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Raf

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Everything posted by Raf

  1. Your dishonest approach to this thread, and to this conversation across several threads, should embarrass you.
  2. this is a stupid question. This is the kind of bad faith question that leads me to believe you guys are trolling the thread and not interested in a real dialogue.
  3. You are reading a non-relevant purpose into the law. It's supposed to be unachievable BECAUSE IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO BE THAT MORAL. It's not supposed to be some random list of immoral edicts just for the sake of demonstrating disobedience. Honestly, the pretzel you have to twist yourself into to justify the morality of a God who straight up murdered someone for picking up sticks on the wrong day of the week is baffling. You can use your "Thus saith Raf" quip all you want, but the fact remains that you are defending a moral structure that's not defensible. And you should be embarrassed about it, honestly.
  4. There is nothing false about the premise I laid out. If God is the source of objective morality, then his law should be objectively moral. Any argument to the contrary proves my point (namely, that he's NOT the source of objective morality, and therefore the imperfection of the law is no surprise). There was never a time in history when it was an objectively moral punishment for a rapist to "have to" marry his victim and pay her father 50 shekels. An omniscient God would know that. So either he's not omniscient, he's not moral, or both. It makes sense that a society's laws and understanding of morality would evolve with time. It makes no sense that a God's understanding of morality would evolve unless he were imperfect and immoral (or at least imperfectly moral) to begin with.
  5. The Bible doesn't. People say it of Yahweh. It is that premise that I am challenging. If you do not accept that premise, then I am not arguing with you. http://www.reasonablefaith.org/can-we-be-good-without-god
  6. Are you truly THAT unable to evaluate an analogy? I expected better. Stop derailing all these threads with babble.
  7. Thou shalt not commit murder. This is a stupid question, and I'm tired of you derailing with thread with irrelevant diversions like "Mesopotamia used to do such and such." Mesopotamia does not claim to be the source of objective morality. At some point, the dishonest way you guys have approached the subject matter of this thread has to prick your conscience just a little.
  8. Are you guys done derailing all my threads? Because I'm over it.
  9. No it doesn't. No more or less than the Qu'ran or the Book of the Dead or all sorts of other holy books. I chose "PFAL's criteria" because it is a common frame of reference. I could have said "inerrantists" and made the same point. A story can have "truth" without being "true." Back to superheroes: "With great power comes great responsibility" is a pretty decent life lesson. That it is the central lesson of a clearly fictional tale does not invalidate the lesson. Plenty of things in the Bible that are valuable lessons that do not rely on the stories themselves being true. Once you say "this story isn't literally true, but..." we are no longer in disagreement and there is simply nothing to discuss.
  10. "The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed."
  11. Nothing you guys have come up with explains why a moral God killed someone for picking up sticks on the wrong day of the week or punished a rapist by having him marry his victim. The logical contortions you have to come up with to excuse Yahweh's immorality make my point better than I have.
  12. No one is claiming that you cannot have objective morality without the founding fathers of the USA. That they were morally imperfect is a surprise to no one. God is supposed to be THE source of objective morality. How could He not get it right the first time? (Answer: God's morality is derived from the people who created Him, not the other way around. God gets his morality from us. That's why He evolves and gets kinder and gentler as history progresses. A God who really existed and was the source of objective morality would not evolve).
  13. What I am proposing is that an omniscient God who is the source of all objective morality could have and should have gotten this right the first time. You are not arguing for the existence of that God. Therefore your barrage of posts on this thread is irrelevant, because you are not talking about the God of the Bible. You're talking about a God whose morality is subject to the people who created him, not the other way around. And that's FINE. But it's also irrelevant. You may as well be talking about Zeus. Whichever God you're talking about, it's not the Yahweh of the Bible. You have moved the goalposts so many times in two conversations that it's become fruitless to discuss anything with you.
  14. God DID work that way. What you call "Stalinist thinking" is His way, not mine.
  15. God can't? You have to be Utopian to denounce slavery? If you're GOD? This is nonsense. You're not engaging in a serious discussion.
  16. "To say I'm more moral than Yahweh is to also say I am more moral than EVERYONE. . . . . All hail ME!" This is the same guy who in another thread accused me of using a straw man argument. This is absurdity and not worthy of a serious reply.
  17. I'd rather not. You're working from a "God" definition that is at odds with the unchanging God of the Bible. It is impossible to kick a field goal when the posts keep getting moved. Excuse me... evolving.
  18. Because Yahweh is a God who says of Himself that He does not change. Therefore, we would expect His morals to not change. Once you start talking about Yahweh changing with the times, you're basically conceding my point. The thread was "monotonous" because the point can be driven home repeatedly using tons of examples all leading to the same conclusion: You ARE more moral than Yahweh.
  19. Do you honestly believe you cannot weigh the morality of someone's actions unless you are as rich or as powerful as that person? That's absurd! I need to be king in order to ascertain that it's wrong to murder someone so I can bang his wife without him finding out? Seriously? I don't understand your concern with "jumping to God's superpowers." God has superpowers (supposedly). Why can we jump to them to conclude that anything is possible yet we cannot "jump to them" about greater matters, such as fundamental decency and morality? That makes no sense. All that said, you are working with a very different definition of "God" than the person who started this thread, which complicates this discussion beyond our ability to work it out. And that's fine, but this whole "evolving God" thing you have going here goes against the "I am the LORD, I change not" God of the Bible. Again, that's your call. But I don't think we can have an intelligent discussion about a God whose attributes change every time he's exposed as anything other than "correct."
  20. Astonishing how not a word of that addresses... never mind. not worth it.
  21. My "Green Goblin" comment was not the argument of a child. It was my response to the argument of a child. Implying as you did that I can't use the story of David without conceding that the story happened in history is tantamount to saying I can't call myself more moral than Lex Luthor without conceding that Lex Luthor exists in real life. It's ludicrous, and it's YOUR argument, not mine. The stories of David are really stories. They are not history. They are folklore. Valuable lessons can be learned from folklore without adopting the premise that they reflect history.
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