^ Which was exactly my point.
I believe that if a benevolent God existed, we wouldn't. That's because we don't deserve to live, as a species.




























Nicholas wrote:@Regulus and Woeler:
The thing is, in God's eyes none of us are non-evil because we all have done something evil at least once in our lives. I'm pretty sure all of us ever thought something like: ''damn, I wish that idiot would get killed'' about someone we hate or don't like. This already makes you a murderer in your heart, even though you actually haven't committed the crime. If God were to whipe away all evil, then all of us would cease to exist besides only people like Hitler and Bin Laden. Because all of us have sinned and we all deserve to be punished. None but God is sinless.














That comparison is rubbish and you know it. Comparing real crime with thought-crime is ridiculous. You keep escaping the fact that someone who can prevent evil, but isn't willing to prevent it is in fact evil. There is no logical way of getting around that, and there is certainly no scripture supporting anything beyond this.
Also None but God is sinless. Yet he created us in his own image. That seems to contradict itself.
And don't tell me 'we were once different'. We weren't. The bible says the Earth is 4000 years old and we have enough evidence showing that at that time there was murder, war and violence.
And a question that bugs me. How do YOU know the way 'a God' views things? This stuff is in no holy book. These are just wild claims to escape the sharp teeth of logic and human reasoning. I'm not ashamed to say that I am arrogant, but to say that I know what 'the creator' of the universe thinks and wants are levels of arrogance that even I haven't touched.














If you truly want a person to die, then the only diffrence between an actual murder is that you don't commit the murder yourself.
To us thoughts and deeds may not be such a big deal, I admit that. But to God it would be, if we assume he exists, since God would not only judge all of our deeds in life, but also the person we are in our hearts.
And like I said, if God was stopping all evil right now, every single person on earth would die. God doesn't count our sins, because a sin is a sin. He wouldn't be a fair ''god'' if he only punished Hitler for example and not us. I admit, even I look down at Hitler like you do. But to God we are not much diffrent from Hitler, because God cannot allow any sin to go unpunished, That's why he choose willingly and selflessly to sacrifice himself on the cross for our sins. (A story you shouldn't be unfamilar with after having (possibly) debated with many others of my kind.) God is merely watching humanity reaping what it has sown. Because by rebelling to God, we are responsible for all the evil that we do to ourselves.
Mankind was created sinless. Only after sin came into the world, it was that only God remained sinless. Also, the supposed fact that we are created in the image of God doesn't mean that we are literally 100% like God himself but rather in terms that we, like him, are eternal because we have an eternal soul that does not die.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought our debate was about God's personality and nature (for if he WOULD exist) rather then physical evidence for his existance? It's fine by me if you don't believe in the bible, but I as a Christian do.
See my previous statement. I am in no way escaping the ''sharp teeth of logic and human reasoning'' because I truly believe that God exists and that the bible is his word. Be free to call me names for that though, but that's my personal view. While I appreciate science in many ways, I simply do not think that science has all the answers, nor will I just simply take everything what National Geographic or Discovery Channel shoves down my throat, as a fact.




























That's why it's not murder.
So it's kinda like a celestial North-Korea.
Different version of the same argument.
Observation: There is evil in this world
It still means one of three things:
1 God is evil. He likes evil.
2 God doesn't prevent evil.
3 God can't prevent evil.
Conclusions
1 God is not all loving.
2 God doesn't give a damn about any of us.
3 God seems to be no God after all.
Even if we take your free will theory in mind we can still conclude that God is evil. God is all-knowing and therefore should have known that by giving the human race free will it would turn out to be disastrous.
To allow evil is to be evil. There is no way around it. One does not allow killing because one loves another.
If God was a perfect being he would have created a world untouchable by sin, which he didn't.
''Science doesn't have all the answers, therefore it must be God'' isn't reasoning. That is nonsense. I find it amusing that you don't 'just simply take' what discovery or ngc say, but you do 'just simply take' what a 2000 year old mistranslated third degree eyewitness account says.
The belief that Hitler is no less of a person than any of us is the most absurd thing I've heard all day. After all, it was such beliefs, at the time, which allowed him to do what he did.














No, but the person already committed murder in his/her heart. It are thoughts that lead into sin, therefore, the Christian God takes thoughts serious. I'll give another example. If a married husband looks at an unknown girl/woman with lust, then he already committed adultery in his heart too. That's the way how God would see it.
I don't know where you got that idea from, but I'm not getting into that because the diffrence to me is too obvious. God gives us freedom of choice to either follow him or oppose him. In North Korea it's either you follow the president or you've earned a one-way ticket to camp 22.
I see you're still holding on to the view that If a ''God'' exists, he would be evil and would be the creator of evil. It just wouldn't work that way. It is true that God is the creator of everything. However, evil itself is not even a ''thing'' like a rock, or water. You cannot have a jar of evil, because technically evil doesn't even exist. When a bad relationship exists between something good and something that opposes goodness, we call that good and evil, and it does not even require a God to create it. God only created goodness. Everything which opposes good, is what we came to know as ''evil''.
If a world untouchable by sin would exist, then that means we wouldn't be having a free will and we would all be robots programmed to do everything God wants.
I do take alot what National Geographic and Discovery says, but not just the whole evolution and creation related things. To me it personally makes more sense that a God created the universe and everything else, rather then everything else appearing out of nothing. But then again, it's all just faith. If everything in the bible seems too hard to believe to you, well then there's nothing I can say about it. I personally believe that I have came to know God by reading the bible, as I feel that the biblical depiction about God bears the most truth then any other religion.














Who said this and what source should I take this from besides you? And that's besides the fact that thoughtcrime is a victimless crime, just like blasphemy or sin
In God's world it's either you follow him or you go to hell. There is no difference and you've just proven that even more.
I can't have a jar of God either. I have now disproven the existence of God with your own faulty logic
Besides, God is all-knowing and should have known evil was coming, which still makes it evil. He's either the creator of everything including evil. It's not like evil suddenly falls aside from the universe, or he doesn't exist and there are other more valid theories.
Which would be morally ideal both for him and for us.
Sure, I'd trust the 2000 year old books written by racist, sexist, homophobic, violent, sexually frustrated men over empirical evidence and expert's visions any day. After all, that's way easier than actually taking the initiative to find out how stuff works.














Regulus wrote:^ Which was exactly my point.
I believe that if a benevolent God existed, we wouldn't. That's because we don't deserve to live, as a species.















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