Mustard Seed
New member
godrulz said:Evil is not co-eternal with God. God is holy and there was no evil until His creation rebelled.
Free will is an aspect of being in the personal image of God. God has free will. Does this make God evil? What are you smoking?
Nothing. I was a bit tired and thought that you'd conceeded a point on evil being co-eternal with God. I missed a "not" in your statement and your explanation that the concept was somehow in God's mind without it ever having existed or being created by God in anyway seemed to correlate with the way I read your statement when I failed to note the "not".
Free will gives us the capacity to chose between right and wrong. The misuse of free will does not mean that the capacity to chose is inherently evil, especially if we do not chose evil as God does not chose evil.
You still have the problem with the origin of evil. You say that it is a product of agency BUT that there's some magical exception that, in this case, seperates cause and effect.
God is not irrational in creating. He does not have to create since He is complete in Himself. He chose to create out of a desire to have love relationships with significant others. This introduced the potential for new joy and experience, but entailed risk that He could be rejected, hurt, and grieved.
Uhhh... Sorry godrulz but the above doesn't make sense by anyform of logic of which I'm aware. God has all the loving relationship he would ever need. He could continue on in such forever due to his self sufficiency. God decides to bring regection and evil into the picture DESPITE the fact that he was not lacking in ANY aspect of love or relationship previous to that moment AND could have continued on in such a state without lessening the good He was and had.
AM I THE ONLY ONE THAT DOESN'T SEE ANYTHING NEAR LOGIC IN SUCH A VIEW?
A no-risk model of divine relationality may resonate with Mormonism and Calvinism, but it is not the biblical model (see John Sanders: "The God who risks...a theology of providence).
You don't understand either what resonates with us nor what we believe. If you did you would understand that my questions are trying to understand YOUR view and NOT representations of MY view.
You continue to give me reasons to understand the superiority of biblical Christianity over Mormonism (since it is not true, its weaknesses become more apparent as it is examined in light of truth).
I don't. You simply see what you want to see and are willfully blind of the problems of your views in light of the Bible AND logic. But keep telling yourself you're winning. Ignorance is bliss, until you can't be ignorant anymore, then it rather becomes terrible and makes all the past bliss vanish like the dream of one who hungers and dreams he eats...