And when you get to the pearly gates and Peter himself asks your warrant for presenting yourself, are you going to say that you're there because Joe the whackdoodle sent you? — tim wood
Believers do not experience a different world. — Banno
I genuinely don't know what the right thing to say here is. — Srap Tasmaner
Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm under the impression there's "something it's like" to have faith, something not describable as holding certain opinions but something that saturates your experience. — Srap Tasmaner
Something like a conceptual scheme? — fdrake
an excuse to forgive those who consider hell appropriate — Banno
Belief in hell has implications in terms of explaining the behaviour of the believer. Perhaps there is some potential to understand the cruel behaviour of so many who call themselves christian in understanding the cruelty inherent in their belief. How much of their behaviour can be explained as resulting from fear of damnation? — Banno
The "something it's like to have faith" goes the way of the "something it is like to be a bat", joining the beetle in the box on the sideline. — Banno
What we can put into words trumps what we can't. — Banno
but Lewis doesn’t, does he? — Srap Tasmaner
Well, I would hope not to be alone in being unimpressed by the items listed....Christian behavior you disapprove of. — Srap Tasmaner
“I’ve frequently said I’m glad I’m not God,” Tutu continued. “But I’m also glad God is God. He can watch us speak, spread hatred, in His name. Apartheid was for a long time justified by the church. We do the same when we say all those awful things we say about gays and lesbians. We speak on behalf of a God of love. The God that I worship is an omnipotent God. He is also incredibly, totally impotent. The God that I worship is almighty, and also incredibly weak.
“He can sit there and watch me make a wrong choice,” Tutu continued. “But the glory of God is actually mind-blowing. He can sit and not intervene because He has such an incredible, incredible reverence for my autonomy. He is prepared to let me go to hell. Freely. Rather than compel me to go to heaven. He weeps when He sees us do the things that we do to one another. But He does not send lightning bolts to destroy the ungodly. And that is fantastic. God says, ‘I can’t force you. I beg you, please for your own sake, make the right choice. I beg you.’ ”
My suspicion, voiced above, is that hell is unjust, and further that belief in hell may sometimes lead to cruelty here on earth. — Banno
It's the supposed common "something it is like..." to which this argument applies, not the faith. — Banno
The "something it's like to have faith" goes the way of the "something it is like to be a bat", joining the beetle in the box on the sideline. — Banno
Articles of faith don't hook up to whatever proposition-handling machinery you might imagine being handy elsewhere. (Gathering evidence, testing, refining, etc.) — Srap Tasmaner
Believers do not experience a different world. — Banno
Is faith exactly a matter of your opinions on certain questions (the reality of God, hell, and so on)? Is it just some propositions you assent to? — Srap Tasmaner
Believers understand the world differently.
— EnPassant
So do bats, I'm told.
How can you tell? — Banno
Is faith exactly a matter of your opinions on certain questions (the reality of God, hell, and so on)? Is it just some propositions you assent to? — Srap Tasmaner
It is obvious to the point of tedium that christians will not be dissuaded from their belief by the arguments here. They are not the audience, either for Lewis' article or for this thread. That Srap supposes otherwise is just plain odd. It seems to be little more than a veiled ad hom directed at Lewis and myself. — Banno
Non-believers have been able to excuse their religious friends on the grounds that they are probably not clear-heading about the commitments of their worship. We can think of them as good people who have not see the perpetrator's dark side. In bringing the problem of divine evil to their attention, I am presenting them with a choice they have preciously avoided. Ironically, I may be making it impossible for myself to admire many whom I have previously liked and respected. — Lewis at 242
I think it'd be a hard argument to make that any Christian could talk about their faith without assenting to a proposition as an integral part of that discussion. — Isaac
And you can say something similar elsewhere, but with similar issues. If I perform an act of kindness for a stranger, I don’t experience that as following the example of Jesus, for instance. I don’t know, not having experienced the alternative, but I suspect it isn’t. Categorization would be retroactive, right?*** But we’re talking about me comporting myself as someone who believes himself to be within the sight of God. That’s not just a matter of how I categorize myself or my behavior, is it? — Srap Tasmaner
You could say that this is a matter of categorization, but is that all it is?
Worldviews - I dislike the term - are not incommensurable, one with the other. We must be able to understand at least part of other views, in order to be able to recognise them as worldviews. — Banno
Are you doubting that it is a propositional attitude - that it is faith in something...? — Banno
"Tis a busy day, and you both deserve longer replies. But in the interim, it strikes me that you share in the view that christianity ought be judged only (or mainly) from a christian perspective; that seems to be what is implicit in the admonition to understand christianity before commenting. — Banno
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