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(June 4, 2011 at 6:14 pm)Pel Wrote: This is a question for atheists, deists and such. If you were to be asked what is God like and why in case he existed what would you say? The answer should be based on your observation and reflection of everything that has surounded you. Also try to look into your emotions. Thanks
Diffidus:
If a God existed (and I cannot base this on my observation, since I have never witnessed such a phenomena) it would need to have all the attributes necessary to create the whole universe including life itself. I would imagine such a God to be impersonal. A being that created the universe and then left it to evolve so that people could have free will within it. A God could not be all powerful, omnipotent and perfect due to the fact that evil exists. An impersonal God, of the sought that I describe, may even answer Epicurus' riddle with regard to the existence of evil in the world:
If He is able and willing - whence cometh evil.
If He is unable but willing - then He is not omnipotent.
If He is able but unwilling - then He is malevolent.
If He is unable and unwilling - then why call him God?
(June 17, 2011 at 1:31 pm)diffidus Wrote:
(June 13, 2011 at 8:01 am)tackattack Wrote: You can call it what you like. You're saying I can't have doubts and faith, which I've shown is categorically wrong. My entire belief does not break from one moment of doubt, because doubt is an instance and belief is a collection of congruent and fortified instances. I will answer your question. I am as close to a gnostic 100% belief that God exists as I could get to anything. For instance I support the statement that If I know anything that is real or useful, it is that God exists. I equate my level/intensity of faith with my belief in gravity. I "know" if I throw an apple up it will fall, There are instances that could make that not happen (ie. in space or an anti-gravity chamber), but for all practical usefulness and purposes, the apple falls and God exists for me. I have instances of doubts just as it's possible for the apple not to fall, but there's a proven track record of personally reliable information supporting his existence for me.
Diffidus:
Yes - and you can show me the apple falling at any time I request it. But you cannot show me your God.
Aberfan is a tiny mining community in Wales UK. In 1966 the little children of this small town had gone to school in the morning as usual. They went into the assembly hall, for the usual routine announcements, which finished in the usual manner, with a Hymn. There little innocent voices could be heard from outside:
"All things bright and beautiful
All creatures great and small
All things bright and wonderful
The Lord God made them all"
Shortly after this, a rumbling sound was heard and a huge mountain of slag avalanched on top of the school killing 116 school children, many young infants, and also a number of teachers and other adults. The rescue attempts were desperate - parents were screaming and digging the slag with there bare hands. Some parents lost there entire family of children.
God has sufficient power that he could have nudged the slag heap a couple of hours earlier, before the school children arrived. Imagine if you had such power, what would you do?
I find it hard to have faith in a God that has such power but just stood there and watched!!
Quote:Diffidus:
There is no emotional appeal only cold hard facts. These facts may evoke an emotion in you, but they are facts. I notice that I give you facts and you give me some irrelevant academic argument about the difference between faith and belief - a point that I didn't even question in my post.
The reality is: I pose a real question about real events in the world and you have no answer to it. So I will ask again - why did God stand and watch the Aberfan disaster?
I apologize diffidus, I got your conversation mixed with bozo and I's conversation. I was having a specific converation about someone who claimed I couldn't doubt faith and still believe. Apparently I haven't responded to your arguement, as I never even saw it, at all so please allow me to now.
1-You posed no question till that last post, just made a statement that you couldn't have faith in a god that sat by and watched.
2-My point was an academic arguement, I apologize becasue it wasn't directed at you
3-You use a natural disaster from 1966 (was Japan not recent enough?) that involved children (plays to every parent) singing a hymn (and even quoted some of it... how sweet). To think this wasn't intended to slide emotionalism in your favor is in err as there were 50 other cases at least that you could have used. Point 3 is your abhorrent use of a tragedy for emotionalism.
4-To answer your question let me get this straight first. You're using the fairly standard Problem of Evil arguement: ie. God is an evil god because he did not stop the Aberfan disaster.
5-I'll assume that 4's assessment is accurate to your position so I can speed this along. Allow me to quote an actual First hand witness to the tragedy.
Quote:"During my childhood I played on that monstrous mountain of slag, and in my youth I rummaged coal from it. Everyone knew that one day – some day – this hideous scar on the landscape, this indiscriminate dumping of colliery refuse, would bring disaster. But little did we think that when it did happen, it would leave such devastation and heart-breaking sorrow in its wake."
These words are written by a native of Aberfan, an ex-pupil of Pantglas school. They are contained in a letter to the editor expressing heartfelt sympathy to all those people who are suffering in this hour of indescribable tragedy.
There is today sadness in the hearts of everyone who lives in a mining valley. But there is bitterness too.
The coal mining communities of South Wales have lived so long with death as a companion that they reconcile themselves to accepting the peril that hangs over them.
Everyone knows that coal tips move. Everyone fears that one day the tip above their village will come rumbling down into the valley, but it is a possibility that they accept.
So you would have a God with no consequences for a man-made decision, they knew would have deadly consequences? Or do you want to continue to play with how religion affected the area?
Quote:After the disaster I warned the community would have to come to accept its guilt. This guilt came out in many ways. There were the so-called guilty men who were blamed for what happened; they suffered themselves and were the victims of a hate campaign. But it wasn’t only them. Women who had sent their children who hadn’t want to go to school that day suffered terrible feelings of guilt. … Grief and guilt came in many different ways. There was a strange bitterness between families who lost children and those who hadn’t; people just could not help it.
Aberfan doctor
-same source emphasis by me
I couldn't find one first hand account that blamed god.. and I looked hard.. there was one that mentioned god that wasn't a preacher.
Quote:
In those days talking of your emotions was an embarrassment. As a child you felt ashamed to tell someone what you were feeling, even if you were crying. You didn’t want them to know you were crying. I only cried when I’d gone to bed in the evenings. If my mother heard me she would come in to see me, But I couldn’t talk to her about how I felt – and in the morning I would feel embarrassed. In my family we never discussed what had happened. Nothing was said. Just tears and very quiet. It’s the same round here today – people don’t want you to see they’re upset. I’ve never seen my dad to cry, never. When I went to bed I would speak to God. He was the only one I could speak to at the time. You don’t get an answer back but you could feel there’s somebody there. And that’s a comfort. … My Dad was very bitter for years. It was his only son, you see. My mother still won’t talk about that time. She doesn’t want to know. She’s blanked it out. It was the only way she could cope. We always went to church and she turned atheist for a while, which was bad because it meant she had no comfort anywhere. But she started to believe again and I think it has given her back her strength.
Pupil, Pantglas Junior School
As far as we’re concerned now, we’ve still got two boys. We’re only separated for a time. One day we’re going to meet. The parting and the loneliness and being without him is terrible, but it’s not for ever.
Bereaved Baptist minister, speaking in 1996
I tried to rescue people but I realised it could be dangerous just digging, not knowing what you were doing and I was getting in the way of people so I immediately switched over to pastoral work … The end of chapter 8 of Romans is a great summary of faith - What can separate us from the love of God - It’s a passage I always use when there’s a personal tragedy or disaster and that’s a message we always try to emphasise - I am certain that nothing can separate us from the love of God, neither death nor life, neither angels or other heavenly rulers or powers, neither the present nor the future.
Bereaved Baptist minister, speaking in 1996
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari
June 18, 2011 at 3:20 pm (This post was last modified: June 18, 2011 at 3:29 pm by diffidus.)
(June 18, 2011 at 8:05 am)tackattack Wrote:
(June 10, 2011 at 2:45 pm)diffidus Wrote:
Quote:
(June 4, 2011 at 6:14 pm)Pel Wrote: This is a question for atheists, deists and such. If you were to be asked what is God like and why in case he existed what would you say? The answer should be based on your observation and reflection of everything that has surounded you. Also try to look into your emotions. Thanks
Diffidus:
If a God existed (and I cannot base this on my observation, since I have never witnessed such a phenomena) it would need to have all the attributes necessary to create the whole universe including life itself. I would imagine such a God to be impersonal. A being that created the universe and then left it to evolve so that people could have free will within it. A God could not be all powerful, omnipotent and perfect due to the fact that evil exists. An impersonal God, of the sought that I describe, may even answer Epicurus' riddle with regard to the existence of evil in the world:
If He is able and willing - whence cometh evil.
If He is unable but willing - then He is not omnipotent.
If He is able but unwilling - then He is malevolent.
If He is unable and unwilling - then why call him God?
(June 17, 2011 at 1:31 pm)diffidus Wrote:
(June 13, 2011 at 8:01 am)tackattack Wrote: You can call it what you like. You're saying I can't have doubts and faith, which I've shown is categorically wrong. My entire belief does not break from one moment of doubt, because doubt is an instance and belief is a collection of congruent and fortified instances. I will answer your question. I am as close to a gnostic 100% belief that God exists as I could get to anything. For instance I support the statement that If I know anything that is real or useful, it is that God exists. I equate my level/intensity of faith with my belief in gravity. I "know" if I throw an apple up it will fall, There are instances that could make that not happen (ie. in space or an anti-gravity chamber), but for all practical usefulness and purposes, the apple falls and God exists for me. I have instances of doubts just as it's possible for the apple not to fall, but there's a proven track record of personally reliable information supporting his existence for me.
Diffidus:
Yes - and you can show me the apple falling at any time I request it. But you cannot show me your God.
Aberfan is a tiny mining community in Wales UK. In 1966 the little children of this small town had gone to school in the morning as usual. They went into the assembly hall, for the usual routine announcements, which finished in the usual manner, with a Hymn. There little innocent voices could be heard from outside:
"All things bright and beautiful
All creatures great and small
All things bright and wonderful
The Lord God made them all"
Shortly after this, a rumbling sound was heard and a huge mountain of slag avalanched on top of the school killing 116 school children, many young infants, and also a number of teachers and other adults. The rescue attempts were desperate - parents were screaming and digging the slag with there bare hands. Some parents lost there entire family of children.
God has sufficient power that he could have nudged the slag heap a couple of hours earlier, before the school children arrived. Imagine if you had such power, what would you do?
I find it hard to have faith in a God that has such power but just stood there and watched!!
Quote:Diffidus:
There is no emotional appeal only cold hard facts. These facts may evoke an emotion in you, but they are facts. I notice that I give you facts and you give me some irrelevant academic argument about the difference between faith and belief - a point that I didn't even question in my post.
The reality is: I pose a real question about real events in the world and you have no answer to it. So I will ask again - why did God stand and watch the Aberfan disaster?
I apologize diffidus, I got your conversation mixed with bozo and I's conversation. I was having a specific converation about someone who claimed I couldn't doubt faith and still believe. Apparently I haven't responded to your arguement, as I never even saw it, at all so please allow me to now.
1-You posed no question till that last post, just made a statement that you couldn't have faith in a god that sat by and watched.
2-My point was an academic arguement, I apologize becasue it wasn't directed at you
3-You use a natural disaster from 1966 (was Japan not recent enough?) that involved children (plays to every parent) singing a hymn (and even quoted some of it... how sweet). To think this wasn't intended to slide emotionalism in your favor is in err as there were 50 other cases at least that you could have used. Point 3 is your abhorrent use of a tragedy for emotionalism.
4-To answer your question let me get this straight first. You're using the fairly standard Problem of Evil arguement: ie. God is an evil god because he did not stop the Aberfan disaster.
5-I'll assume that 4's assessment is accurate to your position so I can speed this along. Allow me to quote an actual First hand witness to the tragedy.
Quote:"During my childhood I played on that monstrous mountain of slag, and in my youth I rummaged coal from it. Everyone knew that one day – some day – this hideous scar on the landscape, this indiscriminate dumping of colliery refuse, would bring disaster. But little did we think that when it did happen, it would leave such devastation and heart-breaking sorrow in its wake."
These words are written by a native of Aberfan, an ex-pupil of Pantglas school. They are contained in a letter to the editor expressing heartfelt sympathy to all those people who are suffering in this hour of indescribable tragedy.
There is today sadness in the hearts of everyone who lives in a mining valley. But there is bitterness too.
The coal mining communities of South Wales have lived so long with death as a companion that they reconcile themselves to accepting the peril that hangs over them.
Everyone knows that coal tips move. Everyone fears that one day the tip above their village will come rumbling down into the valley, but it is a possibility that they accept.
So you would have a God with no consequences for a man-made decision, they knew would have deadly consequences? Or do you want to continue to play with how religion affected the area?
Quote:After the disaster I warned the community would have to come to accept its guilt. This guilt came out in many ways. There were the so-called guilty men who were blamed for what happened; they suffered themselves and were the victims of a hate campaign. But it wasn’t only them. Women who had sent their children who hadn’t want to go to school that day suffered terrible feelings of guilt. … Grief and guilt came in many different ways. There was a strange bitterness between families who lost children and those who hadn’t; people just could not help it.
Aberfan doctor
-same source emphasis by me
I couldn't find one first hand account that blamed god.. and I looked hard.. there was one that mentioned god that wasn't a preacher.
Quote:In those days talking of your emotions was an embarrassment. As a child you felt ashamed to tell someone what you were feeling, even if you were crying. You didn’t want them to know you were crying. I only cried when I’d gone to bed in the evenings. If my mother heard me she would come in to see me, But I couldn’t talk to her about how I felt – and in the morning I would feel embarrassed. In my family we never discussed what had happened. Nothing was said. Just tears and very quiet. It’s the same round here today – people don’t want you to see they’re upset. I’ve never seen my dad to cry, never. When I went to bed I would speak to God. He was the only one I could speak to at the time. You don’t get an answer back but you could feel there’s somebody there. And that’s a comfort. … My Dad was very bitter for years. It was his only son, you see. My mother still won’t talk about that time. She doesn’t want to know. She’s blanked it out. It was the only way she could cope. We always went to church and she turned atheist for a while, which was bad because it meant she had no comfort anywhere. But she started to believe again and I think it has given her back her strength.
Pupil, Pantglas Junior School
As far as we’re concerned now, we’ve still got two boys. We’re only separated for a time. One day we’re going to meet. The parting and the loneliness and being without him is terrible, but it’s not for ever.
Bereaved Baptist minister, speaking in 1996
I tried to rescue people but I realised it could be dangerous just digging, not knowing what you were doing and I was getting in the way of people so I immediately switched over to pastoral work … The end of chapter 8 of Romans is a great summary of faith - What can separate us from the love of God - It’s a passage I always use when there’s a personal tragedy or disaster and that’s a message we always try to emphasise - I am certain that nothing can separate us from the love of God, neither death nor life, neither angels or other heavenly rulers or powers, neither the present nor the future.
Bereaved Baptist minister, speaking in 1996
Diffidus:
You seem to have side stepped the issue again. This time you have just given me more (interesting) facts about the Aberfan disaster and, if I understand you correctly, you are saying that certain people in the community were to blame for the disaster and that they should have known better.
When I was aged 23 I was waiting at a bus stop on my way to the city centre to do some shopping. I noticed an infant playing with a ball close to me. Just as the bus was pulling into the stop, the ball ran out into its path. The infant had his full attention on the ball and had not noticed the bus and so he was running out after the ball. Luckily, I had noticed his mistake and at the last moment I was able to grab him and avert a potential tragedy.
This incident stuck in my mind. I had acted partly instinctively, but partly because I could. It did not occur to me to let him run under the bus because it was his own fault (maybe he should have looked left and right, maybe he should have listened to that road safety lesson) or anyone else’s (maybe mankind for creating a bus that was capable of killing people.
I cannot get it out of my mind that if I’d had the wherewithal l to avert the Aberfan disaster then I would have.
The Aberfan disaster is particularly relevant to my questions, which is why I chose it. Firstly, children are inherently innocent and, secondly, they had just finished singing ‘All things bright and beautiful’ a hymn of celebration to God and his creation.
This leaves two questions that I am genuinely interested in:
i) Would you have stood by and watched the Aberfan disaster if you had the power to avert it?
ii) Why did God do nothing?
I didn't sidestep anything. You still refuse to answer my questions, but I'll happily answer yours.
i)With my limited knowledge and my human perspective I would have averted it
ii) There are lots of reasons to this. You no doubt answer it with, because he doesn't exist, because you see no justifiable reason for their death.
Here's a few -
a)Someone had to pay the consequence for human action. From a life after death perspective, why not take the innocents so they can be spared hell and blame so that the living guilty could atone.
b)What would make the more impact on a community to learn their lesson? they already realized it could be a disaster, but apparently didn't care enough to protect their children.
c)He only interferes with human choice and desires and not natural laws or consequences
d)He's doesn't see death (especially of innocents) as inheritly bad and would rather have the innocents in heaven with him then have another generation of people that ignored him and common sense.
e)There could have been the next Jeffrey Dahmer in that school house, and he wanted to clear him away while he was still innocent.
I could come up with more probably if you like or even
f)He's apathetic
I'm sure I could come up with more, but I don't really know his reasons and this is all conjecture that I can see from my finite little perspective. None of it is evidence against God. You can't take someone's/something's inaction and use it to disprove their existence. I've never eaten an ugli fruit, they must not exist right... That's my main problem with the P.O.E. is that it's using instances of inaction and trussing up a moral delima with it and using it as evidence of the unlikeliness of God's existence.
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari
Anymouse
Worshipper of Caffeinea, Goddess of Coffee.
Religious Views: Atheist (formerly Wiccan, with a Discordian bent). Erotic Romance novel editor. Handfasted to BethK, the smartest, coolest, sexiest, brightest atheist here.
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June 20, 2011 at 3:45 am (This post was last modified: June 20, 2011 at 3:45 am by Anymouse.)
(June 18, 2011 at 6:36 am)diffidus Wrote:
(June 18, 2011 at 6:16 am)Anymouse Wrote:
(June 18, 2011 at 6:10 am)diffidus Wrote: But why did He stand and watch the Aberfan disaster? If you had the power, what would you have done?
I dunno, I'm not a Christian, nor have I ever been. Must be that part about "creating evil" in Isaiah. Maybe he did it?
Diffidus:
Sorry anymouse, my mistake - I meant this post for pel.
That does bring up a question in my mind, whether directed at me or not. If God is omnipotent (as held out by Christianity and Islam), and God creates evil (as held in Isaiah), perhaps the Aberfan disaster was caused by God? That, though God could have chosen to allow/push a slag heap onto a school before dawn, he chose to do it during the school day. It does say in Isaiah that he creates evil. Not the folk that pile up slag heaps, but God himself.
"Be ye not lost amongst Precept of Order." - Book of Uterus, 1:5, "Principia Discordia, or How I Found Goddess and What I Did to Her When I Found Her."
June 25, 2011 at 10:55 am (This post was last modified: June 25, 2011 at 11:01 am by diffidus.)
(June 19, 2011 at 5:52 am)tackattack Wrote: I didn't sidestep anything. You still refuse to answer my questions, but I'll happily answer yours.
i)With my limited knowledge and my human perspective I would have averted it
ii) There are lots of reasons to this. You no doubt answer it with, because he doesn't exist, because you see no justifiable reason for their death.
Here's a few -
a)Someone had to pay the consequence for human action. From a life after death perspective, why not take the innocents so they can be spared hell and blame so that the living guilty could atone.
b)What would make the more impact on a community to learn their lesson? they already realized it could be a disaster, but apparently didn't care enough to protect their children.
c)He only interferes with human choice and desires and not natural laws or consequences
d)He's doesn't see death (especially of innocents) as inheritly bad and would rather have the innocents in heaven with him then have another generation of people that ignored him and common sense.
e)There could have been the next Jeffrey Dahmer in that school house, and he wanted to clear him away while he was still innocent.
I could come up with more probably if you like or even
f)He's apathetic
I'm sure I could come up with more, but I don't really know his reasons and this is all conjecture that I can see from my finite little perspective. None of it is evidence against God. You can't take someone's/something's inaction and use it to disprove their existence. I've never eaten an ugli fruit, they must not exist right... That's my main problem with the P.O.E. is that it's using instances of inaction and trussing up a moral delima with it and using it as evidence of the unlikeliness of God's existence.
Diffidus:
I would have replied to this earlier but I have been on holiday.
From your first answer, you are more compassionate than God.
From the list of rationalisations, I agree with your final conclusion - that you 'don't really know His reasons.'
I am not trying to use this argument to say that God does not exist or, in fact, anything at all about the probability of God's existence.
Here is my view (based upon the Aberfan incident): If God existed( and this is a big if) then
Maybe
God does not involve Himself in Human affairs - He has created a universe and then lets it run its course. But this impersonal God seems seems to be malevolent since, if He is omnipotent, He should have saved the children of Aberfan. This, also, does not answer the age old question that Epicurus posed. But there is an answer to the problem of evil; an answer to Epicurus' riddle:
If God exists he is not omnipotent. This possibility is given by Epicurus but it is usually passed over since, by definition, God is supposed to be omnipotent.But what if He has all the attributes necessary to create a certain type of universe but that for every positive creation there infiltrates strong evil forces. God would be continually in battle against these forces of evil but sometimes He loses, because he is powerful but not omnipotent - this would explain Aberfan.
June 25, 2011 at 12:35 pm (This post was last modified: June 25, 2011 at 12:38 pm by Darth.)
Problem of evil exists when you have omnipotence (and thus omniscience) as well as omnibenevolence. Take one of those away and the problem no longer exists. But is that really how you want your god to be? Still, best to take off the omnipotence before you take away the omnibenevolence I suppose.
Then you claim God is immoral because he doesn't allow us to face the consequences of our actions. The scenario you posed as God being powerful but losing to "evil" sometimes would theoretically be possible. I don't think it is the God I understand and know, but it's possible. Here's my response to your P.O.E..
People knew it was just a matter of time before something bad happened. People still refused to leave there, thus denial of the risk.
People knew that putting a school that close to the mine could invite disaster. Failure to create safety even though similar things have happened.
Land near a mine is cheap for a reason and I'm sure it was easier to build a school there. Cutting corners and greed are not good ethical practice.
Above are just 3 ways that they denied what was morally and ethically right (even from an outsider). Denial of what is right is rejection of the laws God places on each of our hearts.
Therefore denial of what is right is a denial of God adn the Holy Spirit. That saperates you from God. Rejecting God's love does not make him less all loving, it just keeps you out of his good graces. I would say if any supernatural entity had a say in what went on here (I would say none) it was Satan. Satan is the moral opposite of God, yet you still blame God for allowing this to happen?
The victims didn't. I've shown where they've rejected commone sense, societal rightness and by default God's plan.
Let me ask you something . If I tell my kids to not run with scissors. They run with scissors and get hurt am I to blame? Perhaps for not watching over them closely enough, but certainly not the majority. Now what if my kids have grown up and are 20 and the do the same thing? I don't think anyone would put any blame on me for that. I don't think people who have heard the message of God as many times as people in today's society have, can be considered children with little knowledge and understanding to be watched and coddled over.
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari