Hello reconsiderate,
reconsiderate wrote:I do not think it is necessary to believe in God's existence to engage in theological reasoning.
Certainly, all of my point is hypothetical. Assuming that God exists, I am claiming that
if He is omnipotent
then He is no benevolent, and vice versa.
reconsiderate wrote:Satan my have been God's creation, as are humans, but BECAUSE God endowed His replicants with free will, He CHOSE to respect his own causal law of free will and allowed them to go against His will if they so CHOOSE.
Okay, but as I said: "free will" is either
free from causation or not; if it is, then it is determined by the laws and arrangement of the universe; if it is not, then it happens wholly fortuitously, and the agent is not to be held accountable.
reconsiderate wrote:So anyway, if you CHOOSE to attribute all things to God's original causation, then you'd be opposing God's will
Well maybe, or maybe not, but the point is that I'd be quite correct; if God wants me to be wilfully incorrect about some matters then He and I shall have to agree to disagree.
reconsiderate wrote:I suppose I'm accusing your perspective of being evil now, but this is almost amusing to me because this is mainly a philosophical exercise to me; even though there could be some truth in it - that would be up to you to decide.
Haha, I've had worse accusations. Don't feel you need to be careful around my emotions.
reconsiderate wrote:Anyway, you are basically claiming that if God knew everything and he still allowed evil and harm to occur, that would make him evil. Yet, couldn't you also say that if God constantly intervened in the free will of His replicants, that he would be depriving them of the opportunity to achieve good over the possibility of evil?
Yes, but in the same broad stroke He could be eliminating the very evil that we are supposed to be getting rid of. For instance, suppose you had small children of your own (maybe you do, I don't know): would you let them play near fire, in order to give them the opportunity to avoid the danger of their own free will? I rather fancy you would restrict their access, and so would I.
It is also worth noting that a great amount of the potential harm in the world is not caused by sentient beings. God could get rid of volcanoes and disease and asteroids and whatever you like, without interfering with your free will.
Further, as the laws of physics stand, there are all sorts of things we cannot do. We cannot fly, why let us walk? We cannot change our length, why let us change our breadth? Alot of God's decisions about whether to grant or restrict our freedom, seem altogether arbitrary.
reconsiderate wrote:Yet, He may refuse to completely eliminate the power of people to choose for evil because He sees that in itself as evil and He Himself is resisting evil.
If so, then He has made that conscious choice, and is accountable for its consequences, both good and bad.
reconsiderate wrote:Certainly the story of the flood and the rainbow-covenant following it is an example where God is supposed to have acted wrathfully and enlightened himself through His self-observed mistake.
If you don't mind me asking (because my Biblical knowledge is probably not as good as yours): where does it say that God has learnt from these mistakes?
reconsiderate wrote:Maybe the point of this story is to tell people not to obsess over whether someone is perfect or not (including God) and instead to view mistakes as enlightening and wisdom-producing. This may be another part of the reason why God allows suffering to occur.
Perhaps, but note, then, that we have forced another feature of our God hypothesis to be dropped: if God needs to learn from His mistakes, then He is not omniscient.
Lomax
P.S. I just use the royal "He" to keep theists happy, really. But I think it has become misleading with the rise of feminism, since we now use "they" rather than "he" to make a gender-indeterminate reference. It has yet to be established that God is male, or gender-bound at all for that matter.