A couple weeks ago, a lady wrote a letter in to our local newspaper's Readers' Forum saying that her "God" was not a god of wrath. A man replied with the following letter (found here):
"This is in response to Tina Blough’s letter on Aug. 19, 'Being good a personal choice.' As part of her response to another letter, she says that 'my God would never show wrath.'
That is the thinking of many Americans today, but the problem with that is the god they describe does not exist. How can we possibly understand anything about a God we cannot see? The only way to know God is to see him as he is revealed in the Bible.
The God of the Bible is described in many ways, and one them is that he is 'angry with the wicked everyday.'
To deny the wrath of God is to deny the justice of God against evil. Even a cursory reading of the Bible shows that God cannot tolerate evil, will judge it, and even show his terrible wrath against it and those who propagate it.
Blough and others who claim God is anything other than what he is described in the Holy Scriptures have created a god out of their own imagination.
I responded on the website's Discussion section:
"You are right to point out that the God of the Bible is indeed a God of wrath. As Richard Dawkins puts it, he 'is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.'
The problem is that there is not just one 'God' described in the Bible. I am not implying that Christianity is a polytheistic religion; I mean that God as described by one author (Amos, for example) is very different than the God described by another biblical author (the author of Jonah, for example). When you compare the Old Testament to the New Testament, the differences are compounded far more! The result is that any one God with definable attributes, even by fundamentalist Christians such as yourself who truly think that they follow the bible explicitly, must be a self-created conglomerate being, pieced together by the portions of Scripture you accept. It is impossible to have one God that possesses all of the attributes given to him in the bible, since many of these attributes are conflicting. (Granted, some Christians try by saying that God is both 'infinitely just and infinitely merciful' which is a logical impossibility; I have been told that this is not an impossibility for God, but this just shows the ignorance of the one making the claim. 'Infinite justice' leaves no room for mercy; any act of mercy is not justice. 'Infinite mercy' leaves no room for justice, as people are not getting what is deserved. Yet many Christians love to make this logically-impossible, 'cute' claim about God.)
So, Jeff, I applaud you for not glossing over the vengeful, tyrannical nature of the god you worship as many Christians try to do. However, please recognize that you too create a god out of your own imagination. You state that the problem with people like Tina Blough is that 'the god they describe does not exist.' The god you describe does not exist either, as an in depth study of the bible, its writing, and its canonization will reveal that Judaism and Christianity are made up religions, just like any religion. Escape your delusion, recognize that this reality is all we get and it truly is magical, and embrace this world."
The fellow who wrote the original letter responded on the Discussion forum:
"Just a few notes in response to your discussion. First, your quoting of Richard Dawkins shows an inherent bias against any spiritual. It would be like asking a Japanese soldier trapped and being bombed on Okinawa what he thought of FDR.
The Scriptures are very clear in pointing out that mankind in general is the enemy of God and hates His laws and everything about Him. Dawkins is just more vocal in his mischaracterization of the God of the Bible. He comes across differently in different books because of the great ignorance of His enemies and the biased hatred in their hearts they have toward Him. Thousands of others have studied the Bible and came to opposite (and more reasonable) conclusions.
Though Dawkins makes great sport of mocking the spiritual, he has no real answers to the origin of life, any more than the uneducated atheist drunk at the bar. It takes great faith to believe that the great complexity of life and the universe around us somehow 'evolved' from nothing (against all scientific observation). So Dawkins goes on his rampages, and the spiritually blind mockers join right in, having no more idea how we got here than he does.
I am not going to rehash the dozen or so arguments you pose against the Christian religion, other than to say this - exactly what would this world be like had it not been for Jesus Christ? Follow Christianity around the world and around the centuries, and you see the end of cannibalism, Viking raids, widow burning, polygamy, and so forth. Even the freedom we enjoy right now is the result of the Protestant idea of religious liberty, and the chaos we see happening at the same time is the result of our losing that foundation. Atheism has produced only the Russian gulag and the Chinese mass murder, forced abortions, and general cruelty. Jesus said you will know them by there fruits, and there is no denying the bloody fruit of Atheism. As a side note, how many hospitals around the globe are founded, funded, and staff by self-sacrificing atheists?
When it comes to the idea of how we and the universe got here, atheism draws a big blank. Something does not come form nothing. The complex does not arise from the nonexistent. That is observable science, and it also why a person should start looking for answers in Genesis 1:1."
I initially planned to let bygones be bygones and let the argument end here, but now I'm tempted to respond. In particular, I'm annoyed that he spends half of his response attacking Richard Dawkins, claiming there is no proof for cosmological or biological evolution, and then for some bizarre reason claiming that the entire world is better off because of Christianity and atheism has only ever brought evil. The more I think about it, the more this annoys me. Would you all recommend from debating experience that I let this one go or push it? If I should push it, are there any points in particular that you recommend I argue in order to try to at least get this guy to see the other side? Thanks!!!
"This is in response to Tina Blough’s letter on Aug. 19, 'Being good a personal choice.' As part of her response to another letter, she says that 'my God would never show wrath.'
That is the thinking of many Americans today, but the problem with that is the god they describe does not exist. How can we possibly understand anything about a God we cannot see? The only way to know God is to see him as he is revealed in the Bible.
The God of the Bible is described in many ways, and one them is that he is 'angry with the wicked everyday.'
To deny the wrath of God is to deny the justice of God against evil. Even a cursory reading of the Bible shows that God cannot tolerate evil, will judge it, and even show his terrible wrath against it and those who propagate it.
Blough and others who claim God is anything other than what he is described in the Holy Scriptures have created a god out of their own imagination.
I responded on the website's Discussion section:
"You are right to point out that the God of the Bible is indeed a God of wrath. As Richard Dawkins puts it, he 'is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully.'
The problem is that there is not just one 'God' described in the Bible. I am not implying that Christianity is a polytheistic religion; I mean that God as described by one author (Amos, for example) is very different than the God described by another biblical author (the author of Jonah, for example). When you compare the Old Testament to the New Testament, the differences are compounded far more! The result is that any one God with definable attributes, even by fundamentalist Christians such as yourself who truly think that they follow the bible explicitly, must be a self-created conglomerate being, pieced together by the portions of Scripture you accept. It is impossible to have one God that possesses all of the attributes given to him in the bible, since many of these attributes are conflicting. (Granted, some Christians try by saying that God is both 'infinitely just and infinitely merciful' which is a logical impossibility; I have been told that this is not an impossibility for God, but this just shows the ignorance of the one making the claim. 'Infinite justice' leaves no room for mercy; any act of mercy is not justice. 'Infinite mercy' leaves no room for justice, as people are not getting what is deserved. Yet many Christians love to make this logically-impossible, 'cute' claim about God.)
So, Jeff, I applaud you for not glossing over the vengeful, tyrannical nature of the god you worship as many Christians try to do. However, please recognize that you too create a god out of your own imagination. You state that the problem with people like Tina Blough is that 'the god they describe does not exist.' The god you describe does not exist either, as an in depth study of the bible, its writing, and its canonization will reveal that Judaism and Christianity are made up religions, just like any religion. Escape your delusion, recognize that this reality is all we get and it truly is magical, and embrace this world."
The fellow who wrote the original letter responded on the Discussion forum:
"Just a few notes in response to your discussion. First, your quoting of Richard Dawkins shows an inherent bias against any spiritual. It would be like asking a Japanese soldier trapped and being bombed on Okinawa what he thought of FDR.
The Scriptures are very clear in pointing out that mankind in general is the enemy of God and hates His laws and everything about Him. Dawkins is just more vocal in his mischaracterization of the God of the Bible. He comes across differently in different books because of the great ignorance of His enemies and the biased hatred in their hearts they have toward Him. Thousands of others have studied the Bible and came to opposite (and more reasonable) conclusions.
Though Dawkins makes great sport of mocking the spiritual, he has no real answers to the origin of life, any more than the uneducated atheist drunk at the bar. It takes great faith to believe that the great complexity of life and the universe around us somehow 'evolved' from nothing (against all scientific observation). So Dawkins goes on his rampages, and the spiritually blind mockers join right in, having no more idea how we got here than he does.
I am not going to rehash the dozen or so arguments you pose against the Christian religion, other than to say this - exactly what would this world be like had it not been for Jesus Christ? Follow Christianity around the world and around the centuries, and you see the end of cannibalism, Viking raids, widow burning, polygamy, and so forth. Even the freedom we enjoy right now is the result of the Protestant idea of religious liberty, and the chaos we see happening at the same time is the result of our losing that foundation. Atheism has produced only the Russian gulag and the Chinese mass murder, forced abortions, and general cruelty. Jesus said you will know them by there fruits, and there is no denying the bloody fruit of Atheism. As a side note, how many hospitals around the globe are founded, funded, and staff by self-sacrificing atheists?
When it comes to the idea of how we and the universe got here, atheism draws a big blank. Something does not come form nothing. The complex does not arise from the nonexistent. That is observable science, and it also why a person should start looking for answers in Genesis 1:1."
I initially planned to let bygones be bygones and let the argument end here, but now I'm tempted to respond. In particular, I'm annoyed that he spends half of his response attacking Richard Dawkins, claiming there is no proof for cosmological or biological evolution, and then for some bizarre reason claiming that the entire world is better off because of Christianity and atheism has only ever brought evil. The more I think about it, the more this annoys me. Would you all recommend from debating experience that I let this one go or push it? If I should push it, are there any points in particular that you recommend I argue in order to try to at least get this guy to see the other side? Thanks!!!