Please address the actual argument and tell me what premise(s) you disagree with. — Relativist
Please address the actual argument and tell me what premise(s) you disagree with. — Relativist
8. Therefore God chose a world with needless pain and suffering. — Relativist
But if there are non-sinning free-willed souls in heaven, then such beings can exist without contradiction. — Relativist
Is it impossible to fail in heaven, or are the souls in heaven changed in some way? — Relativist
Are you really choosing to give up free will, or is that an unexpected consequence? — Relativist
Why wouldn't an omnibenevolent God just create beings like THAT - without a freedom to sin, but free in infinite possibilities of goodness? — Relativist
There exist contingent free-willed souls in heaven who do not sin (e.g. the departed souls of faithful Christians). (Christian doctrine). — Relativist
Therefore God's omnipotence entails the ability to directly create free-willed beings that do not sin. — Relativist
but that's a tautology. — Relativist
is a tautology, it is saying something quite different - It is not real goodness if it is not freely chosen.Because freedom is necessary if goodness is to be freely chosen — EnPassant
At death, we stop having these choices — Relativist
Great good. If we become good we will be closer to God in the next life.What good comes from this brief period of moral freedom? — Relativist
This seems a different statement, but I disagree with this one. I don't see a good thing must be freely chosen to be considered good. Hypothetically, a robot that follows Asimov's 3 laws of robotics can still do good, even though it cannot choose to do harm. — Relativist
At death, we stop having these choices — Relativist
You previously said, "They would give up the freedom to sin but would still be free in infinite possibilities of goodness" This seems to imply we stop having these choices to sin or not.Not necessarily. — EnPassant
What good comes from this brief period of moral freedom? — Relativist
You seem to be suggesting it is a good thing to be close to God in spite of a loss of moral freedom. Well and good, but then why not create beings with that absence of moral freedom to begin with? Then everybody wins: this results in more good than the merit system God devised - a merit system that results in good people suffering. How is God's merit system better than what I proposed?Great good. If we become good we will be closer to God in the next life. — EnPassant
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