@DeputyDog
It might seem that way to you, but, God is in control and knows exactly who will be hurt, killed in any disaster. He is also responsible for every survivor. I don't believe ANYTHING is arbtrary.
Whoa, sorry I but I can’t believe that. Maybe I’m misunderstanding you, but there’s no way I could watch the news, see a disaster and say “They had it coming to them.”
We do deserve to die.
We are all *going* to die, unfortunately, which is something I had to accept (with difficulty) when I rejected the JW belief system. But believing that we *deserve* to die sounds exactly like the sort of thing that would destroy a person’s self-esteem. I know I always felt guilty as a JW because I could never meet their (impossibly high?) standards. I felt like I deserved to die, and I think that this belief suppressed me - rather than helping me - as a person.
@glenster
the cows that moo twice are killing the cows that moo once
Yeah I think war is stupid as well.
A lot of them are anti-rancher.
Hm. Are these by any chance Evil Atheist Cows? Because my position isn’t that I *hate* [the] God [of the bible], rather it’s that I don’t think he exists. Let’s say the cows never saw the rancher. Ever. Do you think it would be fair of them to assume that there was no rancher?
A cow might look at all the hardships and say life sucks, and another cow might see all the same things yet be glad for their shot at life and what good they found in it.
But I don’t think the outlook of the “glass half empty” vs “glass half full” cows has anything to do with whether they believe in the (as yet unseen) rancher. They might just be optimistic or pessimistic cows.
There's no credible concept of an all-beneficent rancher (or cows or ranch) or that choice wouldn't exist.
Are you saying that if life wasn’t filled with suffering, then all of the cows would be optimistic? That’s a good thing, isn’t it though? I’d rather have a field of happy, problem-free cows than a bovine bloodbath.
a son from the rancher's dysfunctional family who's…presiding over those who decide life sucks and to forget the rancher.
But for some people, life does suck. What’s wrong with acknowledging that? Why does it have to be likened to pledging allegiance to Satan? (I hope I’m understanding your illustration properly here). Some people (I assume) acknowledge that life sucks, but just get on with it. Again, the sort of language you’re using: “anti-racher”, “forget the rancher”, suggests that anyone who isn’t worshipping [the Christian] God is consciously and deliberately working against him, whereas in reality they probably don’t give “him” a second thought.