(October 21, 2013 at 10:14 am)Drich Wrote:(October 19, 2013 at 7:56 am)Dolphins are the best Wrote: God is perfectly just, and yet he sentences the imperfect humans he created to infinite suffering in hell for finite sins. A limited offense does not warrant unlimited punishment.Why do you assume Sin are limited? What in the bible states that sins are limited.
Quote:God's sentencing of the imperfect humans to an eternity in hell for a mere mortal lifetime of sin is infinitely more unjust than this punishment.So.. what do you think of life in prisionment? or do you perfer the death penality?
Quote:A perfectly just God who sentences his imperfect creationGod only 'Created' Adam and He was perfect. then from Adam produced Eve. After the fall Adam and Eve Reproduced.. Meaning we are not a creation of God we are a reproduction of what God created.. Or more over a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy...
First of all, you WERE doing so well with the spelling. Your posts were nearly perfectly readable there for awhile. What happened?
Secondly, the lifelong imprisonment response is the first good argument I've ever seen come from your fingertips. I disagree of course, but good job none the less.
Thirdly, and the real reason your post caught my eye:
(October 21, 2013 at 10:14 am)Drich Wrote:'Dolphins Wrote:to infinite punishment for finite sins is impossible as the properties of a cubic sphere or invisible pink unicorn.Again in order for you to make this claim you must first demonstated that sins are finite.
This is an example of why you have this reputation:
It is completely reasonable to make a logical conclusion based on the facts presented by your bible: By your own admission, your god allows for a creation that is NOT remotely perfect ("a copy of a copy of a copy"). Therefore, this being is mortal and finite. Being a finite creature, it is not possible for this being to re-create infinitely. Meaning, the sins that are committed are not committed for all time. (The man's car I stole or even the woman I raped are not suffering these sins in the next life.) More so, a perfect god would be free of malicious vendettas against peons who sinned during a finite life. In fact, regardless of how great those sins may have seemed during that lifetime, they would not even register as a blip on the meter of billions of human lives on the eternal plain of existence.
Now unless you're going to pull this action: , than you can't realistically deny that I have demonstrated to any reasonable logical person that sins are indeed finite.