Oh we know... this is why you believe in a fairy tale; because you don't ask yourself any questions.
Ah, if you only knew! Any rational person asks questions, and I’ve got plenty of them. But they’re not predicated on God being a “psychopath.”
The bible says that [God] hardened the heart of the pharaoh. He CAUSED the pharaoh not to let them go, only to punish him after. Yes, that's pretty pathetic, but now you're going to sit there and [embellish] the story your way, so it sounds better. That's just as pathetic.
If one looks at the scriptures with the predicate that God is Just, then God could not harden someone’s heart to cause them harm. I also believe that God respects our free agency to the point that He would never tempt any man to do evil, as we saw in the New Testament. Thus, when faced with a contradiction, one can throw out the entire account or one can look for a rational answer. If God cannot tempt a man to do evil, that would include Pharaoh. You can believe what you wish, but don’t hold me to your standards. I’m not there. Another example would be the statements in the scriptures that “no man has seen God at any time.” Yet the scriptures are rife with people seeing God, including Moses, who spoke to Him “face to face” and Stephen, who saw Jesus sitting on the right hand of the Father. But the apostle John makes an exception: “Not that any man hath seen the Father, save he which is of God, he hath seen the Father.” (John 6:46) And the scripture states specifically that Moses was “of God.”
“And this is the blessing, wherewith Moses the man of God blessed the children of Israel before his death.” (Duet. 33:1) So when taken in context, otherwise difficult scriptures can be properly understood. But if a person stands simply as an accuser, he or she is really not interested in answers, or even the truth. They’ve already made their decision, and when one answer is given, they’ve already got another gripe ready to go. Thus, instead of attacking religion, why not respect the views of believers and stop trying to kick them in the teeth? It’s one thing to be embittered about a religious group you once were duped by; it’s another to get in everyone’s face and make ridiculous assertions over things you have no idea about. I believe atheism is a fairy tale, but if someone wants to believe it, I hardly see it as my life’s mission to either change their minds or trumpet my own beliefs and make accusatory statements about their judgment, or lack thereof.
It's astounding how you cannot judge god's negative actions as despicable because you are 'unworthy'. Who are you to judge god after all, right? Yet, in all other "positive" (in your view) aspects of god you have a veritable cornuccopia of opinions and apparently know the mind of god inside and out.
Well, if I did have a “cornucopia” of opinions, I would certainly know how to spell it.
I cannot judge God, not because I’m unworthy, but because I’m ignorant. I don’t know what was in the hearts or minds of those He destroyed, or where those people went when they died, but I have no reason to believe that a just, kind and loving parent would torture them, or why he would arrange to have the gospel preached to them in the Meridian of Time, if He weren’t trying to help them. Infants need no baptism, so when they die, they automatically gain eternal life without having to put up with a difficult, trying life that may not work out well for them. Also, have you noticed? Man is killing far more infants than God could, through abortion. And many atheists have no problem with that? Do you? Are you a committed pro-life advocate? If not, I’m much more competent to judge your character than I am God’s.
How do you justify God also killing the firstborn animals too?!? Now how do you explain that crap?!?
What do you mean, how do I explain it? God has the right to give and take life as He pleases. We see only through a glass darkly, so we don’t have access to God, nor can we put those questions to him. But the animals that drowned in the flood (and weren’t spared the easy life of being eaten by predators) are in precisely the same place they are now as they would have been had they lived their full lives.
Like you. Especially if you’re an atheist, what the hell difference does it make if you die now or twenty years from now? You’re all so stumped by the belief of the finality of life that you can’t get past it. But if there is a God, at least He offers an out to that finality. Atheists never do. They look at death as a horror they can’t outrun, or fight, and they’re frightened by it. God kills, ergo, He must be evil. Is the logic of that really supposed to impress me? Some maintain that death doesn’t frighten them, but just wait until it arrives. You can’t comfort them. Some, superstitiously, convert when the shadows begin lengthening, hoping against hope that they were wrong. Others honestly expand their views and realize they’ve been wrong in their thinking. And many others, like Stalin, die shaking their fist at heaven, as if they see death’s grim visage approach. You ought to read Howard Storm’s book. He was an avowed hard core atheist and nasty person until he had a life changing after death experience.
And there are many others besides him. But they had to see it to believe.
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