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Author Topic:   How do we know God is "Good"?
Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 36 of 305 (155036)
11-01-2004 5:59 PM
Reply to: Message 34 by grace2u
11-01-2004 10:26 AM


Re: God is good by definition
Grace2u wrote:
Do you agree then that your question of Gods goodness really has no meaning?
Not at all. It is particularly pertinent.
In other words perhaps the question is better phrased like this :
Question: "Does God meet the subjective humanistic standards of goodness?"
Answer: No
Or simplistically:
Question: Is God good?
Answer: No. (answered by athiets and Christian alike)
We all know what we mean by good.
There is no need to clarify and make a special reference to the fact that Christian's are screwing with the definition of yet another word.
What is the point?
Several points really:
1)The Christian God is not good.
This means he is not positive or desirable in nature, Worthy of respect; honorable, Of moral excellence, Benevolent; kind, etc, etc.
Such an entity, if it exists is not worthy of respect, acknowledgement or praise. It embodies the Christian concept of evil.
2) Christians, once again, deliberately mislead others about the nature of their God. They do this by using the word "good" when they don't mean it as it is commonly used and in some cases claiming that their God has desirable qualities, when in reality the Bible and the world evidences a despicable entity.
3) This contradiction is probably not the intention of Christians (because they generally spend a lot of apologetics time trying to establish that God IS good). This theological inconsistency suggests that the Christian God is the fictional product of the human mind or as Ifen articulated that the Christian God is merely an evolving product of what humans think a God should be.
Most Christians would attempt to defend God's goodness. You bailed on this stance because you thought you could find another way out of this pickle. Instead you painted a picture of a flawed, undesirable and arguably non-existent entity.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 34 by grace2u, posted 11-01-2004 10:26 AM grace2u has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 38 by jar, posted 11-01-2004 9:53 PM Gilgamesh has replied
 Message 39 by grace2u, posted 11-01-2004 11:00 PM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 37 of 305 (155041)
11-01-2004 6:05 PM
Reply to: Message 35 by Phat
11-01-2004 11:09 AM


Re: How do we know God is "Good"?
Phatboy wrote:
I am diabetic, so I can't handle much sugar! The angle that I wish to ask is this:
Why are you here? I don't mean here on earth. I mean here in this thread. What is it that compels you to spend the amount of time that you spend typing comments, answering posts, making new posts and hanging out?
1) If it is the social relationships online with the rest of us in here, what is it that makes any of us "good" enough to warrent your time spent with us? Did this charming character that we have come in our evolutionary package? If you say that humans instinctively have social instincts, why is it that school is not enough? Or work? Or church? What is the attraction that this EvC website has?
My point? That humans were created in the image of God and that God draws all people unto Himself...and that the fact that we see goodness in each other can be attributed to our original source.
Do you believe in another origin? Tell us how our goodness evolved.
I know this is response to Lam, so I'll let him consider dealing with it.
But just aside: what the hell are you on about? Do you want to try and formulate a coherent question relevant to this thread, or are you just flying the flag for Christian incoherency?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 35 by Phat, posted 11-01-2004 11:09 AM Phat has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 40 by Phat, posted 11-02-2004 1:08 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 41 of 305 (155279)
11-02-2004 6:43 PM
Reply to: Message 39 by grace2u
11-01-2004 11:00 PM


Re: God is good by definition
I wrote:
"We all know what we mean by good."
Grace2u replied
Are you serious?
Yes.
Defining good, it seems, is not difficult for anyone other than Christians.
Are there people that you have considered good, demonstrate qualities of goodness, do good acts? Maybe your church elders or historical Christian characters? What actions of these individuals demonstrate goodness: kindness, selflessness, generosity, compassion, sincerity, trustworhtiness, etc etc. It isn't difficult. Are you deliberately being obtuse?
He doesn't meet your standard in fact, you standard is woefully superficial and extremely simplistic and oversimplified compared to His standard - which is really what we should all be interested in trying to understand.
"His" standard, as you call it is not relevant. It is a concept that you have made up and labelled "goodness", but it includes a whole plethora of qualities that we would never describe as good in the common use of the word.
The question is not "is God good" - especially when you can't even define good - or provide a response like "we all know what good is".
Now I know you are being obtuse. I have defined this term at least twice above: "Being positive or desirable in nature, Worthy of respect; honorable, Of moral excellence, Benevolent; kind, etc, etc"
Go to http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=good and identify for me where the concept of good is referenced to any God. Does killing innocent children comprise any of the definitions?
Do you know of anyone, who is not in desparate need of being locked up, would consider that act of killing children good?
Do not ask me to define good again.
The question is "Are we good as defined by God".
It is a grave concern that you foundate you definitions of good and morality in your God concept, because it means that anything you believe God tells you to do, whether derived from scripture or divine revelation, must be good. Even if you are told to kill innocent children. Human morality has moved on from this nonsense.
READ THE THREADS ABOUT MORALITY. Catch up Grace2u.
This oversimplified thinking is based on a sin-cursed minds feeble attempt to be divine
As I stated and you keep ignoring, I am only interested in what we human's call good. I have no interest in pondering what some fictional diety might think.
In order to ask whether or not the Christian God is good, you must define good. The problem you have is that it is impossible to define good in such a way that would be binding on God - at least in some way that would matter to the rest of us that is.
Well we have the definition. The problem is that you are blindly accepting your theology, despite that fact that the God it describes is flawed and not worthy of recognition.
Besides just being in awe and fear of this supposed deity's power, and fearing for our mortal souls, what ethical reasons are their to recognise the Christian deity?
So - if you beleive that goodness is relative, dependent upon the current culture at the current time, then why do you even care if some supposed Christian God meets up to this subjective and everchanging humanistic standard of morality?
Then re-write the Bible again, and stop using the word good.
The Christian does not have this problem - for by our definition, God is good and is the standard of all goodness. Nothing is more good than God. We measure all things by His holy standard
And this is why morality derived from Christianity is frightening and has no place in modern society. It also makes those who subscribe to this form of morality potentially very dangerous individuals.
We might shake our fist in rebellion against God, the whole time acknowledging His existence by the very questions we pose(is God good).
I acknowledge the exsitence of your God proposition. The flaws of that proposition and the evidence of the world attests to it's very non-existence.
I would say that most every beleiver has questioned Gods goodness at one point in time.
And justifiably so when everything about the Bible and the world evidences a very non-good God. You then have to fall back to faith, and claims of not knowing the bigger picture, and as I said from the outset, you then have absolutely no basis for knowing anything about your God.
Will he even come through with his promise of eternal life?
He has demonstrated this to us (for us it is abundanent life - not dependent upon our circumstances, a real relationship with our maker(throught Christ), a church or body of believers to help us out and provide fellowship, loving families, true friendships, unselfish brotherly love for non-believers and believers alike - as commanded through scripture, putting others above ourselves
Or, you score lives statistically immaterially different from non-believers and those of contrary faiths, a church that screws you for 10% of your net earnings, demands much of your leisure time and may emotionally screw you or even kill you (a-la Waco or Jonestown), family and friends just like the rest of us (or you may be required to ostracise them for your faith), bigotry towards non-belivers (and women and other sexual orientations) that can lead to wars and a self centred theology to the detriment of the rest of humanity and the planet because you are "God's chosen ones".
None of this stuff is very good.
Furthermore, its things that really can't be described - spiritual truths that are revealed that demonstrate how foolish and lacking the world really is.
And it those "spiritual truths" should reveal that all children must die, God help the rest of us.
We see evil and we see good. We know that the good is from God and that the evil has nothing to do with God.
It has everything to do with an omnipotent and imnipresent God. Heck he even admits to ordering or personally committing this stuff in the OT.
There really are some serious problems with your theology.
Christians simply know God is good. Taste and see.
Yes, but not good as we know it. Your being misleading again, aren't you?
I don't want to taste and see. I don't think I could kill innocent children.
Edited for typos.
This message has been edited by Gilgamesh, 11-02-2004 09:21 PM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 39 by grace2u, posted 11-01-2004 11:00 PM grace2u has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 51 by grace2u, posted 11-04-2004 11:09 PM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 42 of 305 (155306)
11-02-2004 9:34 PM
Reply to: Message 38 by jar
11-01-2004 9:53 PM


Re: God is good and...
Jar wrote:
Terrible in these passages is used in a classic sense, meaning great, good, awesome, horrific, ultimate. It is a concept of amorality, something beyond moral or immoral. It can be good, or bad....
So asking if GOD is good is a limiting question. GOD is good, and I believe I've pointed out some reasons that I believe that to be true.
But GOD is also terrible.
Does GOD also embody evil? Yes.
Hmmm. So how to we judge an entity that is good sometimes, bad others; good and evil?
It's like a emporer that sometimes shows acts of great kindness and compassion, but other times incoherently inflicts great agony and pianful death.
We would certianly fear such a character, but would we call him good?
Here's that definition again: desirable in nature, Worthy of respect; honorable, Of moral excellence, Benevolent; kind etc etc
I don't think "good' encompasses bi-polar personalities. So the best we have got is that God is sometimes good. Which still makes the Christian claim of God being all good misleading and incorrect. And we are only defining him as part good because of his own say so. His actions are very much otherwise.
Is GOD worthy of respect, acknowledgement or praise?
Only out of fear.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 38 by jar, posted 11-01-2004 9:53 PM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 43 by jar, posted 11-02-2004 9:45 PM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 46 of 305 (155338)
11-03-2004 12:16 AM
Reply to: Message 43 by jar
11-02-2004 9:45 PM


Re: GOD is complete.
Hello Jar:
Well,as I've said before, good and evil are arbitrary terms that we assign, usually based on personal opinion as opposed to the actual incident.
True. But we can have a consensus on what is good and evil that reflects the opinions of society/humanity as a whole. Our legal system attempts to do this, of course. Just because they are subject to change and evolution doesn't make them any less valid. In fact such evolution ensures that they reflect what we are learning from the past.
Such terms can be applied to incidents. Here's one:
Would you define as good the killing of young children for acts committed by their ancestors many generations prior? (These children are of no threat or danger to you now or ever).
Before we get too deeply buried in specifics, I need to make sure that you and I are talking about things from at the least, a common language.
Agree. Discussing this topic with you, is very much different than discussing this topic with a Biblical inerrantist.
So let's first deal with the Biblical tales.
As I have said in the past, IMHO we must read the Bible remembering that it was written by men of a given period and contains all of the limits, prejudices, bias and culture of their period. Can we agree with those assumptions or do you want to first address particular instances from the Bible?
I suspect you and I will have nothing to debate.
Do you believe that God killed any children for the acts of thier ancestors as depicted in the Bible (whether through the actions of those weilding swords in his name or through his own action, eg the flood)?
No?
Then, for the sake of debate for you and I, do you believe that your God would condemn any sentient being to an eternity of pain, anguish etc?
Still no?
Then let's have a beer and a yarn about American football.
Edited for typos.
This message has been edited by Gilgamesh, 11-03-2004 12:20 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 43 by jar, posted 11-02-2004 9:45 PM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 47 by jar, posted 11-03-2004 12:33 AM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 48 of 305 (155340)
11-03-2004 12:50 AM
Reply to: Message 47 by jar
11-03-2004 12:33 AM


Re: GOD is complete.
Jar wrote:
So shall we move on to today?
I think I am still going to have trouble finding something that you and I have issue with. Your description of God is not the traditional Christian God of the Bible.
Ok, for the sake of allowing you to articulate your liberal and progressive theology (which I very much would like to hear) how is God's goodness evidenced by my fundamentalist Christian nephew contracting insulin dependent diabetes at the age of ten?
Edited for typos: Again!
This message has been edited by Gilgamesh, 11-03-2004 12:52 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 47 by jar, posted 11-03-2004 12:33 AM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 49 by jar, posted 11-03-2004 9:53 AM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 50 of 305 (155604)
11-03-2004 7:33 PM
Reply to: Message 49 by jar
11-03-2004 9:53 AM


Re: GOD is complete.
Thanks Jar. I enjoyed reading every word that you wrote.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 49 by jar, posted 11-03-2004 9:53 AM jar has seen this message but not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 103 of 305 (157410)
11-08-2004 6:25 PM
Reply to: Message 51 by grace2u
11-04-2004 11:09 PM


Grace2u wrote:
Christianity actually agrees with you in a sense. Reformed theology would argue that you are in rebellion against God and that any definition of good you produce, God will not adhere to - and thereofre to you, God is not good.
I'm not actually rebelling against any deity so much as rejecting your personal theology. All religions have an explaination as to why some individuals chose to reject their particular God. It is an essential part of the religious formula.
This is ultimately what drives the world against God. In its feeble attempts to be God - it denies the reality that He is all things and that everything : sensible morality, rationality, logic and science all depend upon His existance. So in an attempt to make ourselves God, we deny that which is obvious. To the world, Christ - the Wisdom of God, is foolish. What the world fails to see is that it is dependet upon His existance in order to make sense of itself and of the entire human experience
The world is not against the concept of a God . The vast majority of people believe in a God and submit themsleves to their God concept.
In what way are any of us attempting to be God? Are we attempting to be God by bettering ourselves and gaining knowledge? By gaining a better understanding of the universe and the world around us? Because a tiny minority of us reject the intellectuals shackles of faith and dogma? Your just spouting non-sensical Christian mantra, aren't you? This is such a worrisome and daft accusation, and it is often the basis for Christians to rally against the areas we have made most significant progress throughout modern history.
The religious definition of morality is far from sensible, in the emotive realm of religion there is little room for rationality, your theology repeatedly defies logic, and none of your material claims stand up to scientific investigation.
Existence is not reliant on the created thelogy of man. Besides insight into the human condition, religion has provided us with no insights into the natural world. Indeed it held us back until the advent of what you call "our attempts to be God", and it will drag us back down if given a second chance.
"Do I find God personally pleasing or Does the Christian God meet the subjective definition of good that I have produced - even though it might change as my opinions change"
Or perhaps better put,
"Do I like the Christian version of God"
The question is, and remains is God good? That he is not, is settled. That anyone should not desire anything ungood, goes without saying
Just because you don't like God, doesn't mean that He doesn't exist or that He isn't good if He does.
True. Let's just ignore my opinion of your God concept and deal with the fact that you have absolutely no way of knowing of your God is good, have only contrary evidence and this theological dilemma is yet more evidence that your God concept is merely a flawed product of the human mind.
It just means that He doesn't meet up to your humanistic definition of good
We can restate that as the human definition of good.
Thanks for again stating that your God isn't good.
It just means that He doesn't meet up to your humanistic definition of good - something that He clearly states He will never meet up with
Well he could try, just a little. Not a very good role model, is he?
Then, once again, we have absolutely no way of knowing whether he is worthy of trust, worship or respect. You have no basis for your claim that God is good, other than what believe is his say so. If he can't even live up the the moralistics qualities, that ironically you argue he imbued us with, then he is not a concept worthy of our consideration.
You have several options:
1) Try to rewrite the nature history of your religion. Deny God's cupability for the ungood acts of Bible history, the creation of evil, and the ongoing ungood of the world. You'll very much have to limit his powers.
2) Admit the largely ungood character of your God and claim that he should be worshipped on other basis: fear, awe, loud voice, biggest sandals etc.
3) Make up a new, totally non-sensical definition for the word good, so that it encompasses all of the shitty things that the Christian God embodies.
You chose number 3.
His goodness is far greater than any changing and relative defition the greatest humanisitc philosophers could come up with. HE IS THE STANDARD.
And you know this how? How do you evidence your God's goodness?
For example - surely you know that the Christian God is unchanging - as defined by Christianity. Your question would otherwise be this - "does some humanisitic, changing and relative definition of good apply to a God that is unchanging?" How could it be??? God might be good by todays standard but not good by tomorrows standard. Just because He might not be good now, doesn't mean that He isn't good in the universal sense. BUT, your question is not this, it is "Is God good". Clearly you are aknowledging a univerasal/unchanging standard and you are attempting to determine if an unchanging God has met this standard.
The fact that our appraisals of morality and aesthetics evolves in no way undermines the integrity or significance of those concepts. There really is no difference in the concept of religious morality anyway, as history has shown us that it evolves significantly also. Jar articulated how the Christian concept of God has changed throughout the history of the Bible itself. It's integrity is actually undermined by it's inability to evolve quickly enough.
It is a dangerous basis of morality because adherents believer, as you do, that anything God instructs is by definition "good".
For your God to be good, in the universal sense, he must be good by the evolving majority consensus of the the concept of good. I am not acknowledging any other universal basis for the concept of good above that of the evolving majority consensus.
This is far from an alien concept: when our courts come to applying public morality to, for example, pornography, indecent acts, offensive language etc they don't have to apply to your friggin' God for a current definition. They merely appeal to the reasonable standards of the community of that era. These concepts do evolve, but as stated above that doesn't undermine the integrity or significance of those concepts.
Stop playing daft of the defining good question.
This is why your question makes no sense. This is why in order to make sense of your question, you must affirm that which you are clearly trying to disaffirm. - namely if God is good.
Nope. We merely have to refer to the evolving majority consensus of the definition of good.
Just like you, the believer, have to refer to evolving majority when determining your own religious morality.
To ask if God meets some relative standard of good has no meaning. What is the point. Who really cares, especially since God has said that you will not agree with Him.
I don't agree with you, not your fictional deity. I have no issue with him or space monkeys.
There is a point. In an internet forum, over not much more than a week, we have established that your God concept needs not be worshipped for any reason other than fear and awe, loud voice and really big sandals. And this theological absurdity documents another arguement for the non-existence of your God.
For exmaple, you would then have the problem of good "How could an all evil god allow good in the world". Clearly, the good in this world outweighs the bad. GOd has an answer for the bad. He says that the bad is a byproduct of disobedience towards His will and rebellions against His nature. While we might not fully understand all the evil- at least we know that there are some potential answers out there - free will, differences between Gods directed and permissive will, etc.
Clearly the simplest answer is that the God that you describe does not exist and interact with the world. The nature of the world can be well rationalised without attempting to define everything in terms of the actions of an ever present deity.
I dispute the claim that good outweighs the bad in the world. What good offset the death by starvation of thousand of third world children this year? Try not to make something up or state that we do not know the bigger picture.
Free will is contradicted by the Christian concept of pre-determinism. Theological deficiency number 737.
We cannot say that we cannot understand the bigger picture in relation to evil without also admitting we cannot know the bigger picture in relation to good. Go back to post number 1 and 4. Thanks for finally asserting that
Your question ultimately has no meaning because of the fact that your definition of good is not binding on God and because God Himself has stated that you will not agree with Him. He is God and He defines goodness. Of course there are questions at times (such as when the kids were massacred in russia). This however drives me to a deeper understanding of Gods goodness however (we know evil exists, the absence of God) - not further away from Him. Because I know that GOd hates these acts far more than I could ever hope to dispise them. Because of this, I know God is good. To the qeustions, I rely upon His goodness and His understanding. This is not irrational - I do not know everything - nor do you. Many things we are not capable of understanding. This does not mean God is not good however. It only means that He is at times unsearchable and that His ways are not our ways.
This last paragraph is a nasty repeat of the same content. Once again:
- I do not care about the opinion of your fictional deity. Your fictional deity is defined as ungood. That we have established and you have admitted.
- It is you that is stating why I reject your God. Your are repeating your particular religions mantra for this anticpated dilemma.
- Your deity cannot convincingly claim to be good and then act in a very non-good way. Actions speak louder than words.
- When Christians use the word good, they mean something competely different to the standard dictionary meaning. It is extremely deceptive to use the word good in this context. In this context good includes unjustifiable murder of innocent children for the actions of their ancestors. In this context the definition is absurd.
- There are questions at all times. You cannot rationalise evil in the world and the Bible, and in turn you have no basis for rationalising God's goodness. Indeed, you cannot claim any qualities for your God, who may simply be taking the piss.
- Your only basis for claiming that God is good, in the traditional sense is on the basis of a blind appeal to faith. You cannot evidence any goodness.
- Your God is not understandable because he is made up. It is an ineffective and progressively obsolete attempt to explain the events of the natural world and human nature.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 51 by grace2u, posted 11-04-2004 11:09 PM grace2u has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 120 of 305 (157782)
11-09-2004 9:31 PM
Reply to: Message 119 by riVeRraT
11-09-2004 6:22 PM


Getting back on topic...
Here's a great snippit from the OT:
2 Kings
2:23
And he went up from thence unto Bethel: and as he was going up by the way, there came forth little children out of the city, and mocked him, and said unto him, Go up, thou bald head; go up, thou bald head.
2:24
And he turned back, and looked on them, and cursed them in the name of the LORD. And there came forth two she bears out of the wood, and tare forty and two children of them.
The Christian God had two bears tear FORTY-TWO children from limb to limb merely because they were doing what children do: tease and taunt?
I challenge any Christian, without making something up, to explain how slaughtering forty-two children is anything but the act of a psychopath.
Anybody?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 119 by riVeRraT, posted 11-09-2004 6:22 PM riVeRraT has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 121 by mike the wiz, posted 11-09-2004 9:42 PM Gilgamesh has replied
 Message 122 by jar, posted 11-09-2004 9:43 PM Gilgamesh has not replied
 Message 127 by riVeRraT, posted 11-10-2004 7:38 AM Gilgamesh has replied
 Message 129 by riVeRraT, posted 11-10-2004 7:48 AM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 136 of 305 (158209)
11-10-2004 10:19 PM
Reply to: Message 121 by mike the wiz
11-09-2004 9:42 PM


Mike wrote:
Why a christian? You require a Jew - you have argued against the Jewish bible, us CHRISTians follow the law of the spirit of life. Events in the OT are irrelevant to me, any evil I'll simply attribute to man.
If you want to write off the OT, fine by me. Especially if you then just extract out only the good stuff from the NT. You are then on the road to a sensible religion.
Can we now abolish:
- All the OT atrocities and cruelty, including this one where God compels bears to "tare up" 42 children.
- The Genesis creation myth
- Noah's Ark
- Jonah and the Whale
- 10 Commandments
This is the re-writing Christian history option I listed above, and as I said, is fine by me.
But as 1.61803 pointed out you have somewhat of a dilemma with the Trinity concept.
What about Jesus's many references to OT atrocities? Matthew 24:37 has Jesus referring to the flood (you know, that delightful story where the OT God drowned everybody, including an inconceivable number of innocent children) and comparing it to his second coming. Does that mean Jesus (who is the God of the OT anyway: you know the God who tared 42 children with bears) will be personably reasponsible for the killing of innocent children this time round?
Edited for typos
This message has been edited by Gilgamesh, 11-11-2004 12:11 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 121 by mike the wiz, posted 11-09-2004 9:42 PM mike the wiz has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 155 by mike the wiz, posted 11-11-2004 8:53 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 137 of 305 (158210)
11-10-2004 10:21 PM
Reply to: Message 127 by riVeRraT
11-10-2004 7:38 AM


Riverat wrote:
So you think raising your kids to tease others is a good thing?
So you think having bears tare those children is a sensible thing?
You guys have serious difficulties with right and wrong.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 127 by riVeRraT, posted 11-10-2004 7:38 AM riVeRraT has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 147 by riVeRraT, posted 11-11-2004 7:43 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 138 of 305 (158216)
11-10-2004 10:35 PM
Reply to: Message 129 by riVeRraT
11-10-2004 7:48 AM


riverat wrote:
First off, lets clear something up.
I think your a smart person. So if you want to find out what a bible verse means, you can go study it at good source on the net like
BibleGateway.com: A searchable online Bible in over 150 versions and 50 languages.
You want to tell me what I was meant to get out of that link?
The children were not torn limb from limb. They were mauled by the bears.
I'll tell you what I did get from that link (which I do have in my favourites for when Christians play the "Bible version game"), I get:
- tare
- tore
- attacked
- ripping them from limb to limb (by far the least amusing) The Message Translation
- ripped up
- and mauled
So what is your point: that some of them might have lived? This makes it less inconceivably ungood?
It was sign to a nation of unjust people, of what was about to fall on them.
Did they get the message from the slaughter of 42 of their innocent children by wild animals? That was a "good" way of conveying such a message?
Are you saying the passage is merely allegorical and didn't happen? What else didn't happen, even though it is plain on it's reading, in the OT? All of Genesis?
Thank God he sent his son to free us of stuff like that. All we have to do is follow his ways.
So God will never do this stuff again. Great. Is God's morality evolving?
How come your answers generate so many more baffling questions? Isn't it an easier answer that you guys are just making this stuff up?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 129 by riVeRraT, posted 11-10-2004 7:48 AM riVeRraT has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 148 by riVeRraT, posted 11-11-2004 7:53 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 139 of 305 (158217)
11-10-2004 10:39 PM
Reply to: Message 133 by mike the wiz
11-10-2004 3:23 PM


Re: Irrefutable mike strikes
Mike waffled a bit then wrote:
I believe Christ is God's example of how God is. Merciful, gracious, healing illnesses etc.
Please attempt to disassociate your Christ from the actions of the God of the OT. In your answer, discuss the Trinity concept and Jesus's references to OT events.
Ta.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 133 by mike the wiz, posted 11-10-2004 3:23 PM mike the wiz has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 140 by jar, posted 11-10-2004 11:04 PM Gilgamesh has replied
 Message 156 by mike the wiz, posted 11-11-2004 9:13 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 141 of 305 (158239)
11-11-2004 12:08 AM
Reply to: Message 140 by jar
11-10-2004 11:04 PM


Re: Irrefutable mike strikes
Please do me the honour, Jar.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 140 by jar, posted 11-10-2004 11:04 PM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 142 by jar, posted 11-11-2004 12:14 AM Gilgamesh has replied

Gilgamesh
Inactive Member


Message 143 of 305 (158243)
11-11-2004 12:29 AM
Reply to: Message 142 by jar
11-11-2004 12:14 AM


Re: Irrefutable mike strikes
I believe I may be forgetting that Mike is not a fundie; in which case there may actually be much common ground.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 142 by jar, posted 11-11-2004 12:14 AM jar has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 144 by jar, posted 11-11-2004 12:33 AM Gilgamesh has not replied

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