darth's brain and rapier wit.

Amen! Darth is one of my favorites too!
No precept or claim is more likely to be false than one that can only be supported by invoking the claim of Divine authority for it--no matter who or what claims such authority.

“If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; but if you really make them think, they'll hate you.”
― Harlan Ellison
_Sethbag
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Sethbag »

That comic was the best Jack Chick parody I've ever seen. It's perfect, down to the jot and tittle.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen
_Fence Sitter
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Fence Sitter »

Runtu wrote:Well said. It is interesting that the positive things we attribute to God are the parts that are "effable," and the parts that are problematic are "ineffable.".



Sounds like a big effing problem to me. :surprised: :surprised:
"Any over-ritualized religion since the dawn of time can make its priests say yes, we know, it is rotten, and hard luck, but just do as we say, keep at the ritual, stick it out, give us your money and you'll end up with the angels in heaven for evermore."
_Runtu
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Runtu »

Fence Sitter wrote:Sounds like a big effing problem to me. :surprised: :surprised:


Go eff yourself. :lol:
Runtu's Rincón

If you just talk, I find that your mouth comes out with stuff. -- Karl Pilkington
_mentalgymnast
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _mentalgymnast »

Runtu wrote:
EAllusion wrote:The problem is when the believer asserts that our judgement of what is right and wrong in ordinary circumstances can be used to evidence the idea a good God exists, but the reverse is illegitimate. It's inconsistent. If you can't judge God's actions or inaction as inconsistent with benevolence because a morally perfect God might have good reasons beyond your ken, then it just as equally follows that you can't judge God's actions or inactions as inconsistent with malevolence because such a being could just as easily have bad reasons beyond your ken. Maybe that event you think was a wonderful miracle from God was done for evil reasons. God is just beyond your moral judgment at that point. Therefore, you can't believe that God is good.

And if you could believe that God is good, your understanding of what that entails wouldn't inform your ability to anticipate God's behavior. That means arguments like, "I know God isn't lying to me because God is good" go straight out the window. God, after all, can have good reasons for lying to you beyond your understanding just the same as allowing Tay-Sachs babies to suffer. An assertion of God's goodness becomes empty because we don't know what that means. This is a serious theological problem because believers routinely hang ideas about what God will or won't do on the claim of his benevolence.


Again, very well said. This is quite in line with Joseph Smith's statement that whatever God commands is right, no matter what it is. Basically, all bets are off because, no matter what happens, because it's from God, it is good. And the goodness of God thus becomes an assertion based on nothing else.

A serious problem indeed.


Good points brought up in the last number of posts. I've struggled with a number of the same issues along the way. We all struggle with definitions...omnipotence, and the other omni's. The early brethren did. Later prophets of the restoration up to now have. And it is true, in order to move forward with a particle of faith in the LDS movement one necessarily defaults to "whatever God commands is right" and then hopes(based upon the pile of evidence, for and against) that the God that you worship is GOD. If the God of LDS'ism is the creator/God, then it is not unreasonable to accrue inscrutability to that God and his operations along the spectrum of what LOOKS, from our human perspective, to be evil and/or good. OTOH, if one doesn't believe that the God of Mormonism has a chance in heck-fire of being GOD, because of the apparent "quirkiness" of His commands here and there, one is still left to ascertain what GOD is. Or as EA and others have done, ascertain what GOD isn't...literally. Nothing. Another Santa story that's been going on a long time with many flavors and variations on the theme.

I'm not unaware of many of the issues and reasonings that have lead you, EA, Darth, and others, to the conclusions/outlook that you've come to. I would share many of those same views as a matter of FACT...if it wasn't for the "flip side" of the coin (and yes, some of that is probably cultural conditioning and "gut feelings" based on the same...) that tells me that there's something more than what I can SEE or REASON in regards to Christianity's story concerning God/Christ. Mormonism's coming on the scene at a time in world history where it makes a good fit into the world as it is and as it has been (Judeo-Christian principles/history) and where it seems to be going (yes, I know that is potentially more subjective than objective and again is AT LEAST conditioned on my own experience within my cultural mileu), is interesting, if not prophetic. There seems, to me, a LOT going for the church as it stands along other belief systems. There's some awesome theology/doctrine that has popped on the scene, albeit with a little help from the culture J.S. found himself a part of, since the restoration began in the 1800's.

And granted, there are conundrums. The ineffability and inscrutability stuff that those that proclaim faith end up falling back on can be seen as a cop out. I realize that. I've said before, the ONLY thing that keeps Mormonism on the table for me is the Book of Mormon. None of the other stuff, collectively (prophets, doctrine, authority, etc.) are the golden bullets that kill all the opposition. As I've read the book itself and also books that dig into the complexity of the Book of Mormon written by Grant Hardy, Brant Gardner, and others, I am not convinced that the book NECESSARILY came about as a result of Joseph Smith's genius or any others that were his associates in the beginning stages of Mormonism. Whether or not the Book of Abraham is a "smoking gun" that shoots down the Book of Mormon is of little or no consequence to me at this stage of the game. The Book of Mormon stands alone in its breadth and depth of narrative, complexity, and testimony of God and the redemptive mission of Christ.

So as long as the Book of Mormon comes off the presses and there's reason to think that there's something to it, I'm along for the ride. And I'm willing to default to the position that the ways of God are inscrutable, even when my personal morality and reasoned opinion is in conflict. I know, how can I live with contradiction between what my mind and heart tell me and what I have to live with as I come up against the things that don't make sense?

I just do. Until I see something better/richer come along...which I haven't. The Book of Mormon is indeed a keystone to my continued practice of plausible faith/hope within the confines of the Mormon narrative of reality. Prove it false or come up with the "smoking gun" against its authenticity, for a fact, and I'm probably going to be right there with you. :smile: Otherwise, I'm comfortable being an orthopractic, if not TBM'y orthodox (how can I be?), member of the church. Believing (conditionally), and willing at this stage of the game to live with reservations and ambiguity in many respects.

Regards,
MG
_Fence Sitter
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Re: Who's left?

Post by _Fence Sitter »

mentalgymnast wrote:
I'm not unaware of many of the issues and reasonings that have lead you, EA, Darth, and others, to the conclusions/outlook that you've come to. I would share many of those same views as a matter of FACT...if it wasn't for the "flip side" of the coin (and yes, some of that is probably cultural conditioning and "gut feelings" based on the same...) that tells me that there's something more than what I can SEE or REASON in regards to Christianity's story concerning God/Christ. Mormonism's coming on the scene at a time in world history where it makes a good fit into the world as it is and as it has been (Judeo-Christian principles/history) and where it seems to be going (yes, I know that is potentially more subjective than objective and again is AT LEAST conditioned on my own experience within my cultural mileu), is interesting, if not prophetic. There seems, to me, a LOT going for the church as it stands along other belief systems. There's some awesome theology/doctrine that has popped on the scene, albeit with a little help from the culture J.S. found himself a part of, since the restoration began in the 1800's.


Regards,
MG


Excellent post MG and forgive me for jumping on just one point but I do not see God restoring his Church in the 19th century America as a "good fit" at all. There seems no valid reason for God to send his only begotten to establish his Church only to let it fade from the earth for 1500+- years. Why would God allow such an apostasy, why would He allow it to go on for so long, and why reestablish it rural New York where it has struggled to even maintain its numbers against world population growth? The faithful answers to all these questions require some sort of ad hoc reasoning to justify more unexplainable actions by God.

What was wrong with all the people in all those other centuries and places that God did not consider restoring his one true church to them?

I would suggest it only seems a good fit because you happen to be part of it. For the vast majority of mankind it is just another blip on the ever changing religious scene.
"Any over-ritualized religion since the dawn of time can make its priests say yes, we know, it is rotten, and hard luck, but just do as we say, keep at the ritual, stick it out, give us your money and you'll end up with the angels in heaven for evermore."
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