BTS
I still maintain that the burden of proof is on your theistic assertions, but before I get to them....
You miss the point AllTimeJeff. We only know how we would act in a given situation.
I agree. Really. In fact, history shows this to be the only frame of reference, how we humans tend to act in a given situation. What will god do? Before we get there, we must examine history and ask "What has god done?" To date, not one single thing. There is no evidence that he has.
The only evidence that argues for "bible god"'s existence are those that argue for "bible god's" existence. Many assertions, but zero evidence.
As to how the above statement relates to standards of behavior, the very fact that behavioral standards are subjective also means that they do not argue for the rightness of Christian theistic standards. (which I still maintain is Perry's argument, very clearly. It's not about ANY standard, but his fundamentalist Christian POV that he is arguing for)
For example, if two men see a robbery in progress, and they vary among themselves in power, goodness and knowledge, it is reasonable to surmise that they will act differently. Let's assume equal power and goodness between the two characters but a variance in knowledge. The first man might know that he can easily wrestle the armed robber to the ground and defuse the threat. The second might know the same, but he also knows that the robber has a semtex belt and would choose to self detonate if he is physically restrained. The first man would take action, and the second would not.
Ok. Great. I know analogies are frequently used by Christian theists of all stripes, and they can provide a limited road to discuss these types of issues. But it would be nice if Christian theists didn't have to depend on analogies so much. It turns the argument into an "apples v oranges" scenario. The other possibility is that there really isn't a rational way to explain god's behavior in that he demands what he himself does not do. That conclusion, supported by the evidence, needs zero analogies.
You cannot see to the end of time and see all the outcomes and effects of an action as it propagates down the chains of causality through time. An omniscient God existing outside of Time would. How do you know that this world is not the best of all possible worlds? As soon as there are beings possessed of the will to choose good or evil, there is the possibility of evil. Over a long enough period of time, evil is a certainty. Perhaps this is the best that things can be, because even an omnipotent God cannot commit a logical impossibility.
My point is that we cannot know how an omnibenevolent, omniscient, omnipotent being should act without being all these things ourselves. How does such a being respond to a human evil? How does he balance justice with allowing humans free will? We cannot know that a OOO being would prevent such evils as you mention, we cannot even know the probability of such an action. Only human hubris could assume to know such a thing.
If this is what you believe, more power to you. However, I find it ironic that you will argue for the existence of a god that we cannot see, who hasn't acted on behalf of his creation, yet maintain with 100% certainty that he does exist, and at the same time say that it is impossible for us to know him, or even the probability of how he might act in terms of suffering and/or punishment??
So you maintain that we know
- God exists.
- He is an omnibenevolent, omniscient, omnipotent being, who can come in and out of time.
- He will punish those who disagree with him or break his standards in the use of their free will
- He cares about all who are suffering
- He hasn't solved suffering yet, but we shouldn't hold this against him, because even though we can know with certainty that he exists, we are less certain as to why he allows suffering, even though he created all things and has the power and love to end suffering. We should merely accept that he has his reasons.
- His use of "justice" is tempered by the exercise of mans free will. In his justice, he created us to crave things he disapproves of, and will destroy us. (you might remember your clip from the Devils Advocate. I agree with Al Pacino)
- It is human hubris to believe that we can judge god, even by his own standards.
That looks pretty bad when it is in black and white.