The devil is not the exact opposite, he is a lesser power altogether. He is not a god but a fallen angel — Sir2u
1. Impotent
2. Stupid
3. Omnimalevolent — TheMadFool
Free will. God gave to some of his creatures, namely men and angels, the power of free will. I think it is logically contradictory to give a creature free will, while also decide to destroy the creature as soon as it chooses evil.Why would a "good and just" God not destroy the Devil, if the Devil is the sole perpetrator of all evil in the world? — Jamie
As an angel that has fallen and now opposes god. — Sir2u
The devil can certainly be omnimalevolent, but were he impotent and stupid he would be unable to perform the deceits, seductions, frauds, and misrepresentations necessary to dupe even the brightest human. — Bitter Crank
Where is this given? — Noble Dust
To fight or rebel against an omnipotent being (God) is clearly a stupid thing - moron.
Compared to an omnipotent being (God) anyone, even Satan, is obviously impotent. Add or subtract 1 or 1,000,000,000,000 to infinity (God) and we're still left with infinity (God). So Satan is, simply put, as insginificant as zero to God - impotent. — TheMadFool
As to a definition of the devil, I don't have one. I'm just addressing some issues I have with your argument.
It's a complicated topic for me, actually. But I get the sense you're making your argument purely theoretically and not with any actual real life implications regarding whether "The Devil" actually exists. — Noble Dust
I am not arguing in favor of God or Satan, but it makes for a much more interesting and compelling mythology (story) if God is immensely powerful but not omnipotent, and if the Devil has a bit of ambiguity about his evil, and must labor with great effort to outwit smart people and undo the work of God. — Bitter Crank
The omnimalevolence part is obvious and needs no further discussion. — TheMadFool
To fight or rebel against an omnipotent being (God) is clearly a stupid thing - moron. — TheMadFool
Compared to an omnipotent being (God) anyone, even Satan, is obviously impotent. — TheMadFool
Philosophy and people in general are very "knowledgeable" about the definition of God. They argue about it but everybody circles around omnipotence, omniscience and omnibenevolence. The Devil is rarely discussed and I wonder why. — TheMadFool
If we can't find God directly, perhaps an oblique approach to the issue may help. What I mean is by analyzing what Evil means we may see the light. What do you think? — TheMadFool
No further discussion?
To show that he is evil, I think that you should start by defining what evil is.
Morally objectionable behavior
That which causes harm, destruction or misfortune
The quality of being morally wrong in principle or practice
Morally bad or wrong
Based on morality, the devil is only evil to people that use god as a moral guide.
Based on causing harm, exactly what harm has the devil caused? — Sir2u
So you think it is stupid to fight for the things you believe in? Most people think that their bosses are omnipotent so the never bother asking for a raise. They are stupid. — Sir2u
I think analyzing what evil means in order to find "the light" is an interesting prospect, but I haven't really seen you doing that yet in this thread. — Noble Dust
I'm just putting it out there to check people's thoughts. I don't have a clear-cut strategy on the issue. I don't even know where to begin.
Anyway, how would we define the Devil? — TheMadFool
It simply doesn't make sense for Satan to rebel against God. — TheMadFool
No further discussion only because we all accept the Devil is evil — TheMadFool
and this doesn't affect my argument that he is impotent and a fool. — TheMadFool
Again, are you talking about The Christian concept of The Devil, or no? — Noble Dust
Why the hell not? Better to rule in hell than serve in heaven. — Bitter Crank
To fight without the slimmest chance of victory is foolish, don't you think? — TheMadFool
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