You also don't know if there is a god to match any given interpretation. — Tom Storm
We certainly have no way readily identifiable method for determining which interpretation is true (if any) so what does it leave us with?
And if we ask, "Who is a true Christian?", we shall be accused of a No True Scotsman fallacy? — baker
We shall simply inquire as to what a Christian is, and under what authority. Being satisfied along those lines, we ask whether the folks in question are Christian by that standard. And not withstanding what anyone says or claims or interprets, they either are, or they are not. — tim wood
I begin to suspect you're crazy. Where does your thinking come from? People say all kinds of things, but saying alone never makes it so, right? Being a Christian - or anything - is not settled merely because a person says he is. If that, then a Christian - or anything else - is whatever anyone says it is, whenever it pleases them to say it. Is that how you understand that world to operate when its operating reasonably well?IOW, set ourselves up as the judges over other people's religious identity. — baker
Really? You can peacefully coexist with someone who believes you should be dead or suffer forever, and you know they believe thusly? — baker
Those who do not believe in god, when they die, will be cast into eternal torment.
— Banno
No they don't. There is indeed a portion of Christian fanatics who might believe this but the main majority don't.
There are even more Christians who believe that God judge people by their acts not just their belief to him. I don't know how you or David Lewis get that.
Except if the thread is about that minority of Christians who believe this thing. If so, fine. — dimosthenis9
So long as they’re “good Christians” they will also love their enemy (me) as themselves and love their neighbor. If they’re consistent with their adherence to Christianity they’ll at most pity me, and perhaps try to convert me. Sure, I can live with that. — Pinprick
There are two different passages between which there is actual discrepancy. — god must be atheist
The punishment for those who don't become Christians -- whatever your definition of it is -- is eternal death. — god must be atheist
And what's so horrible about eternal death? Nothing. It's infinitely better than eternal life. — god must be atheist
is your point that good catholics, the pope included, do not actually believe the doctrine they espouse? — Banno
Demonising religion is as easy as demonising capitalism or communism, and almost as productive. — unenlightened
the dead horse of organized religion — Tzeentch
The interesting variation here is that the argument asks us not to consider the morality of such an evil god, but of those who consider him worthy of praise or worship. — Banno
“An evil god” according to what principles? I’m always interested to know where people acquire their rules of what is good and evil. — laura ann
Not really. It's pretty easy to see where the idea of an evil god comes from. The Old testament reveals a thuggish, vengeful god who supports slavery, genocide, rape and frequently behaves as a mass-murdering Mafia boss. People have been pointing this out for a long time and, as Isaac Asimov and others have pointed out, one of the surest pathways into atheism is reading the Bible. — Tom Storm
I don’t think you understand my questions, Tom. I’m asking how David Lewis determines and defines what is good and what is evil, just or unjust, right and wrong.
(While I am aware of the many different interpretations of the Old Testament, I’m not at all interested in debating them.) — laura ann
Let's take as an illustration two notable christian philosophers, Saint Thomas Aquinas and Saint Augustine: — Amalac
If they would make the claim that Christian doctrine has changed over time, or that these two Church Fathers did not mean what they said, then there is significant further explanation needed. Changes in morality over time are prima facie incompatible with what is right being what god wills. It looks as if what is right changes along with human sentiment, such that what was once considered acceptable no longer is. — Banno
Let's take as an illustration two notable christian philosophers, Saint Thomas Aquinas and Saint Augustine:
— Amalac
Thanks for this. Those who have claimed that belief in hell is not central to Christianity would do well to consider your post.
If they would make the claim that Christian doctrine has changed over time, or that these two Church Fathers did not mean what they said, then there is significant further explanation needed. Changes in morality over time are prima facie incompatible with what is right being what god wills. It looks as if what is right changes along with human sentiment, such that what was once considered acceptable no longer is.
an hour ago — Banno
It is true that people have used the arguments of justification to support terrible acts. — Paine
This thread is unworthy of you. — unenlightened
“An evil god” according to what principles? — laura ann
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