RE: My progress report in defeating my illness.
September 4, 2013 at 6:55 pm
(This post was last modified: September 4, 2013 at 6:56 pm by Mystical.)
Personally I've found that disbelief in god took more will than believing in it. Disbelieving in god entails taking all the responsibility for your actions, thoughts, and environment rather than leaving it up to god to make things better. My dad, he refuses medical treatment both for his worsening diabetes and for his mental health (his parents died as a result of his fathers untreated schizophrenia). It breaks my heart every day because he's such a good man and invokes a life of solitary confinement, willingly based on his preconceived notion that he is how god made himself to be and that doctors are playing god. Unfortunately he strikes down my position that if there is a god he put everything including medicinal properties and our brains ability to harness them for well being. As a result he holds me hostage worrying about his physical and mental well being constantly; its selfish what he does even though he believes he's being unselfish. I chose to avoid that route. I chose to harness the things this life has to offer, for him and for me..
If I were to create self aware beings knowing fully what they would do in their lifetimes, I sure wouldn't create a HELL for the majority of them to live in infinitely! That's not Love, that's sadistic. Therefore a truly loving god does not exist!
Dead wrong. The actions of a finite being measured against an infinite one are infinitesimal and therefore merit infinitesimal punishment.
I say again: No exceptions. Punishment should be equal to the crime, not in excess of it. As soon as the punishment is greater than the crime, the punisher is in the wrong.
Quote:The sin is against an infinite being (God) unforgiven infinitely, therefore the punishment is infinite.
Dead wrong. The actions of a finite being measured against an infinite one are infinitesimal and therefore merit infinitesimal punishment.
Quote:Some people deserve hell.
I say again: No exceptions. Punishment should be equal to the crime, not in excess of it. As soon as the punishment is greater than the crime, the punisher is in the wrong.