The fawn burned. The reasons might be interesting. — tim wood
Assume, and you can demonstrate anything. Usually not worth the effort. There's a thread titled IRAC, about a way to rite posts, give the OP a read; it's not very long.going to assume — Wallows
Assume, and you can demonstrate anything. Usually not worth the effort. There's a thread titled IRAC, about a way to rite posts, give the OP a read; it's not very long. — tim wood
for sake of clarity? — Wallows
Whose clarity? I like clarity myself - and it cost me money to learn it. But here's a challenge: go back to your OP and try to see if anything in it is clear. — tim wood
Folks claiming g/God is both omnipotent/omniscient and omnibenevolent are unwittingly dealing in paradoxes that Christian thinkers worked out a long time ago. I.e., exhibiting ignorance. — tim wood
Decide, leap. If g/God can burn the fawn, then you've got no guarantees. More fool you if you thought you did. Except for those you give yourself. — tim wood
What is your response to the burning fawn scenario with respect to God? — Wallows
A contradiction is a logical problem and not a moral problem per se. — TheMadFool
Is that always true? — Wallows
This seems more like trying to fit the characterization of God's omnibenevolence to the pertaining situation. One can always say, that God works in mysterious ways; but, that doesn't get us much afar, does it? — Wallows
What is your response to the burning fawn scenario with respect to God? — Wallows
I don't know. Did it fit? — TheMadFool
The point is, you presume knowledge - one way or another - of something you absolutely have no knowledge of, and further, about that which a lot of smart people have concluded nothing can be known. And that's a problem. — tim wood
My response is that there is a problem. It doesn't disprove God's existence. But there is a problem. — Coben
Do you mean the gymnastics involved in explaining away such obvious problems? — Coben
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