• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      You could replace “God” with “Parents” to the same effect.

      But arguing that a parent is evil because they see a child committing an error, know it is an error, and decline to intercede doesn’t rationally follow. If you helicopter over your kids and intercede every time they make mistakes, they never develop into independent and mature adults. You also induce a lot of anxiety, as you’re constantly interposing yourself between the child’s desires and actions without the ability to convey the wisdom of your decisions. So the kid sees you as the harmful force, rather than the thing you’re seeking to avert.

      So what’s a Parent/God to do? Do you puppet your child, never letting them stray farther than the length of a string? Do you lock your child in a padded ceil and hand-feed them every day? Do you hardwire their programming, so they can’t deviate from your design, acting exclusively on a divine instinct?

      Is that really what we consider “Goodness”?

      There is also the Calculation Problem to consider. A God-like intelligence might be able to observe far more than a human without being perfectly omniscient. Similarly, they might be able to calculate probabilities more quickly and accurately without being perfectly prescient. If a Parent/God knows most of the things but is not omniscient, does that mean they are unworthy of your attention or the reception of wisdom? At the same time, is it the duty of a Parent/God to restrict the actions of the others in their domain to the things they can calculate in advance? This brings us back to the idea of the Child Prisoner or Brainwashed Child. You’re safe at the expense of any kind of growth or personal liberty. God treats you like a farmer treats a veal calf - perfectly unspoiled through inaction.

      And finally, there is the problem of Entropy. A God who can foresee everything and recognizes that Evil is inevitable. Is such a God responsible for this Evil simply because it can perceive it? Is such a God responsible for this Evil simply because it cannot prevent it? Is this flaw in God’s power a reason to reject it as a source of virtue?

      Consider Odin hanging from Yggdrasil, his eye plucked out in pursuit of a way to prevent Ragnorak. He is not all-powerful. He is not-all knowing. He is routinely makes mistakes and even acts out of anger, lust, or petty vengeance. He is fundamentally flawed as dieties come. And yet his primary goal and function - to prevent the end of the world - seems noble enough to justifiably cultivate a religious following.

      • bufalo1973@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Parents aren’t all powerful. But the Abrahamic god is (according to their faith) all powerful. So it could stop any war, any disease, any pain, … but does not. Either it’s not all powerful or not good. Choose. Or, as I think, doesn’t exist.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Parents aren’t all powerful.

          From the perspective of a newborn, they might as well be. Everything you need to be happy, healthy, and comfortable is actively managed by the parent. You don’t understand anything about your condition or your history or your source of care. All you know is the id-based impulses to complain when you don’t feel good and the soothing release of your feeding, playing, and sleeping cycles.

          So it could stop any war, any disease, any pain, … but does not.

          What would that look like, from a practical perspective? Imagine trying to explain to a baby that you’re going to stick a needle into its skin in order to prevent it from suffering a disease, when it has no conception of disease. All you know is the pain of the needle. Must you conclude, from that pain, that your nurse is fundamentally evil for inflicting this upon you? And that, by extension, your parents are evil for bringing you to this nurse?

          “If parents were truly worthy of my attention, they would have found a better method of vaccinating me than this needle!” is the sort of thing you get to say as a child, precisely because you do not understand the underlying nature of the world you live in. All you know is the scolding language of a parent cajoling you into this immediate superficial pain.

          Should humankind be incapable of performing wars? What does that look like? Should humankind be incapable of contracting disease? What does that look like? Should humankind be incapable of experiencing pain, even? Is that what you really want? An eternal numbness of being? Is godly perfection just being a particularly resilient tree?

          Either it’s not all powerful or not good.

          One can be both exceptionally powerful and exceptionally good without needing to draw a distinction between the two. One can be beyond comprehension, as well. But the argument that a single person experiencing a single moment of discomfort disproves a benevolent deity seems to throw the proverbial baby out with the bath water.

  • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Yup.

    The teachings of Christianity don’t make any fucking sense. (Unless you’re willing to gaslight yourself for a lifetime.)

  • Doctor_Satan@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If you read the Bible with a purely objective mind and come away thinking God is the good guy in the story, I have some serious questions about your morality and ethics.

  • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    Well, since this is a religious discussion, I’m a Christian. It’s always God.

    Job 1:6-12 very clearly shows God granting permission for Satan to test Job.

    1 Kings 22:19-22 shows the “court in heaven” and God soliciting ideas from spirits for enticing Ahab to attack Ramoth Gilead, where he will die. When a good suggestion is made, God grants permission.

    Exodus 10:1-2 states clearly that God hardened Pharaoh’s heart to not let the slaves go, so that God could display his “signs” (plagues).

    Satan is a liar, and the father of lies.

    Romans 9:19-21 NIV

    One of you will say to me: “Then why does God still blame us? For who is able to resist his will?” But who are you, a human being, to talk back to God? “Shall what is formed say to the one who formed it, ‘Why did you make me like this?’ ” Does not the potter have the right to make out of the same lump of clay some pottery for special purposes and some for common use?

      • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        Hey, at least you’re judging based on the facts of what the Bible says. God is who He is. He’s not campaigning. You disagree with Him, but at least it’s really Him.

        Of course, that puts you in the same position as Job. You want to judge God. You want to put him on trial. You disagree with Him.

        And if you have the opportunity to question Him directly, you’ll say the same thing Job said.

        • FrostBlazer@lemm.ee
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          I would add that not every author is writing unbiased in the Bible. We know now for instance that some books near the end of the Bible attributed to Paul may not have been written by him, but by some of the people under Paul in the early church. So adding parts about women not holding positions of authority within the Church more or less served to cement their own positions and authority for the early-Christians that were formalizing the religion.

            • FrostBlazer@lemm.ee
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              2 months ago

              From my perspective, the Bible should have continued to been written forward, and included pieces of the issues Christians sought to address in their current times. I think an updated one would have spoken of the poorly of the actions taken by the church and followers alike through the ages, and would have followed people trying to do good in hard times.

        • samus12345@lemm.ee
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          2 months ago

          I’m judging a fictional character based on how he’s characterized by the book he appears in. There may be a higher power, but the god of the Bible certainly ain’t it.

          • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            Certainly? You have a better candidate? Baal? Molech? Satan, perhaps?

            You do you; pick a side, deny the battle, anything you choose.

            I’m quite seriously suggesting that the God of the Bible, and specifically the Christian God, is is the most perfect God that could be imagined, and yet wholly unexpected as He is revealed. The God of the Bible soothes no one. He ruffles everyone’s feathers. He is pure perfect and exacting. Yet there is love and mercy there.

            Now, His followers have done a lot to screw up that presentation. But that’s as it always has been. In the Old Testament, in Jesus’s day, and now, the people of God - even those with direct divine revelation - have been misrepresenting Him.

            Joshua 24:15 NIV

            But if serving the Lord seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. [Or the gods of reason, science, and unbelief?] But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”

            • samus12345@lemm.ee
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              2 months ago

              Certainly. Any candidate that doesn’t have a traceable origin as being created by people would be a good start, which all the religions of the world do.

              I’m quite seriously suggesting that the God of the Bible, and specifically the Christian God, is is the most perfect God that could be imagined

              Yes, that’s what people of every religion say about their god. I’m guessing your parents are Christian?

              • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                “Traceable origin…as being created by people.” You’ve set quite a high bar for yourself, but I assume you would consider your traceability as…

                Yes, nominally Christian. Raised in USA, fed cornbread and gospel music, prayin’ at baseball games.

                • samus12345@lemm.ee
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                  2 months ago

                  Here’s an example of traceability. If the god of the bible were real, eternal, unchanging, etc., there would be no historical record of him being just another god in a pantheon until someone decided to make him THE god. This is just one example of many and you can do this with any god in any religion - there’s nothing notably special about Yahwah aside from how popular his worship became.

                  I asked because it’s especially suspicious if you have been raised from birth to believe in a god, even if it wasn’t a main focus. My intention isn’t to dissuade you from believing - I couldn’t do that even if I wanted to - but just to encourage you to see Christianity objectively, looking at its history and how it compares with other religions. If you choose to have faith regardless, that’s fine, and in fact is stronger than if you never questioned it at all. I just always prefer that people make an informed decision on things.

            • Maeve@midwest.social
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              1 month ago

              Certainly? You have a better candidate? Baal? Molech? Satan, perhaps?

              A rose by any other name…

        • Schadrach@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 months ago

          And if you have the opportunity to question Him directly, you’ll say the same thing Job said.

          That would be what, “Why are you so weirdly obsessed with Leviathan?” after Job 41?

          • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Haha, Leviathan was certainly the “big bad” in Job. I don’t know what creature was being referred to (maybe a species of large crocodile?) but yes, he gets a lot of air time.

            No, I meant Job 42:3, “Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.”

            • Schadrach@lemmy.sdf.org
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              1 month ago

              Haha, Leviathan was certainly the “big bad” in Job.

              To quote a work of fiction I particularly enjoyed, during a discussion between the characters on the Book of Job:

              “You know,” said Bill Dodd, “what is Leviathan, anyway? Like a giant whale or something, right? So God is saying we need to be able to make whales submit to us and serve us and dance for us and stuff? Cause, I’ve been to Sea World. We have totally done that.”

              “Leviathan is a giant sea dinosaur thing,” said Zoe Farr. “Like a plesiosaur. Look, it’s in the next chapter. It says he has scales and a strong neck.”

              “And you don’t think if he really existed, we’d Jurassic Park the sucker?” asked Bill Dodd.

              “It also says he breathes fire,” said Eli Foss.

              “So,” proposed Erica, “if we can find a fire-breathing whale with scales and a neck, and we bring it to Sea World, then we win the Bible?”

              https://unsongbook.com/

              • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 month ago

                I read Earthsea, and it is my professional opinion that Leviathan is a dragon. Which we know is, as they say in baseball, a “tough out.”

  • PattyMcB@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    If God were all-powerful, he could create another all-powerful God who could destroy him against his will, thus making him less than all-powerful.

    The mere idea of an all-powerful God contains a ton of paradoxes.

  • FrostBlazer@lemm.ee
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    I don’t think many Christians would actually argue for that first point tbh. It’s not something Biblically portrayed as one of God’s gifts. Free will is portrayed as something that was given conditionally, but taking from the tree of knowledge and specifically eating the fruit of knowledge is known as man’s first sin in the Bible.

    I think it’s a bit of a metaphor for a parent wanting to shield their child from the harshness of reality, but as the sheltered child grows older they often want to know more about the outside world and in doing so become exposed to the cruelty. This was my own experience with religion growing up. A teacher of mine one day sat us down and pleaded the above with our class, as many of us grew to see through the veil of how reality looked.

    In retrospect I think some things about the world make sense to not be told about, depending on one’s age. However, I think other things should never be hidden, have been hidden, or done in other cases.

    Side note: I think the idea of God’s plan is for people to hold love for one another. Lots of people lose sight of what they are called to do and how they are to act though. They’re called to love their neighbor as their self, called to love their enemy, and called to forgive others for their transgressions. I personally think people are called to do good works in conjunction with holding faith, as people are called to act righteously in this life.

    • GoodLuckToFriends@lemmy.today
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      I don’t think many Christians would actually argue for that first point tbh.

      Then truthfully, I don’t think you’ve had this conversation with many christians. Every single one immediately defaults to that point when confronted with the horrors god would be responsible for if god is in control.

      • FrostBlazer@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        I’m not saying that people don’t have free will or that it’s not talked about in the Bible, but free will is not something presented as a gift, yet alone God’s greatest gift to humanity as the meme says.

        From my perspective, once God set the universe in motion he has mostly taken a step back from direct action. I would say life is a test of sorts for us, to see if we can make earth resemble the good of heaven, on a humanity wide scale. But it’s also an individual test for each person’s willingness to use their obtained knowledge to still be good unto others. We are all the children of God, from my own perspective we are learning to become like God, who is the Bible is shown as loving and kind.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        the horrors god would be responsible for if god is in control

        You’re forgetting the counterfactual. Namely, that we live in The Best Of All Possible Worlds and what you describe as horror is actually the nicest things can conceivably get. The standard Christian argument is that, without God, existence would be significantly worse. Also (depending on your flavor of Christianity) the mortal life is a proving ground not a final destination. Life is a trial one experiences before being eligible to enter the Kingdom Of Heaven, where God is fully in control.

        The horrors are a consequence of Free Will mixed with the corruptive influences of evil spirits sent out to tempt mortals to sin. And they are transient, while the Christian Reward is supposed to be eternal. You see this best in the Story of Job, during which he suffers a litany of torments but holds firm to his faith. This faith is ultimately rewarded, not just through the restoration of his material pleasures, but through the promise of an eternal blissful afterlife.

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      Don’t worry, they don’t read the Bible, and especially don’t read the old testament.

      They believe they have god given freedom of action

  • blade_barrier@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    Like, did you meet a person who unironically blames satan for everything bad that’s happening to them?

  • NutWrench@lemmy.ml
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    I’m also sick of hearing people say, “God never gives you more than you can handle.”

    I know people who have been driven batshit insane by what God has given them.

    • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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      He sounds like Elwood from The Blues Brothers. “We’re on a mission from God.”

  • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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    What shits me is Christians (and Jews and Muslims, but it’s mainly Christians who do this) who just handwave away the problem of evil. Like fine, I can accept that some evils might arise as a result of human decisions and free will. Things like wars and genocides are done by people. It’s difficult to swallow even that much with the idea of a god who supposedly knows all, is capable of doing anything, and is “all good”, but fine, maybe free will ultimately supplants all that.

    But what I absolutely cannot accept is any claim that tries to square the idea of a god with the triple-omnis with the fact that natural disasters happen. That children die of cancer. You try telling the parents of a child slowly dying of a painful incurable disease that someone could fix it if they wanted, and they completely know about it, but that they won’t. And then try telling them that person is “all good”. See how they react.

    I find religious people who believe in the three omnis after having given it any amount of serious consideration to be absolutely disgusting and immoral people.

    • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      Any “evil” suffered in current life will be compensated with reward in afterlife.

      The concept tends to fall apart with modern Christianity where everyone just goes to heaven and hell is written out.

      • Maeve@midwest.social
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        1 month ago

        If the kingdom of heaven is within us, where is the kingdom of hell? The tree of life, whether yggdrassil, abramic, or hermetic offers great insight, here.

      • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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        The concept tends to fall apart with modern Christianity where everyone just goes to heaven and hell is written out.

        Huh? From what I can tell Christians are more fixated on hell than ever now. Listen to them talk about gay/trans people, Palestinians, women who get abortions, or literally anyone who isn’t Christian, and it’s clear that they’re really excited about the idea that their god will torture those people for all eternity while they get to watch from heaven. You’ll even get catholics and protestants both thinking they’re the only ones going to heaven and the “wrong” kind of Christian goes to hell because of technicalities like whether you go to confession or not or whether praying to Mary is idolatry. Some outright say that it’s okay to kill gay/trans people, Palestinians, etc, because they’re damned anyway and god doesn’t give a shit about them.

        • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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          2 months ago

          Most we observe in the media either the kumbaya Christians, where Jesus died for everyones sins and everyone goes to heaven. Or the MAGA Christians who believe treating the poor like dirt is owning the libs.

          The question about evil existing is rather easy to answer but all the Christian internal discourse would be more confusing. I don’t have much experience with it but

          technicalities like whether you go to confession or not or whether praying to Mary is idolatry.

          Wouldn’t that directly violate the first commandment?

          • Maeve@midwest.social
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            2 months ago

            Asking someone already in the kingdom is no different than asking someone without the kingdom to intercede on our behalf. Also God has 72 names in our tradition, millions in others.

            • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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              2 months ago

              Also God has 72 names in our tradition, millions in others.

              Mary is not God or part of the trinity right? Jesus ascending into heaven would not mean Mary is in heaven. Which would mean Mary remains dead until judgement day and is not yet in heaven. Unless I am not familiar with something.

              • Maeve@midwest.social
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                You’re not familiar with a lot because churches and politicians occulted this information. It’s in the whole Bible (you can find the Ethiopian Bible in English online but there are mistranslations so you have to go to the Jewish and hermetic kabbalah and other sources to find them. Also I already referred to Psalm 82, wrt God.

      • psud@aussie.zone
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        2 months ago

        That doesn’t work. People with crap lives often can’t meet the standards of goodness that many forms of Christianity need for you to be qualified for heaven

        • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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          If there is no evil how can there be good?

          If the purpose of life is to be a test, how can you test without challenges (evil)?

          The crux of the problem is once again the modernized version of Christianity. Where hell has been written out and Adolf Hitler goes to heaven because “Jesus died for his sins”.

          • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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            2 months ago

            If there is no evil how can there be good?

            Easy. You take the world as it is right now…and then remove the evil things. Evil is a metaphysical concept. We often use analogies of light and dark, but it doesn’t literally work that way.

              • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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                First, you’ll note that I started this conversation by conceding free will and concentrating my discussion of evil on evils that are not performed by humans, but by the planet itself, or by fundamental biology.

                But as for “the concept of life as a test”…why is something supposedly omniscient performing a test? It should already know the result of said test, thus making the test itself irrelevant. That’s what omniscience is.

                • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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                  Evil existing is necessary for a test in good and evil. Whether done by humans or natural causes.

                  Angels were created as perfect servants who obey all commands without free will. Humans were created as the opposite. Those who have free will to perform both good and evil.

                  It should already know the result of said test, thus making the test itself irrelevant. That’s what omniscience is.

                  An all-powerful entity is not bound by paradoxes. If that was the case it would end at the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnipotence_paradox which is even more extreme than the free-will paradox for which some explanations can be thought of.

              • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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                1 month ago

                It’s not about “want” at all. It’s about figuring out what’s true. And what’s true is that the Abrahamic god, as understood by modern Jews, Christians, and Muslims, is very clearly impossible, unless you choose to define “good” as including children dying of cancer.

          • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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            Children dying of cancer is not “good”, and frankly the fact that you seem to think it is is fucking disgusting.

    • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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      Yep years ago I was in a bible study, well on my way to being an agnostic already. They were going over a difficult passage and the conclusion was ‘god works in mysterious ways’. Not that I hadn’t heard that nonsense before but for some reason hearing it in that scenario was the last straw and I never went back.

      • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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        Yeah, the average person gets a pass on this sort of thing because I generally assume they haven’t thought much about it. But it’s particularly galling when biblical scholars do it.

        I saw one biblical scholar whose schtick was debunking things evangelicals believe about the bible. He would happily admit it’s written by a collection of authors over a long period of time, who were doing so not literally but in rhetorical styles popular in their day. Things like that.

        Once, I saw him describe how the early Israelites did not believe in the three omnis. They may not have even believed in a monotheistic god, but it was certainly not omniscient and omnibenevolent. Then he went on to say that despite that—despite the fact that the authors of the religious text and the society that invented this god not believing in three omnis—he nevertheless did believe god was omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent. Wtf?

    • underwire212@lemm.ee
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      I’m not necessarily disagreeing with you here, but thought I’d provide a counter argument.

      A group of children are dying of a horrible, deadly disease that can only be cured with the bark from a specific tree. So we go into the forest and chop this tree down to save the children from an excruciating disease.

      A squirrel had built its entire home in that tree. That tree was everything to the squirrel. Now the squirrel has nothing and will suffer because we chopped down its home.

      How do we explain this to the squirrel? Well, we can’t. No matter how hard we try, we can’t explain why we needed to destroy its home. The squirrel is physically incapable of understanding.

      Playing devils advocate here, perhaps the reason for the need for human suffering is so beyond our understanding and comprehension that we are just physically incapable of understanding. Maybe we’re just squirrels, and human suffering needs to happen for some greater purpose unbeknownst to us.

      • bramkaandorp@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That argument lands you in the “we can’t know which religion is true” category, because if we can’t know the plans of god, we also can’t know which god is real.

        So, while it absolves the believer from having to answer the problem of evil, it simultaneously robs them of any certainty about the truth of their religion.

        But only if they think about it.

        • Maeve@midwest.social
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          At their core they use symbolism to teach the same things. You get to choose. Misunderstanding lessons is allowed. It’s Montessori style school.

      • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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        2 months ago

        IF there was some reason, first of all, God could give us the ability to understand if he wanted to, as he is not supposed to be limited. Second, it would imply someone is getting something from it, God, us, or otherwise, that for some reason, God can’t give in a way that doesn’t involve evil. But again, if he is never limited, that shouldn’t be the case.

        Also, if cancer and other diseases are supposed to exist and kill people for some kind of purpose we don’t understand, why do we have the ability to treat, vaccinate and cure those same diseases? If medicine gets to the point of preventing every ailment, then why does that “oh so important” reason for it existing not matter anymore? It would seem if these things NEED to exist, we shouldn’t be able to prevent them from happening under any circumstances.

        • Maeve@midwest.social
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          1 month ago

          Why? If we just knew, we’d be stepford wives or ai.

          Being created little gods who die like men, our lesson is to solve certain things, at least amelioration of them. But all things die, and are born anew. A mutation that is helpful or harmful today may not have been so yesterday or tomorrow.

          • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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            1 month ago

            If we knew why God made things that are objectively evil from the human perspective, we’d be AI

            I literally have no response to this.

      • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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        2 months ago

        I’m upvoting because I thought this was done good engagement with the premise and you don’t deserve to be downvoted for it.

        But fundamentally, you’ve missed a pretty big step. What if god just…didn’t create a situation where children get diseases that can only be cured with one rare tree?

        Or, more importantly, what about diseases that cannot be cured? What about natural disasters? Yes, some types of natural disasters have gotten more common and worse as a result of human action, but they still happened before climate change, and if anything were more disruptive to people before we had modern building practices.

        We’re talking about a god that is literally capable of anything. It could just wave its hand and delete all disease from existence. It chooses not to.

        • Maeve@midwest.social
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          1 month ago

          Is a hero a hero without a villain?

          I’d wager you’ve been a hero to some people’s telling and not so much, to others’.

          Every relationship is karmic, that is we learn.

    • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      It was Hobbes who said…

      But his Lordship [tells]us that God is wholly here, and wholly there, and wholly every where; because he has no parts. I cannot comprehend nor conceive this. For methinks it implies also that the whole world is also in the whole God, and in every part of God. Nor can I find anything of this in the Scripture. If I could find it there, I could believe it; and if I could find it in the public doctrine of the Church, I could easily abstain from contradicting it.