Yes.Isn't begging the question when you set as one of your assumptions the thing you seek to prove?
I challenged you on your characterization of God as "demanding" love. Your next post was to ask another question that relied on my acceptance of this characterization.
Not true at all.There's definitely hellfire for disregarding any of it.
Why does it need to do that?In the case of Corinthians it doesn't mention who might be the object of the love described, in fact it doesn't even say that this is love directed to anyone or anything.
Then what are you worried about? :idunno:I'm not a sinner from my own point of view. The word is irrelevant.
Nope. The admonition in Ezekiel 18 is likely based on people who took scripture similar to what you're complaining about in the New Testament and misapplied it.Well indeed. The whole nasty idea was basically invented by Saul of Tarsus.
According to your beliefs, my ideas are a product of the same process and just as valid.I sure am, or at least I am part of the judge: our inate inborn morality formed by eons of natural selection working through the pressures of tribal life, plus our collective thought are the source of morality.
Why? It's just selection. What makes your ideas better than mine?You would be a misfit if you took your morals from the bible.
:AMR: What does democracy have to do with anything?In a democracy you are the judge as much as I am, although there is usually some small leeway for those following their own consciences. Not in a totalitarian christian belief system, though.
Why the urgency? Because you say we should find meaning in the face of oblivion? What if I just want to wait out my time doing nothing, or just serving my own interests? Why are your notions of what is right and proper the ones we should adopt?Eternal existence, whatever that means, is laughably promised to people who haven't even got a clue what to do on a wet Sunday afternoon. But if you know your existence will end, and you have the usual ambitions to do things, whatever they might be for you personally, then the wet Sunday afternoon takes on a bit more importance. There is a tiny bit more urgency and significance to the fact that you will not always have Sunday afternoons, or indeed any time in any day. That urgency to live life for whatever purpose you have decided for yourself (and that purpose is definitely decided by you, under the influence of your genome) accumulates the more you realise what it means to live and die.
Because you say so? What if life and death have been set out before you and people are urging you to choose life. What if there is reality to deal with — justice and mercy, love and freedom — for the rest of eternity?On the other hand, an unending existence has no urgency and no shape.
We should just listen to you and your evidence-less insistence that oblivion is all that awaits?
Why not? What if there is a creation to explore? What if there are people to get to know? What if creativity knows no bounds?You can lie in bed every morning, and do whatever it is tomorrow instead, forever. There is no need to get around to engaging with the business of being ... curious.
"I think that's the nicest thing anyone has ever said about me."Can't decide if that's a platitude or a thinly veiled threat!
We were talking about how to derive value from the promise of oblivion. You think that the worst offender just vanishes along with the saint. You think this leaves room for justice and bestows meaning on people's lives.
So you don't think justice will arrive.No, that's a concept for someone thinking at Kohlberg's first tier of ethical thinking, that of the young child whose reasons for action centre around what other people will do to them. The stages above that are, basically, "You scratch my back and I'll scratch yours", then "What would a good person do?", then "We should all follow the law", and later "Follow laws that are based in ethical principles". Some fundamentalist christians appear superficially to be working at the level of ethical principles because they recall biblical commands, but very often they are actually working at the level of fear for what happens to them if they don't. Probably Judeo-christianity's biggest broken promise, even bigger than lies about living forever, is the promise of justice for those living in really difficult circumstances. You might believe those two promises to the time of your death, but none of it was true, and you will never know. It's a popular button to push of course, because humans have a very keen sense of justice, but justice is rare and life can be brutal. It's not a comforting fact, but at least it is true. But I stand by my claims about the best justice being restorative, not vengeful, no matter how heinous the actions of the wrongdoer.
This means you do not believe in justice. Oh, you might see it as an ideal, but it will never arrive. The only certainty is oblivion.
Death for failing to engage in capitalism? I think you read it wrong. The third servant wasn't killed.Well yes, a good example to give. The parable appears open to a lot of interpretation. It has never really appealed to me because I think it way oversimplifies the nature of human existence and is really an allegory for what happens to you if you ignore Jesus. Death for failing to engage in capitalism?
Yes. That's what you asked for.Taken literally it's obviously vengeance and not justice.
You declared that vengeance is a bad thing. I asked what is wrong with vengeance. You wanted to know about Jesus and vengeance.
We were discussing your nastiness.The real problem is if you wish to view life as a gift. I do, although we might differ on the existence of a 'giver'. My metaphorical gift of life is mine and no-one else's, so it's mine to waste if I want to. It can't be anything else, or its value drops to that of slavery. I have discussed the purpose of life with christians, and some of them freely admit they are slaves. I think that is the message of this parable, and I disagree with it, but it remains a good example of what we were discussing.
One wonders why you would be compiling such a list. :idunno:I must add that to my list of nasty things Jesus brought!