I find generic attacks inaccurate caricatures, treating religion as this monolithic belief system, as if they are all the same. Some religions largely reject the literalism you find so repugnant, denying the literal eternal damnation you attack.
That is, if your atheism is the result of the evil you find in the God you describe in the OP, you might be better served to find a more suitable religion for you. It's not as if religion must rely upon the sort of God you describe. — Hanover
The point is that people can easily interpret this or that verse, in this or that way. But there are plenty of verses in the Bible that indicate, at the very least, there is separation from God for the unbeliever. I spent years studying the Bible, and memorizing large portions of the Bible, but I'd be hard put to recall much of it. There are a lot of references to hell in the Bible, and those references go to the unbeliever. — Sam26
I mean have you read the OT? God commanded the Israelites to go into villages and slay every man, women, child, and animal, what does that say about this concept of God? All it tells me is that the concept is flawed, and the concept probably has no instance in reality. If there is a God, he probably is nothing like any religious idea of God. — Sam26
No doubt about it. The Old Testament supports slavery, genocide and rape and depicts a monstrous and evil creature who insists on being worshipped. This is not a creature that deserves anything but scorn. — Tom Storm
but to think the Bible is some divinely inspired book just seems a bit out there. — Sam26
I'm going back to Wittgenstein. I'm not getting into arguments over this or that translation, or whether the Greek or Hebrew says this or that. What I know for sure, is that regardless of whether this or that person is stupid or ignorant, that's what they believe, and that's the point. — Sam26
Further, I have invited you to read something with more care and attention that perhaps you're accustomed to and to do even a little on-line looking about a claim you made. And you're not interested. Where I come from, such dismissive non-interest disqualifies you from conversation. Not least because you have fired off all of your ammunition. "It means what I say it means!" And were that the case, what need the rest of us for any other authority, or even opinion. — tim wood
Lewis refers to "orthodox story" without troubling to make clear what that story is, where he gets it, or what its authority is — tim wood
But I challenge it. — tim wood
Further, I have invited you to read something with more care and attention that perhaps you're accustomed to... — tim wood
This is a punishment out of all proportion with the offence. — Banno
Christians hold that the person who inflicts this unjust punishment - God - is worthy of worship. — Banno
This is a punishment out of all proportion with the offence.
— Banno
Is it now? — Agent Smith
Well, yes. No finite offence, or conjunction of such offences, could possibly merit infinite punishment. — Banno
The offense & the punishment, if geometrized into a rectangle, the sides are not in the golden ratio (proportio divina). It looks ugly, can't be God's work. God has to be bluffin'. — Agent Smith
When someone believes s/he has the final solution (vide late Christopher Hitchens) to all our problems, rejecting it would be utter folly or, worse, siding with the devil, no? What would be an appropriate punishment for such wilful stupidity or evil? — Agent Smith
You don't actually know that. You have simply ruled out the possibility of God being what would usually be called "evil". — baker
if we subscribe to the Theory of Evolution, we must subscribe to Social Darwinism.
— baker
Why? Looks plain wrong to me. "Survival of the fittest" is not what evolution is about. — Banno
So the question is, what are we to make of their judgment? They choose to believe, not in the light of the evidence, but in the face of the evidence. They admire the worst conceivable torturer.
Such folk are ripe for manipulation. — Banno
Leaving that aside, is your point that good catholics, the pope included, do not actually believe the doctrine they espouse? That would indeed be a good thing. Would that they did not then feel obligated to pretend that they do, when dealing with events in the world. — Banno
Beliefs, in and of themselves, do not cause harm. So their beliefs are irrelevant.
— Pinprick
Indeed, with this i will pretty much agree. — Banno
Finally, all versions of god are interpretations. — Tom Storm
I find generic attacks inaccurate caricatures, treating religion as this monolithic belief system, as if they are all the same. — Hanover
I don't think one should judge a person based solely on one contemptible view that they have about a certain subject, since they may have other redeemable views or qualities. — Amalac
Those who do not believe in god, when they die, will be cast into eternal torment.
Christians hold that the person who inflicts this unjust punishment - God - is worthy of worship.
— Banno
I'm not sure Christians say or believe any of this. Cite? (Lots of people who call themselves Christians do say this, but they're not Christians.) — tim wood
No question that some - many - believe it, and many of those call themselves Christian. But I challenge it. Nor am I a defender of any faith, but I like accuracy and clarity. — tim wood
The only way you could know that "all versions of god are interpretations" is if you were god, and could this discern what is merely an interpretation and what is actually the truth. — baker
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