Lon
Well-known member
I agree, but not being told the story of that particular, we can't even speculate well. I guess "None of your business" is the frustrating answer. I cannot account for that particular with what I believe, only can go as far as scripture allows at that point. So, the short answer is I have no idea, nor can easily think of how that scenario would or could play out. I do think however, that it has to play out with God not authoring sin, at least as far as you and I are concerned for this discussion and where our systematic theologies agree. That is to say, both yours and mine have fallen angels and Satan as one of them.I decided to address the long answer, since we've talked about this subject before.
2 points:
1. If it takes a serpent to introduce sin to man, where did the serpent get the adversarial nature. At some point someone has to introduce the idea of sin without it being God's fault.
Yes to the first part, but wasn't the serpent's introduction of lies and half-truths the actual rewriting of the code (not that I'm disagreeing on the second part, just asking)?2. The computer analogy breaks down when you talk of a perfect programmer, with perfect equipment, with perfect knowledge, that applies perfectly to all that he does. Thus, if a good creation can become bad, it can't do so at the intent of the programmer, but only at the intent of one of his creations--you can pick Satan, or you can pick Adam, but the resulting conclusion is the same--someone had to have a free will that allows them to follow a different code than God's, or God had to code the sin directly .
Didn't I do that with my kids, though? I didn't create, but procreated them, and taught them to say "I love you" and "Ma ma/Da da." Is it then creepy when they say "I love you" or my name? :nono:Personally, I think you've missed the boat on thinking that freewill is the bad thing (I think you've heard that from me before). I tried to describe it to a non-virtual friend of mine this way:
Imagine that I built a bunch of robots and coded them to stand around me all day, saying "Derf is the greatest!" or "Derf knows everything!" or "Holy, holy, holy!" or whatever statement of praise you want to think of. Remember that these robots are not really thinking of these things by themselves, but they are just programmed to say these things, and, if I were a perfect programmer, they would never fail to do so. What would you think of me? (My friend said, "That would be creepy.")
Realize too, we are unworthy of praise. Some of the creepy and unworthy comes from the fact that we are not, in fact, "The Worlds Best Dad" like my T-shirt says (I took them to Disneyland that year, of course they thought that, and I seldom wear it so as not to wear it out and remind them often). I think too, you are describing mindlessly repeating something rather than freewill per say.But instead, if I were able to make an entity that could think and act on its own, and it, seeing the wondrous works that Derf did and was doing for it, decided to say those things (well, maybe not the Holy, holy, holy), it would not be creepy, but somewhat expected.
Naw, I've taught my dog to say "I luv u." Now it is really not that, because dogs can't vocalize, but it is fairly evident before this that she loves living with us. My son and daughters didn't choose to live with me. They really don't have a freewill, per say, to live somewhere else or choose another set of parents. It is actually my 'loving them' that elicits the same response. Thus, it is pavlovian and so programmed to a degree. For this, Love begets love, even if it is programmed, there is nothing wrong with that, because of the 'way' we are programmed. The very thing that enables it, is the thing that it is, so I do not have a problem, but I did at one time, like you, and I even think 'creepy' was part of it until I thought through it some more and came to these conclusions.The only way that those statements of praise really mean something to me is if my little entity can NOT say those things--that it has the power to say whatever it wants to, and it still chooses to say those things--of its own accord. Then they mean something.
I've had to do this in Fortran, Basic, and C++You can try this (the first scenario) for yourself. Pick up any programming instruction manual and find the "Hello, World!" program. Replace the words "Hello, World!" with "Lon is the greatest!" and make sure you include an infinite loop. Start the program and sit back to bask in the glow of praise from your monitor. Aaaaaaaaaah! How good that feels to be praised by your creation! Now do that on every computer you have and maybe borrow some of your friends. Then ask them to ask their friends to put your program on their computers and smart phones and tablets, etc, etc. Soon you will have billions of computers shouting your praises.
Creepy, huh?
I haven't written a program heralding my praises. Yet another reason it is creepy is simply because we are not to be worshipped. Praised is okay, "you did good" and I'd be okay with the programmed accolades. "I am a nice shark. Fish are friends, not food."