baker
Of course. They've even killed eachother over who has the right understanding of God.I don’t think there is a single “Christianity” as such. There are multiple religions that use the title Christianity and often consider themselves to be the truer account. — Tom Storm
baker
Strawmanned? Eh?After he created us by default such that we only deserve to suffer for all eternity.
In Christianity, we reap what we sow; and only those that on their demerits will they go to hell. What you have done is omitted justice from the discussion and straw manned Christianity with the idea that everyone should go to hell despite having sinned or not. — Bob Ross
Then they'll be happy!Likewise, it is up for debate what exactly ‘suffering’ is like in hell. The popular view in present day is that hell is just a maximally distant place from God—from goodness itself—and those who deserve to be there tend to want to to be there by obstinately rejecting goodness itself.
That story would be silly if it weren't so cruel in its misrepresentation. Angels are incapable of even desiring autonomy.Think of Satan as an embodiment of this: he was a high-ranking archangel with solid knowledge of God’s goodness, and he rejected in favor of his own autonomy—to be his own god.
And yet God made Adam and Eve.He first fucks us up
God didn’t cause us to fall: adam and eve did and we suffer the consequences—but not guilt—of their sin.
These are all truisms that mean nothing until we clearly specifiy what exactly is "good" (and "evil").It has to be conditional to be just. If you do not want to be saved, for example, then it would be unjust to force you to be saved: that would violate your free will and autonomy to choose what is good or evil. God’s plan is the perfect synthesis of justice and mercy—not one at the expense of the other.
Why, yes, indeed, according to the Catechism of the RCC, it's virtually impossible to go to hell.resting on picking the right religion.
This isn’t true, and is a common misunderstanding among areligious and even some religious people. There is a Divinely revealed and guaranteed way to end up saved (which is the Sacraments); but this does not mean that anyone not on that path is going to hell.
Again with the accusation of strawmanning! You don't say!You are straw manning traditional Catholicism with an oversimplification of ‘picking the right religion’.
It's not a specifically Catholic view, sure. But I never claimed to be presenting or arguing against the Catholic view to begin with. That's your strawmanning. You should be sorry.How is it an act of infinite wisdom and goodness to create living beings who by default deserve only eternal suffering?
I would like to ask you why you believe that Christianity teaches that we deserve only eternal suffering by merely being born human: that’s not the traditional nor a predominant view.
Oh, and I should believe you, and not the other Christians. Right.I don’t think there is anything wrong with you: I think that if I understood your background and what you have come to know and why you have come to believe it that I would completely understand why you believe it as true (although it is false).
baker
This is Bob Ross feeling superior to me./.../ why you believe it as true (although it is false). — Bob Ross
baker
The Fall of the Roman Empire and the associated economic downturn seem to be part of a reasonable explanation.I find the period during which the Roman Empire transitioned from a largely tolerant polytheistic society to an intolerant monotheistic society fascinating.
/.../
I wonder how and why this enormous alteration in the ancient world took place — Ciceronianus
But not in a world where there is God.Ideally, one should be virtuous for the sake of being virtuous. — Ciceronianus
Tom Storm
It seems part of Christianity's success is precisely its vagueness, its amoebic, shape-shfting identity. How its concepts mean everything and nothing, how it can go a million ways. How it's ungraspable. — baker
This is the feeling superior to others that I'm talking about. — baker
Bob Ross
Learn your doctrine.
Once born, we are said to bear the stain of the Original Sin, and this is enough to send us straight to eternal suffering.
-- (see here)By yielding to the tempter, Adam and Eve committed a personal sin, but this sin affected the human nature that they would then transmit in a fallen state.294 It is a sin which will be transmitted by propagation to all mankind, that is, by the transmission of a human nature deprived of original holiness and justice. and that is why original sin is called "sin" only in an analogical sense: it is a sin "contracted" and not "committed" - a state and not an act.
405 Although it is proper to each individual,295 original sin does not have the character of a personal fault in any of Adam's descendants. It is a deprivation of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally corrupted: it is wounded in the natural powers proper to it, subject to ignorance, suffering and the dominion of death, and inclined to sin - an inclination to evil that is called concupiscence". Baptism, by imparting the life of Christ's grace, erases original sin and turns a man back towards God, but the consequences for nature, weakened and inclined to evil, persist in man and summon him to spiritual battle.
That story would be silly if it weren't so cruel in its misrepresentation. Angels are incapable of even desiring autonomy.
And yet God made Adam and Eve.
These are all truisms that mean nothing until we clearly specifiy what exactly is "good" (and "evil").
Why, yes, indeed, according to the Catechism of the RCC, it's virtually impossible to go to hell.
However, the RCC is just one Christian denomination claiming to have the right understanding of God, among several thousand.
Again with the accusation of strawmanning! You don't say!
It's not a specifically Catholic view, sure. But I never claimed to be presenting or arguing against the Catholic view to begin with. That's your strawmanning. You should be sorry.
The view that God creates living beings who by default deserve only eternal suffering is the view with the most damning implications, and as such, it's the one that needs to be refuted or resolved, or overcome, or whatever.
This is Bob Ross feeling superior to me.
Twice he invents the charge of strawmanning against me, and he believes he knows The Truth About God while I don't.
Tom Storm
...are patently straw mans of Christianity. No mainstream version of Christianity thinks that by default we go to hell; or that you merely 'pick the right religion' to go to heaven. — Bob Ross
Astorre
I'm not aware of any Christian tradition that guarantees hell for all. However, many mainstream Protestant faiths, especially fundamentalist literalists, do seem to embrace a hellfire-and-damnation view. I’ve certainly heard sermons claiming people will go to hell for being gay or for atheism, with warnings of “weeping and gnashing of teeth.” Some might even consider Protestant literalism a heresy (I think David Bentley Hart who I quite like, despite his sometimes being an arrogant shit, holds that view). — Tom Storm
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