The Christian God and the Problem of Evil

Both Mung and KeithS have asked me to weigh in on the question of whether the existence of evil counts as a good argument against Christianity, as KeithS has maintained in a recent post, so I shall oblige.

It is important to understand that the problem of evil is not an argument against the existence of God or gods, but against what KeithS calls the Christian God (actually, the God of classical theism), Who is supposed to be omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent. KeithS succinctly formulates the problem as follows:

Let’s say I claim that an omniGod named Frank exists — omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent. Suppose I also claim that Frank regards seahorses as the absolute height of evil. The world contains a lot of seahorses, and Frank, being omnipotent, has the power to wipe them off the face of the earth. Why doesn’t he? Why does he countenance a world full of seahorses?

KeithS emphasizes that it is not enough for the Christian to show that God is on balance benevolent. Rather, the Christian needs to defend the claim that God is omnibenevolent:

The Christian claim is that God is omnibenevolent — as benevolent as it is logically possible to be. Finding that the items on the “good” side of the ledger outweigh those on the “bad” side — if that were the case — would not establish God’s omnibenevolence at all.

Finally, KeithS provides his own take on the problem of evil:

The problem of evil remains as much of a problem as ever for Christians. Yet there are obvious solutions to the problem that fit the evidence and are perfectly reasonable: a) accept that God doesn’t exist, or b) accept that God isn’t omnipotent, or c) accept that God isn’t perfectly benevolent. Despite the availability of these obvious solutions, most Christians will choose to cling to a view of God that has long since been falsified.

He even suggests how he would resolve the problem if he were a theist (emphasis mine – VJT):

Suppose God hates evil and suffering but is too weak to defeat them, at least at the moment. Then any such instances can be explained by God’s weakness.

It addresses the problem of evil without sacrificing theism. I’m amazed that more theists don’t seize on this sort of resolution. They’re too greedy in their theology, too reluctant to give up the omnis.

I think KeithS is onto something here. In fact, I’d like to ditch the conventional Christian views of God’s omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence. It’s time for an overhaul.

Why a God Who constantly watches His creatures cannot be omniscient

First, the conventional notion of God’s omniscience needs to be jettisoned. As I argued in an earlier post on the problem of evil, the problem of evil depends on the assumption that God’s knowledge of our choices (and of Adam and Eve’s choices) is logically prior to those choices. In that post, I upheld the contrary view (defended in our own time by C.S. Lewis), that God is like a watcher on a high hill: He timelessly knows everything that we choose to do, but His knowledge is logically subsequent to the choices we make, which means that He doesn’t know what we will do “before” He decides to make us. I have to acknowledge, however, that this is very much a minority view among the Christian Fathers and/or Doctors of the Church, and I can only think of two who argued for this view: namely, the somewhat heterodox theologian Origen (185-254 A.D.) and possibly, the Christian philosopher Boethius (c. 480- c. 524 A.D. – although his own personal views on the subject remain in dispute, as he elsewhere seems to reject the “watcher on the hill” analogy which he develops in Book V, Prose 6 of his Consolation of Philosophy, in which he declares that God “sees all things in an eternal present just as humans see things in a non-eternal present.”) Whether they be predestinationists or Molinists, the vast majority of Christian theologians who are orthodox – and I’m not counting “open theists” here – maintain that God’s knowledge of our choices is logically prior to those choices. I haven’t taken a straw poll of lay Christian believers, but judging from Christians I’m acquainted with, the “watcher on the hill” view of God remains a popular way of reconciling His foreknowledge with human free will, to this day. I believe the common folk are wiser than the theologians here.

Why are theologians so reluctant to accept the Boethian solution? In a nutshell, because they see it as detracting from God’s sovereignty, as it makes Him dependent on His creatures for information about what is going on in the world. God has to (timelessly) observe us in order to know what we are getting up to. I have to say I don’t see the problem here, provided that God freely and timelessly chooses to rely on His creatures for His knowledge of what they do. If He wants to impose that limitation on Himself, who are we to stop Him?

But if God’s knowledge of our choices is (timelessly) obtained from observing those choices, then we can no longer say that God knows exactly what I would do in every possible situation. On the Boethian account, God does not possess counterfactual knowledge: He knows everything I do, but not everything I would do, in all possible situations. Why not? For one thing, in many situations, there simply is no fact of the matter as to what I would do. What would I do if I won $10,000,000? I don’t know, and neither does God. Nor is this a bad thing: after all, if God knows exactly what I would do in every possible situation, then it makes no sense to say that in a given situation, I could have acted otherwise. (That, by the way, is why I find Molinism utterly nonsensical.)

And what about mathematics? Does God know the answer to every possible mathematical problem? I would argue that He doesn’t, as there are many branches of mathematics where the “rules of the game” are determined by the mathematicians theorizing in that area. In a different world, we would have had different mathematicians, and different branches of mathematics, with different rules. I see no reason to suppose that God knows all possible choices that could be made by all possible (as well as actual) persons.

The upshot of all this is that while God knows everything there is to know about His creatures, He is not omniscient. There are many counterfactuals that He doesn’t know, and there are many possibilities that He never contemplates, either. All we can say is that God knows everything about what we do (past, present and future), and that we can keep no secrets from Him.

Why God is a lot less powerful than many Christians think

Second, the traditional notion of God’s omnipotence needs to be discarded. On the classical view defended by St. Thomas Aquinas, God can do anything which it is logically possible for Him to do, as God. In recent years, however, the classical view has come under fire, from the Reformed theologian Alvin Plantinga, who refuted it using the humorous counter-example of a being whose nature allows him to do nothing but scratch his ear (which he does, making him omnipotent) in his book, God and other minds (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1967), and also from the Catholic philosopher Peter Geach, who sharply criticized the traditional view in an influential article titled “Omnipotence” (Philosophy 48 (1973): 7-20 – see here for a discussion). In his article, Geach argued that God is not omnipotent but almighty: since He maintains the world in existence, He has power over all things, but He does not have the power to do all things.

What relevance does this have to the problem of evil? On the traditional view of God’s omnipotence, God could have preserved each of us from sin throughout our earthly lives, without violating our free will, as he did with Jesus and (according to Catholics and Orthodox) the Virgin Mary: we would still have possessed full libertarian freedom when choosing between alternative goods, but not when choosing between good and evil. And there are many Protestants who believe that individuals who are “born again” are infallibly elected by God, so that even if they sin, their final salvation is Divinely guaranteed. Why, one might ask, didn’t God make us all like that? The Catechism of the Catholic Church attempts to resolve the problem by appealing to the “greater good” of the Incarnation and Redemption – a response which I find unsatisfactory, since (as Blessed John Duns Scotus argued) there was nothing to stop God from becoming incarnate even if Adam had never sinned.

For normal human beings, their personal identity is determined by their parentage, and by the gametes from which their bodies were created. (I would not be “me” if I had had a different mother or father, or if I had been conceived from a different sperm or egg.) But what if God’s act of specially electing a saint to glory also determines that individual’s personal identity? In that case, there is no way that God could have refrained from electing that saint without making him or her a different person. And if I am not elected in this fashion, but possess the power to choose between being saved and being damned, then I cannot coherently wish to have been predestined for eternal life without wishing myself to be a different person. It follows from this that while God could have made a world of human beings who were all preserved from sin, or who were all infallibly elected, not even God could make a world in which each of us is preserved from sin or infallibly elected. In that case, God is significantly less powerful than Christian theologians like to imagine.

In recent years, New Atheists have argued that the designs we find in living things are inept, and that if a Creator existed, He could have done a much better job of making these creatures. Creationists and Intelligent Design advocates reply that living things are subject to numerous design constraints, and that just because we can imagine a more elegant design does not mean that it is possible to create such a design. Picturability does not imply possibility. Recent scientific discoveries regarding the vertebrate eye (see here and here) have done much to vindicate this line of argument. (The same goes for the laryngeal nerve in the neck of the giraffe.) We are a long way here from the traditional view that God can make anything, as long as no logical contradiction is involved. Physical and nomological constraints (relating to the structure of matter, and the laws of Nature which obtain in our cosmos) also need to be taken into account.

An additional reason for rejecting the traditional notion of omnipotence is that it commits one to maintaining that God can bring about states of affairs which are not properly described. When someone claims, for instance, that God could make a horse capable of flying, like the mythical Pegasus, what, exactly, are we supposed to conceive of God doing here? And how would Pegasus fly, anyway? Are we supposed to imagine God working a miracle, by raising a horse in the air? But in that case, shouldn’t we really say that the horse is not flying (by its own natural power), but rather that God is holding it up? Or are we meant to imagine an alternative world, where the laws of Nature are changed so as to allow horses to fly – in which case, should we call the creature in this alternate world a horse, or should we rather call it a shmorse? Or are we to suppose that God could come up with a physical design for a horse that would enable it to fly, even with the laws of Nature that hold in this world? But in that case, how do we know that such a design exists? There is not the slightest evidence for such a design, and aerodynamic considerations suggest that the enterprise of attaching natural wings that would allow an animal with the dimensions of a horse to fly, would be altogether unworkable.

Goodbye to omnibenevolence

Finally, the concept of God’s omnibenevolence needs to be tossed out, lock, stock and barrel. Theologians have always maintained, of course, that God could have made a world that was better than the one He did, simply by adding a few extra bells and whistles. There is no “best possible world,” as the philosopher Leibniz falsely imagined. But that does not prevent God from making a world which is free from all natural and moral evil – which raises the obvious question of why an omnibenevolent Deity would create such a world as ours. One traditional answer, given by St. Augustine in his Enchiridion, Chapter III, is that God allows evil for the sake of a “greater good”: “For the Omnipotent God, whom even the heathen acknowledge as the Supreme Power over all, would not allow any evil in his works, unless in his omnipotence and goodness, as the Supreme Good, he is able to bring forth good out of evil.” I think its time to candidly acknowledge, as Orthodox theologian David Bentley Hart has already done, that this kind of talk simply won’t wash:

Being infinitely sufficient in Himself, God had no need of a passage through sin and death to manifest His glory in His creatures or to join them perfectly to Himself. This is why it is misleading (however soothing it may be) to say that the drama of fall and redemption will make the final state of things more glorious than it might otherwise have been. No less metaphysically incoherent – though immeasurably more vile – is the suggestion that God requires suffering and death to reveal certain of his attributes (capricious cruelty, perhaps? morbid indifference? a twisted sense of humor?). It is precisely sin, suffering, and death that blind us to God’s true nature…

I do not believe we Christians are obliged – or even allowed – to look upon the devastation visited upon the coasts of the Indian Ocean and to console ourselves with vacuous cant about the mysterious course taken by God’s goodness in this world, or to assure others that some ultimate meaning or purpose resides in so much misery.

But as KeithS has pointed out, there are problems with Hart’s own resolution of the problem of evil:

So in Hart’s bizarre world, we have a God who supposedly hates evil and suffering, yet chooses to permit them — and somehow this is all okay because it’s only temporary. Good will triumph in the end.

KeithS suggested that the problem of evil would be soluble if Christians simply acknowledged that God isn’t omnipotent or perfectly benevolent, but noted that Christians continue to “cling to a view of God that has long since been falsified.”

So I’d like to make a proposal of my own. In the first place, I’d like to propose that God is benevolent only in relation to the persons whom He decides to create. “Prior to” His act of creation, God is not benevolent at all. Thus when deciding what kind of world to create, God makes no attempt to choose the best one, or even a perfect one (i.e. one free from evil). Only after having chosen a particular world (for reasons best known to Himself) can we speak of God as being benevolent to His creatures.

In the second place, I’d like to propose that God’s benevolence to His sentient and sapient creatures is not unrestricted. After all, He allows His own creatures to be tortured to death, on occasion. Nevertheless, God is perfectly capable of setting limits to the amount of pain we have to put up with (thankfully, none of us has to suffer one million years of torture), of healing whatever wounds (physical and psychic) His tortured creatures have endured, and of bestowing the gift of immortality upon His sentient and sapient creatures (provided that they do not spurn it). Thus according to the picture I am sketching, God is ultimately benevolent, but not omnibenevolent. On this side of eternity, God’s benevolence is quite modest – but we can at least console ourselves with the thought that life could be much, much more painful than it is.

Finally, I’d like to point out that Christians have never referred to God in their prayers as omnibenevolent, but rather as all-loving. God loves each and every one of us with a steadfast, unshakable love which is greater than any of us can possibly imagine. The only kind of love we can compare to God’s love, in its steadfastness, is parental love. And most importantly, what God loves is we ourselves, and not our feelings. Thus God has no interest in maximizing the level of euphoria in the world – whether it be the aggregate level or the average level – because God’s parental commitment is to us, and not our states of mind. Being a loving Father, God naturally wants what is ultimately best for us, but He does not necessarily want us to enjoy a pain-free journey to our ultimate destination.

These proposals of mine have significant implications for the problem of evil. On the Judeo-Christian view, each and every human person is a being of infinite and irreplaceable value, loved by God. Two infinities cannot be meaningfully added to yield a greater infinity; hence a world with more people would not be a “better” world. What’s more, even wicked people are beings of infinite and irreplaceable value; hence a world with kinder people would not be a “better” world, but merely a world where people existed in a better state. Thus I would suggest that one reason why God tolerates evil acts (such as acts of rape or murder) is that there are some individuals in our world who would never have come into existence, were it not for these evil acts having been performed. The same logic can be applied to natural disasters: think of a man and a woman, living in neighboring towns, who both lose their families in a terrible earthquake, but are brought together in the aftermath of the quake, and who decide to get married, settle down and raise a family of their own. Such occurrences are by no means uncommon. Since the creation of any human being is good in an unqualified sense, God may decide to tolerate natural or moral evils, if doing so enables individuals to come into existence who would not have done so otherwise. Please note that I’m not saying He must, but merely that He may.

Fair enough; nevertheless, the skeptic might urge, the world is still a pretty awful place, and arguably much worse than it needs to be. Most natural and moral evils don’t result in the creation of new sentient or sapient beings, after all. There seems to be a lot of gratuitous evil in the world. Why is this so?

The Fall – and why it is needed to explain the mess we’re in

Traditionally, Christians have appealed to the doctrine of the Fall of our first parents at the dawn of human history, in order to explain why God allows these senseless evils to continue. John Henry Newman eloquently argued for this doctrine in his Apologia pro Vita Sua (Longmans, Green & Co., London, revised edition, 1865, chapter 5, pp. 242-243):

I can only answer, that either there is no Creator, or this living society of men is in a true sense discarded from His presence. Did I see a boy of good make and mind, with the tokens on him of a refined nature, cast upon the world without provision, unable to say whence he came, his birthplace or his family connexions, I should conclude that there was some mystery connected with his history, and that he was one, of whom, from one cause or other, his parents were ashamed. Thus only should I be able to account for the contrast between the promise and the condition of his being. And so I argue about the world;— if there be a God, since there is a God, the human race is implicated in some terrible aboriginal calamity. It is out of joint with the purposes of its Creator. This is a fact, a fact as true as the fact of its existence; and thus the doctrine of what is theologically called original sin becomes to me almost as certain as that the world exists, and as the existence of God.

In their recent book, Adam and the Genome, geneticist Dennis Venema and New Testament scholar Scott McKnight have marshaled an impressive array of converging scientific evidence, indicating that the human population has probably never fallen below 10,000 individuals. That certain puts paid to literalistic interpretations of the Fall, but as Denis Alexander has described in his book, Creation or Evolution: Do We Have to Choose?, one can still defend some notion of a Fall at the dawn of human history. Here’s how he outlines one possible approach to the Fall (although it’s not his favorite):

In the first type of approach (which has many variants), some people in Africa, following the emergence of anatomically modern humanity, became aware of God’s existence, power and calling upon their lives and responded to their new-found knowledge of him in love and obedience, in authentic relationship with God. However, they subsequently turned their back on the light that they had received and went their own way, leading to human autonomy and a broken relationship with God (“sin”). The emphasis in this type of speculation is on historical process – relationships built and broken over many generations.

My own belief is that God bestowed upon our first parents the responsibility for deciding the scope of Divine providence in ordinary human affairs. In their pride, our first parents chose personal autonomy, knowing that it would entail death and suffering for the entire human race: basically, they told God to butt out of everyday human affairs, leaving Him free to intervene only for very special reasons. To skeptics who would object that God should never have given such enormous responsibilities to our first parents in the first place, I would suggest that it is simply impossible for God to make intelligent beings without offering them an allotted sphere or domain in which they can legitimately exercise their freedom: that is what makes them who they are. As the first parents of the human race, our first parents had to have the responsibility for deciding whether they wanted the human race to be protected by God’s Providence or whether to reject God and go it alone.

As a Christian, I believe that God is just and merciful. I do not believe that it was unjust of God to test the human race at the beginning of human history; but I will acknowledge that in order to make sense of the terrible consequences of that fateful test, we need to maintain a view of history which sounds very strange to modern ears – instead of a gradual ascent to human self-awareness, as we might suppose, there was a First Contact between human creatures and their Creator. We need to envisage this as a cosmic, Miltonian drama, with our first parents as larger-than-life characters who enjoyed an intimacy and familiarity with God which we can only dream of, and who were given the enormous responsibility of custodianship over the lives of their future descendants. It may seem incomprehensible to us that they would give up their relationship with a God Who could satisfy all their needs, in favor of a death-and-violence ridden world like ours, but what they gained (in their own eyes) was the freedom to live as they chose. This, then, is why we’re in the mess we’re in. How long it will continue, I have no idea.

For those readers who would like a theological explanation of animal suffering, I would recommend Jon Garvey’s excellent online book, God’s Good Earth.

The problem of evil: A summary

We have seen that in order to make sense of the evil in the world, we need to abandon the notion of an omniscient God Who knows all counterfactuals and all possibilities, and Who knows what we do without needing to be informed by us. Rather, we should simply say that God (timelessly) knows everything we do, by constantly watching us. We also need to abandon the notion of an omnipotent God Who can do anything that’s logically possible. It turns out that there are a number of constraints which God is subject to, which prevent Him from creating any old world that we can imagine, and that prevent Him from having created us in a perfect world where no-one ever sinned. Furthermore, we need to abandon the notion that God is omnibenevolent. Christians have never worshiped an omnibenevolent Deity. Rather, the God they worship is a Parent Who loves us personally, and Who will never stop loving us. Such a God may however be willing to allow His creatures to be subjected to a great degree of suffering in the short term. He can only be called “benevolent” from a long-term perspective, insofar as He has prepared us for eternity with Him.

Finally, the sheer pervasiveness of the suffering in this world points to what Newman referred to as “some terrible aboriginal calamity” at the dawn of humanity, in which the entire human race paid the price for the proud decision made by our first parents to isolate themselves from God’s benevolent protection, for the sake of pursuing what they perceived as independence and freedom. God did not know that they would make that choice, but He gave them the power to decide the fate of the human race, and to “turn off the lights” in our world until God started turning them back on again, culminating in His Revelation of Himself to us 2,000 years ago in a manger in Bethlehem.

To sum up: the Christian view of history is capable of being cogently defended, provided Christians are willing to remove the theological barnacles that have attached themselves to its system of belief, and abandon the “three omnis,” in favor of a more intimate but less extravagant notion of God.

1,030 thoughts on “The Christian God and the Problem of Evil

  1. keiths:
    CharlieM:

    He was speculating that his religious experience was veridical.

    His enlightening experiences resulted in him writing many, many books with multiple wise sayings. IMO during his visions what he experienced was truly a higher reality.

    I take it you believe that over the course of animal evolution abilities such as visual awareness was not there to begin with but developed over time. Do you not think that other types of higher awareness may become the norm in the future?

    Notice that while you are fine with Böhme’s speculations, you object when someone makes a reasonable inference based on the amount and nature of the evil in the world.

    I certainly don’t object to anyone speculating. Whether or not I agree with their speculations is another matter.

    You are filtering the evidence in order to support your existing beliefs, rather than seeking a set of beliefs that best fit the evidence.

    A couple of relevant quotes from Boehme

    I have written only for those that seek; to the cunning and worldly-wise I have nothing to say.

    *

    This world is rooted in evil and good, and there can be neither one of them without the other. But the great misfortune in it is that evil is preponderating therein over good, and the wrath stronger than love, and this is due to the sin of the devil and of man, who excited nature by their perverted desires, so that the world is now powerfully qualified in wrath, acting like a poison within the body.

    Franz Hartmann on Boehme:

    During a vision in 1610 he “recognised the divine order of nature, and how from the trunk of the tree of life spring different branches, bearing manifold leaves and flowers and fruits, and he became impressed with the necessity of writing down what he saw and preserving the record.

    Thus, beginning with the year 1612, and up to his end in the year 1624, he wrote many books about the things which he saw in the light of his own spirit, comprising thirty books full of the deepest mysteries regarding God and the angels, Christ and man, heaven and hell and nature, and the secret things of the world, such as before him no man is known to have communicated to this sinful world, and all this he did, not for the purpose of earthly gain, but for the glorification of God and for the redemption of mankind from ignorance regarding the things of the Spirit.

    *

    Moreover, he taught that to be a true Christian it was not sufficient to subscribe to a certain set of beliefs; but that only he in whom the Christ is living is a true follower of Christ in spirit and in truth.

  2. Acartia:

    (Apologies if I’ve posted this before.)

    We are going to start calling you Frankie. Or KairosFocus.

    Please don’t make me choose which I prefer.

  3. colewd:

    There is no (none, nada, zilch) contemporaneous evidence for even the existence of Jesus let alone anything he might have done.

    Interesting.Can you support this claim?

    Certainly. I point to the complete lack of contemporaneous evidence for even the existence of Jesus let alone anything he might have done.

    Others disagree:

    Your quoted material does not support your claim. The vast majority of biblical scholars are religious so they will be biased to the view that Jesus actually existed. None, however, are able to produce contemporaneous evidence for his existence because there simply is none.

  4. fifthmonarchyman:

    remember unlike Islam In Christianity there was no controlling authority that could suppress the writings of groups that they did not like.

    You really know very little about the history of your religion, do you?

  5. Mung:

    Let’s be very clear here. The discussion isn’t about a god, as no such thing has ever been shown to exist. The discussion is about theists’ claims.

    I’ve already demonstrated that this claim is false.

    Cite?

    If we really can’t even agree on that is being discussed perhaps it’s time for keiths and Patrick to back off, since their insults and rants have nothing to do with the views of the people they disagree with.

    You don’t believe in an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent god?

  6. Mung:

    keiths: For fun, let’s talk about the God you worship. Is he omniscient? Omnipotent? Omnibenevolent? Omnipresent? Perfectly just?

    When I worship those are not the things that motivate me or come to mind. Let’s not make fun of my worship. ok?

    Why not? Do you also think that some ideas should not be discussed, argued, and yes, even mocked when found to be silly?

  7. Mung gets mighty nervous when you ask him about his beliefs.

    Are you ashamed, Mung?

  8. CharlieM,

    His [Böhme’s] enlightening experiences resulted in him writing many, many books with multiple wise sayings. IMO during his visions what he experienced was truly a higher reality.

    You’re failing to distinguish between “this resonates with me” and “this is true”.

    And note the continued double standard. Böhme’s “visions” get a pass, but when someone makes a completely reasonable inference based on evidence, you cry “who are you to judge?”

  9. …Christian views of God’s omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence

    This statement is simply false. These views or teachings are not Christian. They were absorbed into so-called Christianity over many years.

    But how does one determine if a particular view or a teaching is Christian?

    Let’s say I’m Muslim and would like to learn whether Christmas is a Christian Holliday. How do I determine that? Wikipedia could be helpfu as well as Google but by what criteria or a stick does one measure whether a particular view or teaching is Christian?

    The answer is very simple: the Bible.

    The views or teachings of God’s omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence are not bible teachings and therefore they are not Christian teachings.

    Here is an example:
    If God is omniscient that means He had known in advance that Adam and Eve would sin. This means that He had known in advance that human suffering due to our parents sin was inevitable as was the death of his Son Jesus for mankind’s redemption…and so on…
    Knowing all this in advance and allowing it to happen would mean that God isn’t omnipotent. Knowing in advance that mankind is doomed and embarking on that venture anyways wouldn’t be loving, which would eliminate the teaching that God is omnibenevolent.

    So it is reasonable to assume that God while having the ability to forknow the future, chose not to know in advance that our first parents would sin…

    Why?

    It would foolish to embark on a bizarre venture, while using the ability to know the outcome in advance and then staging a mere rerun of what he already knew.

  10. Patrick: You really know very little about the history of your religion, do you?

    Patrick you crack me up.

    You can’t say that Jesus existed because you don’t have what you consider to be an early first hand account.

    But you are sure that Christianity had a single controlling authority surrounding the gospel despite the fact that you have a universally accepted early first hand account that you didn’t.

    quote:

    I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting him who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel—not that there is another one, but there are some who trouble you and want to distort the gospel of Christ. But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach to you a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be accursed. As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed.
    (Gal 1:6-9)

    end quote:

    LOL

    for the first three hundred years Christianity had no political power in the Roman empire. By the time that it did have the kind of power that would allow it to suppers decent it had spread to areas that were far beyond the control of the roman empire.

    In those areas (Persia and beyond) there were and still are groups that called themselves Christians that are considered heretical by orthodox Christianity. and they all agree on who wrote the four gospels

    check it out

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestorianism

    peace

  11. Kantian Naturalist: That notion is crucial to Augustine’s “Christianization” of Neoplatonism, but it’s nowhere to be found in Plato’s own works.

    I have no problem stating that Plato’s ideas were rough and incomplete at places. But their is nothing in them that is incompatible with the expansion they have received at time went on.

    I can call myself a Platonist the same way proponent of the modern synthesis can call himself a Darwinist even though Darwin did speak about DNA

    peace

  12. J-Mac: So it is reasonable to assume that God while having the ability to forknow the future, chose not to know in advance that our first parents would sin…

    If he did not know in advance that Adam would sin why did he know that Jesus would have to die for the sins of certain folks before he even created the world?

    quote:

    and all who dwell on earth will worship it, everyone whose name has not been written before the foundation of the world in the book of life of the Lamb who was slain.
    (Rev 13:8)

    end quote:

    peace

  13. J-Mac: This statement is simply false. These views or teachings are not Christian. They were absorbed into so-called Christianity over many years.

    But how does one determine if a particular view or a teaching is Christian?

    Every Christian believes that their views on Christianity are the right ones. Obviously they can’t all be right.

  14. keiths: Are you ashamed, Mung?

    That I am no longer a thief? No. Not ashamed at all.

    That I was addicted to pornography and that when I had my “born again” encounter I was instantly set free from that addiction? No, not at all ashamed.

    That I have helped many people? Nope. Not ashamed. Sorry.

    😀

  15. Patrick: You don’t believe in an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent god?

    So now it’s going to boil down to polling every Christian about their personal beliefs before we can conclude that Christianity is false?

  16. Are you ashamed of your beliefs, Mung?

    A reminder of the questions you’re dodging:

    For fun, let’s talk about the God you worship. Is he omniscient? Omnipotent? Omnibenevolent? Omnipresent? Perfectly just?

  17. keiths: A reminder of the questions you’re dodging:

    I already answered that question. But speaking of dodging questions …

    When will you answer mine?

  18. fifthmonarchyman: If he did not know in advance that Adam would sin why did he know that Jesus would have to die for the sins of certain folks before he even created the world?

    Didn’t you say that God chose not to know A and Eve sinned?

  19. Acartia: Every Christian believes that their views on Christianity are the right ones. Obviously they can’t all be right.

    I for one don’t think all my views are the right ones. I fully expect many of the things I believe are wrong.

    That just means that I don’t know Christ as well I want too yet.

    peace

  20. newton: Didn’t you say that God chose not to know A and Eve sinned?

    no that was J-Mac

    I think that God knows everything that can possibly be known. ie he is omniscient

    peace

  21. fifthmonarchyman: no that was J-Mac

    I think that God knows everything that can possibly be known. ie he is omniscient

    peace

    Right, found the post some time back

  22. fifthmonarchyman: I for one don’t think all my views are the right ones. I fully expect many of the things I believe are wrong.

    It’s kinda like people thinking Congress is awful, but liking their own Congressperson. You (along with most of us) assume some of your views are not right, but are wedded to every single one of them, and when anybody suggests to you that this or that one is mistaken, you insist that it couldn’t be because of the inerrancy of your revelations.

    Must of us do the same. We might be wrong sometimes, but….uh….not now.

  23. walto: , but are wedded to every single one of them, and when anybody suggests to you that this or that one is mistaken, you insist that it couldn’t be because of the inerrancy of your revelations.

    wait a minute

    Just because revelation is inerrant does not mean that I’m infallible

    keith’s gives me a lot of grief precisely because I readily acknowledge that I could be wrong about what I think is a revelation.

    The only thing I’m aware of that I could not be wrong about is fact that God can reveal stuff so that I can know it.

    If I’m wrong about that one thing then any and all knowledge whatsoever is impossible as far as I know

    My Latin is really rusty but I think it might be phrased like this

    Dei revelat, ergo scire ergo sum

    peace

  24. walto: Must of us do the same. We might be wrong sometimes, but….uh….not now.

    I do admit that it is hard for me to let go of stuff when I think I’m right.

    I think that is part of being human and an arguer 😉

    peace

  25. fifthmonarchyman: I do admit that it is hard for me to let go of stuff when I think I’m right.

    I’m like keiths. I don’t even have to think I’m right. I only need to think the other party is wrong. Ever notice how keiths always raises when he’s bluffing? We call that a tell.

  26. keiths:
    CharlieM,

    You’re failing to distinguish between “this resonates with me” and “this is true”.

    And note the continued double standard.Böhme’s “visions” get a pass, but when someone makes a completely reasonable inference based on evidence, you cry “who are you to judge?”

    Boehme’s visions get a pass from me inasmuch as they essentially agree with those of other mystics and seekers over the ages. Steiner even gives advice to anyone who eanestly seeks the truth here and here.

    But I would rather people reserve judgement rather than come to an uneducated conclusion. And I do not just cry “who are you to judge?”, I cry, who are we to judge anything if we do not possess the knowledge required to make an informed judgement?

  27. Acartia: Every Christian believes that their views on Christianity are the right ones. Obviously they can’t all be right.

    They can all be correct that the others are wrong.

  28. Mung:

    You don’t believe in an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent god?

    So now it’s going to boil down to polling every Christian about their personal beliefs before we can conclude that Christianity is false?

    It boils down to understanding your claims about your god concept and determining if they are consistent with observations. If you don’t dare to risk disconfirmation of your beliefs, just say so and bow out of the discussion.

  29. fifthmonarchyman:
    The only thing I’m aware of that I could not be wrong about is fact that God can reveal stuff so that I can know it.

    You should try parking that prior, along with your god belief, at the door.

    If I’m wrong about that one thing then any and all knowledge whatsoever is impossible as far as I know

    You have claimed that many times but never supported it with a rational argument. And before you ask other people to provide an alternative, just don’t. You’ve made the claim, you need to support it.

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