unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
If my opinion makes any difference to you, I submit that we give genocide no time and no place. Genocide has no place in a civilized world.
But huge caveat there.
Civilized world. I would agree that genocide has no time or place in a civilized world. But what do you mean by civilized? Are
we civilized? As we decimate the environment and life on this planet? As we continue to perpetrate racism and sexism and anti-LGBTQism? As we allow the poverty of billions of our own kind? ...
I have serious questions about our "civility," and if I was on the outside looking in, and had the power to do something, I would doubt whether human beings deserve their place in this world (again, whether granted by God or simply an accident of evolution). Now, does that mean I think we are due a genocide? Absolutely not. But some tough love in order to soften our hearts? Yah, I think that is
long overdue. (And unfortunately the plagues that have been set upon us are having little impact...)
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 3:41 pmNo, you are making the very common error that all apologists subscribe to such a notion of omnipotence. Arguments that God can do anything without limit (say, at the snap of a magical finger) are a bit ridiculous, unhelpful, and simply stop all conversation.
What is God unable to do? You contradict Matthew 19:26 (NRSV):
But Jesus looked at them and said, "For mortals it is impossible, but for God all things are possible."
Apologists have come up with a list of things they say God can't do, and I'm left wondering what "
all things" means. So in the wacky world of Christian apologetics, "all" means "not all."
Addressed this. The issue is less with the word "all" and more the word "possible." Possible does not mean actually able. It means within the realm of possibility. As in, it is within the realm of possibility that one day we will all get around in flying cars. And have a vaccine for COVID-19.
I also went further to suggest the true meaning of omnipotence, and how it comes about.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 3:41 pmWhy do you think the Word of God is such an important concept?
It's an important concept in Christianity because that's all God is; a bunch or words.
You are saying this to be dismissive. But there is real truth in what you are saying, and something that should be taken seriously if you have any interest whatsoever in theology (or arguing against theology), and getting beyond dated and unhelpful concepts of God. He's a bit heavy on Derrida I think, but a good and fun read (if a bit flowery) would be something like John Caputo's Weakness of God.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 3:41 pmTo bring up the counterpoint that "all things are possible for God," we need to be clear that "possibility" does not mean "actually able," whether right now or ever before. Rather, it is an eschatological concept. As in, it means at the end, when God is at last all in all, i.e., when all of us (people, animals, elements) have contributed our power to God, only then is God truly omnipotent, or quite literally "all powerful." (Up until then, God could quite literally be powerless, with no one answering the call or contributing any real power to it.)
So for you these two statements mean the same thing:
1. All things are possible for God.
2. Some day we will all get together and make all things possible for God by lending him a hand.
I never cease to be amazed at Biblical interpretation.
Again with the dismissive, trivializing statements (versus actual arguments). If you don't like my words then consider Paul's in First Corinthians 15:24-28 where he says the same thing:
Then the end will come, when he hands over the kingdom to God the Father after he has destroyed all dominion, authority and power. ... When he has done this, then the Son himself will be made subject to him who put everything under him, so that God may be all in all.
What Paul is describing here is the eschaton, or the end, of our calling as human beings first issued in Genesis 1, i.e., when God put everything under us to rule. What Paul is describing is when we at last fulfill that mission, and have the whole of creation under us, or behind us (which is to say
all power), and ultimately give it over to God.
This is when and how God truly becomes all-powerful. According to the bible, that is, and not some random apologist.
So again, be dismissive, but you are ignoring what the bible actually says, and arguing against a strawman. If that's what does it for you, go ahead. But there's nothing in that for me.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 3:41 pmBut even then, at the eschaton, when all power is God's, that power is still through us. So it is always us, and never some super-magical-finger-snapping Being out there, that is doing the work. That is true throughout the bible. Bringing back the example I raised before, God would be freeing the world from Nazism through us, and as such would be limited to whatever power we have, or the power of any others who answer the call, to do so.
Why put God into that mix? The allies' efforts are quite adequate to explain the defeat of Hitler.
I don't really care if you put God into that mix or not. The end result is the same. To a reference I made in the previous post,
you will know them by their fruits.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 7:47 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 3:41 pmYah, again, more magical finger snapping. Got it. Heard it a billion times before. And look, I would agree with you if I thought this notion of God you're advancing had biblical credence, but I don't think it stands up to scrutiny.
But I've read the Bible! God's been snapping his magical fingers since creation week. He flooded the earth, he parted a sea, he rained fire from heaven, he got a virgin pregnant with himself without a penis--I'm not making any of this up.
Reading the bible is not enough. Per earlier discussions on the challenging nature of the bible, it needs to be
studied. Also, you completely ignored what I said (assuming you read it) and simply reiterated what I already knew to be your position... So on both counts,
read more closely.
That's why I keep using the simplest and clearest of references, to make it easy as possible. Again, Genesis 1.
It is not God but the elements that act there. To your point before,
God is nothing but a bunch of words calling upon them. The same is true with Exodus.
The sea parts. Or more precisely,
the wind parts the sea (which is a clear reference again to Genesis 1, and the
ruach Elohim or wind / breath that issues the Word of God as it hovers over the deep...)
It's a subtle but extremely important shift. And to bring back Paul, and Genesis 1,
that's part of our mission. To bring the sea, even, under our rule. So that it answers
our call. And we can ultimately bring it's power back to God.
In the end-time passages I cited from Paul, it was
death itself that at last answered our call and as such was "conquered" by the son of man, which is to say
by humankind. Hence the resurrection of the dead... when death at last loses its "sting."