Your question was asking me why I assume he hasn't. I never assume he hasn't, I have stated I am not convinced he has. If you have proof/evidence that he has, please provide it. You claim he has, so I asked for an example. — chatterbears
Why doesn't God come down and clear up any misunderstandings and/or misinterpretations of his text? — chatterbears
Example? — Kamikaze Butter
Every time people talk to each other with the result that they better understanding each other. — Tomseltje
People think I am Christian, or a God believer. I am in fact an Atheist. My morality is based on secular principles, so I wouldn't adhere to a God, whether he exists or not. I need the clarification, if a God actually exists, for the people who believe in him. — chatterbears
His believers have created wars and segregation throughout the centuries, mostly based on what they think God means or wants for humanity. One church interprets God's word in one way, while another church interprets God's word in another way. In the US, a vast majority of the population are God believers. Many of these people have used their religious beliefs to enact laws that discriminate against people, based on what they think God wants. — chatterbears
For clarification purposes, are you Christian? My question/statement was still not addressed. It blatantly clear that the old testament endorses slavery, such as in Exodus 21. And the new testament doesn't seem to have any problem with slavery as well. So as a general idea, the Bible condones/endorses slavery. Correct? — chatterbears
19 Though I am free and belong to no one; chid of the promise. I have made myself a slave to everyone, to win as many as possible. 20 To the Jews I became like a Jew, to win the Jews. To those under the law I became like one under the law (though I myself am not under the law), so as to win those under the law. 21 To those not having the law I became like one not having the law (though I am not free from God’s law but am under Christ’s law), so as to win those not having the law. 22 To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some. 23 I do all this for the sake of the gospel, that I may share in its blessings.
God already made the path of health, clear in terms of the natural world. He was not addressing the artificial world of medical prosthesis and revisionist history. — wellwisher
Seems we are in violent agreement. Well except for that "quite the opposite part" — Rank Amateur
Wow! You really are dogmatic. So if God did put in an appearance, as per your request, you still wouldn't believe in him. — Txastopher
What makes you think that anything god could say would not be open to convenient interpretations and provide yet more material for confirmation biases? — Txastopher
If you were stating you are not convinced, you should have formulated it more like : "Does God come down and clear up any misunderstandings and/or misinterpretations of this texts? And if so, why haven't I seen any evidence of this." — Tomseltje
Every time people talk to each other with the result that they better understanding each other. — Tomseltje
If your claim is atheism - or there is no god. That claim in no way obligates the theist to show proof of God as argument against. If that is your claim the burden of proof for that claim rests with you. — Rank Amateur
Secondly, religion is an act of man, not an act of God, and as such is subject to all the inherent errors that entails. — Rank Amateur
lastly - the concept of a hidden God is well argued. The usual answer back is there is more value to us - the creature. What we consider valuable traits such as Faith, Charity, Chastity, Love of neighbor etc lose value if done on some guarantee of an eternal hereafter of bliss. It becomes a transaction , base. — Rank Amateur
When Jesus said, "render unto Caesar..." he wasn't condoning/endorsing Caesar, he was simply acknowledging a fact: the Romans were running things in Israel, like it or not. — Bitter Crank
So yes, the Bible endorses slavery; we don't, and the Bible can't be used today to justify it. — Bitter Crank
Part of the reason, God allows various ways of interpreting the bible is so the faithful can save some through their inner spirit of truth. — wellwisher
My claim is, "I do not believe a God exists." AKA "I am not convinced that God exists." - If I told you I owned an invisible pet dragon, and you said you don't believe me, does the burden of proof suddenly rest with you? No. The same applies here with Atheism. I don't believe that a God exists, and anyone who does believe a God exists, should provide evidence to support their claim. I don't need to provide evidence for my lack of belief in your God, just as you don't need to provide evidence for your lack of belief in my invisible pet dragon. — chatterbears
People think I am Christian, or a God believer. I am in fact an Atheist. My morality is based on secular principles, so I wouldn't adhere to a God, whether he exists or not. I need the clarification, if a God actually exists, for the people who believe in him. — chatterbears
seems you need to clarify if you are an atheist as below, or an agnostic as above — Rank Amateur
You're still not making sense. What did you mean by "If God made Himself unequivocally known, Pascal's wager becomes a sure thing". Please expand and explain this more in depth. — chatterbears
even if I believed/knew God exists, it doesn't necessarily mean I would follow his commands. I believe my mother exists, but I am not going to necessarily follow everything she tells me, especially if she told me to kill homosexuals. — chatterbears
Because if God is all-knowing, all-powerful, all-wise and all-loving, He would know how to communicate in a way that would not allow for interpretation or confirmation bias. — chatterbears
My claim is, "I do not believe a God exists." AKA "I am not convinced that God exists." - If I told you I owned an invisible pet dragon, and you said you don't believe me, does the burden of proof suddenly rest with you? No. — chatterbears
Ah, so now you're claiming that whatever god had to say, it may or may not be correct. So this god that you claim not to believe in has, nevertheless, certain qualities that you are sure about. What a mess! — Txastopher
Obviously, you exclude yourself from this group since, as you state above, you wouldn't necessarily follow his commands — Txastopher
How can certainty about god or any of their qualities be concluded from not following their commands? — BlueBanana
The problem is that you can't take an atheist position and make claims about the nature of the deity. — Txastopher
I'm claiming one doesn't need to. You can choose to not follow someone's commands without making any claim. Do I believe you have a beard? No. Do I believe you don't have a beard? No. Will I go to your church if you tell me to? No. Does not mean I have to make a claim about your beard. — BlueBanana
This is your interpretation — chatterbears
Why can't the Bible be used to justify slavery? — chatterbears
If you claim that you are an atheist, you surrender the bases on which to make claims about the nature of god. — Txastopher
OP claims that god is wrong — Txastopher
This is a claim about the nature of god — Txastopher
Ah, so now you're claiming that whatever god had to say, it may or may not be correct. So this god that you claim not to believe in has, nevertheless, certain qualities that you are sure about. What a mess! — Txastopher
Obviously, you exclude yourself from this group since, as you state above, you wouldn't necessarily follow his commands, which suggests that you are either even more all-knowing, all-powerful, all-wise and all-loving than god; a logical impossibility, or that you have grandiose delusions, or that you are a bell-end. — Txastopher
Than Pascal's wager becomes bet on God is and act accordingly with 100 % chance of eternal bliss - or bet of God is not - with 100% chance of eternal suffering - — Rank Amateur
Never mind - whatever you say — Rank Amateur
My claim is, "I do not believe a God exists." AKA "I am not convinced that God exists." - If I told you I owned an invisible pet dragon, and you said you don't believe me, does the burden of proof suddenly rest with you? No. — chatterbears
Yes it does. It's simultaneously on both of you. Your claim offers no new information so we simply don't know whether you have an invisible pet dragon. Drawing conclusions from the existence of burden of proof or from that someone, despite the burden of proof being on them, doesn't provide any proof, is argumentum ad ignorantiam. — BlueBanana
The problem is that you can't take an atheist position and make claims about the nature of the deity. — Txastopher
What are you talking about? Explain to me how the burden of proof rests on the person who does not believe the person making the claim. You seem to not understand the burden of proof and where it rests. It rests on the person making the claim, not the person who doesn't accept the claim as true. — chatterbears
So yes, the Bible endorses slavery; we don't, and the Bible can't be used today to justify it. — Bitter Crank
Why can't the Bible be used to justify slavery? — chatterbears
Go right ahead and use the Bible to justify slavery, but tell us where in the Bible god commanded us to practice slavery. — Bitter Crank
Depends. By "does not believe the person making the claim" do you mean the same as "believing the claim to be false"? If so, there is a burden of proof on that belief, as a new claim is made and each claim has a burden of proof on it. But if you mean the person questioning the claim has no belief either way regarding the claim, you're correct, there's no burden of proof on them. — BlueBanana
I never stated belief in the claim to be false. I originally stated, " I do not believe a God exists ". This is NOT the same as, " I believe NO God exists " - These are two different claims. Or you can look at it this way.
Claim: God exists
Me: I don't accept that claim as true. — chatterbears
I'd suggest researching a little more on the burden of proof — chatterbears
Instead of acknowledging your lack of education on the difference between belief and knowledge, you reply with "Never mind - whatever you say." - Really? — chatterbears
You say the Bible can't be used to justify it today. I asked why. — chatterbears
Jesus Christ, you're horribly confused. — chatterbears
For the sake of argument, I leave out the " IF " part of my statement to save time arguing with believers. — chatterbears
Try not to misrepresent my position next time, because you cause more confusion for people reading and replying to me. — chatterbears
Why doesn't God come down and clear up any misunderstandings and/or misinterpretations of his text? — chatterbears
If you were stating you are not convinced, you should have formulated it more like : "Does God come down and clear up any misunderstandings and/or misinterpretations of this texts? And if so, why haven't I seen any evidence of this." — Tomseltje
From thousands of different religions, denominations within those religions, different churches within those denominations and different people who believer different things within those churches; it is clear that God has not made his message clear enough. My question is not formulated on assumption. It is formulated on fact. If you want to say that God DOES in fact clear up confusion between believers, you would need to provide evidence for that. — chatterbears
So when I talk to my wife about an issue, and at the end of the conversation we better understand each other, that is apparently God revealing the true meaning of scripture to us? — chatterbears
I read it as chatterbears feeling that, if God made it clear that She wanted to punish homosexual acts, chatterbears would conclude that God was immoral according to chatterbear's ethical system (eg see Stephen Law's 'Evil God' hypothesis, or this saying that is wrongly attributed to Marcus Aurelius) and would refuse to serve Her.Ah, so now you're claiming that whatever god had to say, it may or may not be correct. — Txastopher
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