I consider it better than the alternative. I also believe life free of cancer is better than the alternative. I do not know that life as a trillionair would necessarily be better than the alternative however. You can't buy happiness after all.
That's very true, it doesn't buy happiness. It also shows that often we don't really know what gives us happiness.
Did you ever have anything good happen in your life?
When did I say it was excusable at all for any reason? When did I say any warfare of any kind was excusable? That war is an undeniable part of human history does not make it moral.
If a nation faces an unprovoked attack from another nation, and the attacked nation is forced to defend themselves, is the attacked nation immoral for engaging in the immoral act of war?
That is my question to you. I do not think that anything in a fictional story is necessarily right or wrong beyond the context of the fiction in question.
You've made posts that seemed leave open the possibility of Yahweh existing. So I personally think this goes beyond just reading it as a fictional story.
How do I know? Like anything else, study, and draw a conclusion. What I don't do is assume I understand a verse at first glance for the same reason I don't assume I can navigate a rocket without training.
One of the problems is that people have different ideas as to what is contradictory, or unethical in terms of scripture. Most people understand that Jesus didn't advocate body mutilation when stressing the removal of a body part if it offends. A child will generally understand that it's a metaphorical statement. But....there's actually an alleged scholar who actually claims in a book that Jesus is promoting body mutilation.
As far as contradictions, lists are literally made of all the alleged contradictions (whether the list piler believes they all are or not). One of the alleged contradictions on any exhaustive list will probably include the mule and the colt mentioned in the Gospels, where a witness claims one animal, the other including the colt making two. Do you think there's a contradiction in the two separate testimonies?
I am not arguing that the bible doesn't make opposite views depending on the verses you choose to focus on. If the verse in question is actually an injunction against slavery rather than simply against kidnapping it doesn't change the moral dictates concerning the owning of people as property set forth in leviticus it just gives abolitionists and slave owners both a verse to quote to show that the bible "supports" their position (owning people is the focus of my argument and I don't care if you want to call it slavery or not. You could call it super
happy and fully justified people owning time it is still wrong in my estimation which stems mostly from my not wanting to be owned by anyone and the excercise of human empathy)
If you take issue with ownership, then you have to be against indentured servitude, because for those 7 years, the servant is owned.
You also have to be against prison and the military.
The military reference in particular sets people off. I guess maybe they think I'm being unpatriotic (I've been told I can't make the comparison, but not why). But yes, the soldiers a** is truly theirs. For the most part, as the counter argument goes, it's voluntary (like indentured servitude). But the draft is certainly not voluntary if we have to take it a step further.
So the creator is at fault for knowing your thoughts?
Only in as much as a peeping tom is at fault for peeking through a window.
No. Totally different.
Blaming God for knowing your thoughts is like blaming you for seeing a traffic accident that was right in front of you. You're not a peeping Tom for witnessing a traffic accident, are you?
Thinking is not acting. If someone were to think about punching you in the face and then someone else actually did it which one would you think more deserving of punishment? Conversly if someone fantasizes about adultery (coveting his neighbors wife) the Yahweh offers equal punishment (eternal torment) as someone who actually does commit adultery.
It really depends. The guy who thought about it may have given the idea to the one who actually does it. They may have prompted the attack. They may even be more hateful. They also may have paid the guy who did it.
The problem is that we can't always see whatever contribution we may actually have for incidences we assume on someone else. A horrible thought, but words we have said to others may have caused serious mental problems. That time we called someone "fat", not thinking much of it might be one of the contributing factors as to why they're contemplating suicide. Do you think that's far-fetched?
According to the bible all things come from god. Care to argue that this is not true?
Not in this thread, because this is not a thread about God creating evil (which He didn't do).
The acts of a heinous crime originated from the mind. In some cases, depending on the person's sense of morality, just the thought might trigger the action. For most probably, they understood it's wrong, but through mental fantasizing they eventually carried it through. So fantasizing is most definitely a culprit. Humans cannot detect mental fantasizing from another human. So we're forced to base all offenses on action.
We can't see the acceptance, and eventual practice of fantasizing that lead to the criminal violation of another. But God can. So the initial instruction to that person (if God were to speak to them) would have been to control his thoughts, because that's what would lead to the action.
Ah yes let me clarify. I mean the Yahweh is an abuser for making child leukemia an integral part of his plan. If you require further clarification please
just ask.
Yes. How is child leukemia an integral part of His plan? Or, what exactly do you mean?
Again I am unconcerned with the actions of a being I consider to be fictional unless it informs the real world morality of human beings that might then visit equally terrible punishments on other humans. If religion did not cause humans to harm, mistreat or strip freedoms from other humans I would be completely unconcerned. I am not bitter by the way just concerned with the possible consequences of believing in religious dogma that promotes mistreatment of any given humans (say the LGBT community, women and people who pick up sticks on the wrong day of the week.)
So far it looks like you're concerned about something that hasn't even happened.
If you don't mind me asking, for the purpose of relevant discussion, are you American?
As far as the picking up sticks, let me give you two scenarios.
First one, the man who gathered the sticks.
To hopefully shed light on the whole OT laws and how they apply to the NT era, and modern times, and why certain laws in the OT don't necessarily apply in the same way as the NT, or today, the Israelites were in war time during their exodus. Laws for soldiers are going to be different than civilians. I'm not, for instance, going to face the same penalty going AWOL from work (my public/social/communal assignment) as a soldier going AWOL. Not all of the Israelites in the exodus were called out into the battlefield, but the dichotomy between the soldier and the non-soldier (or civilian) would have been less than today. They were all pretty much in the battle, whatever their associated assignment was.
During war time, or even in general military life, following instructions to a "T", no matter how insignificant the instruction appears is vital. So amongst the Israelites we have a man who was given a direct command not to do any work on the Sabbath. His action was not out of ignorance.
The second scenario, the soldier who runs from battle, typically resulting in an execution.
So what's worse?
We have an Israelite who defied very simple instructions not to do any work on the Sabbath. So, if he's unfaithful to simple instructions, he may be unfaithful to his people as a whole. A possible defector or traitor. After all, that was an act of complete defiance. And the obvious question would be why he did it, since he obviously didn't need to. He could have gathered enough the day before, or just wait for the next day.
And we have a soldier who was overcome with fear, that could be argued to be uncontrollable. And yet he will face the firing squad.
Which of the two punishment oriented scenarios is less reasonable?