How? Or if because you say so, then what do you mean in saying it?Proof of god is a moral question. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Do you mean of the actions attributed to God in the Bible do I or does anyone have personal opinions about what seems the morality of the actions so attributed? Why would that matter, any more than opinions about the temperature at which water boils?Do you see the morals shown for god as good or evil? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
How? Or if because you say so, then what do you mean in saying it? — tim wood
Do you mean of the actions attributed to God in the Bible — tim wood
Logic and reason says it. Would you mane an entity god who did not have decent moral tenets?
Not likely. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
To me, a moral god would cure and never kill. That is the position Jesus took towards the non-believers. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
It also appears to me that you think God exists but you just don’t like him. — Brett
Also God might have morally justified reasons for these actions that your limited, fallible, finite mind doesn't have access to. — GodlessGirl
But what you have to decide is what you mean or understand in your own usage by the word "god." Until you settle on that, even provisionally, you're not going to get very far. — tim wood
It also appears to me that you think God exists but you just don’t like him. — Brett
Also God might have morally justified reasons for these actions that your limited, fallible, finite mind doesn't have access to. — GodlessGirl
There is no argument against it; — god must be atheist
Religions tout themselves as being the final word in moral issues, even though secular law has rejected as too barbaric most of those laws. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
To me, a moral god would cure and never kill. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Therefore, I have a vested interest in countering the ruling elite with any alternative available, including religion. If sometimes religion can be the tool of the ruling elite, it can also trivially be repurposed into a tool against it. — alcontali
Modern Gnostic Christians name our god "I am", and yes, we do mean ourselves. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That is because you are a worshipper of the ruling elite. They are your gods, but they are certainly not mine. — alcontali
Question (because I'm ignorant): do you mean yourselves as individuals or as members of a community? That is, do you suppose yourself personally to be God? Or do you suppose yourself as individual as part of a larger entity that itself is God? — tim wood
Are you advocating barbaric religious laws be the law of the land the way Muslims do? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
BTW, Americans fear their government while in other more advanced democracies, the governments fear the people. American have lost the decent balls they used to sport. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
We do not idol worship anything or anyone. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Seriously, arguing over maximum penalties is quite pointless. — alcontali
Your views on Islamic law reflect your ignorance on the matter. Furthermore, by shilling for the ruling elite, you completely lose credibility.I agree and don't know why you went there. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Furthermore, by shilling for the ruling elite, you completely lose credibility. — alcontali
I believe that ethics are a secondary development in religion. It only happens when we proceed from explaining nature in religious metaphor to also conceptualizing human society and morals in religious terms.
This is when the monotheists with their all-powerful and all-good God(tm) run into the theodicy issue.
In my religion, the moral concept of Maat is central, so yes, religion and moral authority are tied together. But since my Gods and Goddesses are neither all powerful nor perfectly good the question of their existence is quite independent from their notion of ethics. — WerMaat
And nature does not conform to human notions of good and evil, an earthquake will kill the righteous as well as the wicked. Why should the gods be different? — WerMaat
Just the opposite: very likely, I argue.The main attribute defining a god is power, not ethics. — WerMaat
Which era and religion do you have in mind here?I cannot agree with your first as the old religions pushed looking after the poor as their first priority and not proving that their god was the most powerful. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The battle of the gods in the BCE s was more of magic and alchemy to show power. That only changed after people became literalists and theirs was the power of the sword that showed the power of their gods.
Before literalism, reared it's ugly and dumbing down head, seeking god was actually a joy to see and participate in. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I wonder. I get sick of backing a theist into a corner just to have him pull his G D god is love B.S.
I mention the feeding of the poor already. To show you wrong now let me show why you might be right. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
If this is more or less what you mean by literalism rearing its head, then we're in agreement. — WerMaat
OK, you lost me here. Do you see me as a theist and are you waiting for me to hit the corner?
And where exactly does the feeding of the poor come in at this point?
I'm confused... — WerMaat
Nice to chat with one who know his religious history. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
For me, Christianity was the starting point, it's what I was raised with. But the more I questioned and explored it the more dissatisfied I became with the biblical texts and concepts. — WerMaat
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