unknown soldier wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 11:11 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 9:30 pmWisdom to live by:
there is a time for everything. Including genocide.
So you defend God's reputed mass murder by saying there is a time for it.
I wouldn't call that a summary of my argument, but yes, my post was clearly setup as a defense of even genocide having a time and place.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 11:11 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 9:30 pmFor example, I don't get how we can think that it is moral to blot out an oppressive regime like, say, Nazism, yet we can't scale up our thinking and consider the edge cases that the bible pushes us to consider.
In some cases people need to use deadly force to fend off a dangerous enemy. We may have no choice, but God presumably can choose to deal with dangerous people any way he chooses. He could simply make sure that innocent people are not harmed by aggressors by taking away the aggressor's weapons. Then there would be no need to kill anybody.
So you are making a very common apologist's logical error: you try to explain away God's violence by comparing him to people. While people have limitations that might compel them to do harm, God supposedly has no such limitations. He is all mighty and does not need to act violently.
No,
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.
Have you ever noticed how God acts in the bible? It is invariably through others, in which I include people, animals, the elements... Note Genesis 1. All God ever says is "let there be..." It is simply a call, and it is
the elements that voluntarily respond to it using
their power (e.g., it is
the sea and
the land that bring forth life,
not God). (Why do you think the Word of God is such an important concept? That's essentially all the power that God has in Godself... The power of words... "Let there be...")
To 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.)
But 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.
So no, I don't agree with what you are saying here. You are making a very common error about the nature of God's power (and I get it - this ridiculous notion of an omnipotent Being out there has deep roots, and is pervasive).
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 11:11 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 9:30 pmLike,
WHAT IF the Nazi's won WW2?
WHAT IF we were looking from outside and had the power to do something? ...
Would we try to talk them out of it while they kept sending Jews to the fire? ... Would we send plagues upon them to try and soften their hearts? ... Would we obliterate the whole lot of them off the face of the earth if they refused to change their ways? ...
I WOULD. Why? Because that's what's right for life.
We really didn't make war on Germany in WWII because they were killing Jews. They were a threat to us, so we needed to remove their ability to threaten us. We were unable to do so peacefully. God, by contrast, could have chosen to turn their bullets into foam rubber and their tanks into go-carts. Not one person would have had to die.
Yah, 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.
unknown soldier wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 11:11 pm
theophile wrote: ↑Thu Sep 24, 2020 9:30 pmSo get over yourselves and own up to what the bible is telling you.
So you defend God's genocides by telling us to "get over it." I get the impression that you like God's ways. That's what scares me.
No, I said get over yourself. That is not a defense of genocide. That is a statement made
after a defense of genocide.