mgb wrote:
DivineInsight wrote:The theology is extremely self-contradictory.
You are making the mistake of thinking I accept Christian theology in its totality. Not so. I accept the core teachings and even at that, I don't interpret them as you do.
I have no problem with this. If you literally reject the Bible then as far as I'm concerned you aren't talking about the Biblical God anyway. And even your "Jesus" would be nothing more than your own personal fabrication of what you would like for Jesus to be.
This is, in fact, what almost all Christians do. They create their own personal Jesus and think that this qualifies as "
Christianity". And most of them aren't even interested in what Yahweh might have done in the OT. They'll either deny it by claiming that they can "twist" what the Bible literally says into something entirely different by pretending that they have
reinterpreted it to mean something completely opposite to what it actually says.
At this point we aren't even talking about the same things when we talk about "Christianity" because I'm talking about what the Bible has to say about it, and you are talking about what you wish it would have said instead.
So we aren't even talking about the same thing.
I've known this from the very beginning.
mgb wrote:
But obviously it doesn't. Have you forgotten that in this theology mankind's character has constantly fallen into a state of total evil?
Not all humanity is evil. I would not say it is 'total'. The story of the flood is not part of my theology - it is too far back in history and how it arose is not at all clear. But, like I said, the bible is not a religion - I'm not a fundamentalist.
Fine. As far as I'm concerned you've just renounced the Bible as being a
dependable source of any description of "
God". Therefore what you are talking about is NOT the Biblical God.
Instead you have invented your own idea of what you would like for God to be like.
That's fine. But calling that "Christianity" is quite misleading, IMHO.
As far as I'm concerned you've already rejected Christianity and have instead invented your own theology of what you would like to believe.
You're certainly not alone in that. This is probably what 99% of "Christians" actually do.
mgb wrote:
In Christianity no human is even permitted have successfully built any respectable character that has any merit. In Christianity all humans are permitted to do is come to Jesus and confess that they have no character worthy of salvation on its own merit and beg Jesus to give them undeserved amnesty via the mercy of Grace.
So this theology makes absolutely no claim that this world was designed to "Build Character". According to this theology building character is something that no human can ever achieve. It's taboo to even suggest that a mortal man has built sufficient character to merit his own salvation.
The gospels make it very clear that 'accepting Jesus' is not sufficient. Many Christians today believe that all they have to do is accept Jesus and they are saved. Jesus said 'It is not those who cry 'Lord, Lord' but those that do the will of my Father.' There are many statements in the gospels that make it clear that only a virtuous life pleases God. Salvation is not automatic.
I totally agree with you.

However, Paul clearly did not. In fact, Paul makes a very clear decree that no one can merit their own salvation lest they will be able to boast. He demands that it's a free gift of grace.
If you could earn your own salvation there would be no need for Jesus to have been crucified on your behalf.
mgb wrote:
a jealous God who condemns people to hell if they refuse to believe in him and worship the religion that lays claim to owning him.
I don't believe God 'condems' anyone. They are self condemned by the weight of evil they have done. But even at that, Origen says they can still be redeemed.
You seem to be forgetting that Christianity has nothing at all to do with committing evil. Christianity is all about recognizing this specific God. The first of the Ten Commandments is "Thou shalt have no other Gods before me". What in the world would that have to do with evil? Absolutely nothing.
John 3-16-18 basically says that if you don't believe Christ is the Son of God you are condemned already.
What would not believing that Christ is the Son of God have to do with evil? Absolutely nothing.
Christianity tossed evil out a long time ago. It's all about professing Christ to be the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. It's a man-made religion that demands that if you don't worship this religion you'll be condemned.
No decent God would ever create a religion like that.
mgb wrote:
Yes, a random element is required. But that's nowhere near the same as the process of evolution being an entirely random process.
The foundation of the theory is random mutations. Dawkin's apologies for this are mere sophistry. Natural Selection must wait until random events come up with the goodies, otherwise nothing happens.
So? That still doesn't mean that the process is random. When a random mutation provides something useful it is because of the usefulness of that mutation that the organism survives better to reproduce. So it's not randomness that's "driving" the process. Randomness merely allows the process to move forward.
mgb wrote:
Every human must fail in God's eyes and the only way to obtain eternal life in his heaven is by asking for undeserved amnesty, NOT by demonstrating character
That is not what the gospels say. They say we must carry our cross and enter the 'narrow gate'. A Christian life must demonstrate virtue. Anyone who says otherwise is not reading the gospel attentively.
Then apparently Paul didn't read the gospel attentively.
Do we toss Paul out on his ear then?
We've already tossed out the Great Flood and much of the OT. Now we need to toss out Paul. We're not going to have much left by the time we're done.
Not only this but your idea is that people do indeed need to EARN their salvation by merit of their own virtue.
Again, the moment you have people earning their own salvation you no longer need Jesus to be their penal substitute and offer them salvation through grace.
So you're changing the original ideas of this religion quite dramatically.
mgb wrote:
And what will heaven be like? Will there be suffering and evil in heaven? If not, then clearly worlds can exist that do not contain suffering and evil. Thus proving that suffering and evil are not required to have a meaningful existence.
Maybe they are not but they exist and the fact that evil exists underlines the folly of people's greed and wickedness. Evil exists and God uses it to warn humanity of where further rebellion leads.
But see here you are remaining in the camp that "
God must exist".
In other words, you are saying, "
Look there is evil in the world, therefore it must somehow be useful to God". But that doesn't follow. It could simply be that there is no such thing as a God. Then the so-called "
evil" in the world is really nothing more than the natural way things are and "
evil" is nothing other that those things that humans disapprove of.
No God required.
Instead you look at things we disapprove of and say, "
Hey they must be useful to God or they wouldn't exist". You're putting the cart before the horse.
mgb wrote:
If the purpose is to live in a heavenly paradise that could have been achieved straight-away.
Maybe, but creation is and must be free. Freedom is part of perfection. Creation needs to learn how to be.
But know we're back to a very circular Christian apology.
Free Will is the culprit for evil.
It is because we have free will that we can make evil choices.
So this is the apology for why evil exists in the first place.
But now you are claiming that Freedom is part of perfection.
Therefore Free Will cannot be the cause of evil.
So this doesn't work.
Not only this, but if this were the Biblical Story when didn't Jesus simply make this clear. And why would we need Jesus to be our sacrificial penal substitute.
Not only this but Paul would then be 100% wrong.
If learning how to properly use free will is the only way to be granted entrance into heaven then everyone who goes to heaven could boast that they go there because they had personally learned how to responsibly control free will.
None of these things are permitted in Christianity. This is simply not part of Christian theology. There is nothing in Christianity that says that it's about a God who is expecting humans to learn how to responsibly use free will.
That's simply not what this theology is about.
mgb wrote:
In fact, according to Christian theology and words attributed to Jesus himself, the vast majority of humans will be condemned and only few will make it into the Kingdom of Heaven.
Those who are saved can rescue others from evil.
Just think how ridiculous that is. This would mean that God basically playing a crap shoot with human souls. In fact, in this scenario you can't even depend on Jesus to save you because you'd need to allow for another moral human to save you.
Talk about boasting in heaven! Paul would roll over in his grave.
Now you not only have people being able to boast that they saved themselves due to their own virtue, but now you are giving them the ability to be able to boast that they have saved other humans that GOD HIMSELF would have otherwise condemned.
You'd have mere humans saving people that God would have otherwise condemned had it not been for the intervention of a human evangelism, or whatever.
In fact, this is why the very concept of evangelism is itself absurd.
mgb wrote:
The only way to obtain salvation in Christianity is to confess that you cannot win the fight against evil.
Not without God's grace. Creation helps itself to escape from evil. God provides the means of escape.
But you seem to be forgetting that it was this God himself who put these humans into this impossible predicament. He would then owe each and every one of them grace, automatically without demanding that they beg for it. In fact, making them beg for it would be an act of evil itself.
mgb wrote:
You're stuck with a Hitler that was DESIGNED by God. So whatever Hitler turned out to be can only be God's fault.
He wasn't designed to be evil. He became evil because he was free to do so and ignored God's teachings.
He didn't ignore God's teachings. God commanded men to kill heathens. Jesus declared that not on jot or on tittle shall pass from law. So God's commandment to kill heathens has been endorsed by Jesus. Anyone who refuses to acknowledge God and rejects God's Son is a heathen. Therefore God teaches us to kill the Jews.
Do you think this is "twisted"? Perhaps so. However, the fact is that it can all be backed up by scripture. Every single part of it.
So Hitler could indeed believe that he was actually doing the will of God and following God's teachings. The Jews were heathens who rejected Christ. According to the Christian Gospels the Jews were even guilty of crucifying Christ.
You are aware that the Gospels do not claim that the Romans crucified Christ. The Gospels clearly have Pontius Pliate exonerating Jesus and finding no fault in him. Pilate washed his hands of the whole affair and handed it over to the Jewish Chief Priests who saw to the crucifixion of Jesus.
So Hitler had every scriptural reason to see the Jews as heathens who had rejected God, and therefore must be killed by God's own commandment.
For all we know Hitler may have been one of God's most obedient servants.
mgb wrote:
If evil can only exist in a physical world, and a non-material existence is perfect, then what would be the point in creating a physical world in the first place?
There would be not point to it at all.
Also, where would Satan have come from in this apologetic view?
I'm not saying evil can only exist in physical terms. I am saying that perfection cannot be physically manifest. Satan is spiritual evil.
But you were attempting to use the physical world as an explanation for why evil exists. But now you are backtracking and suggesting that evil can exist in a non-material spiritual world as well.
If that's the case, then again, "Why bother with a physical world at all?"
Clearly if Satan, as a purely non-material spiritual being, could become "
evil" then everything required to test whether people might become evil would have already existed in the non-material spiritual world.
No need to create a physical world at all.
That was the whole point.