None of that follows. First, nothing stops God from telling some people to do one thing and others to do another. Second, it is conceptually confused to think God could be confused. God is omnipotent and omniscient and thus is not confused. Third, as God is omnipotent he could have given us perfect knowledge of his attitudes if he so wished. As he has not, this tells us something, namely that he isn't particularly bothered about what we get up to or that we know what his attitudes are. — Bartricks
It looks like !80 is up to his usual tricks, which isn't surprising. — Apollodorus
Sancta Mater Ecclesia did what it has always done, more or less successfully (e.g., the Reformation), for so long. That is, what was considered appropriate morally to the extent that didn't endanger its survival as a powerful institution, relatively content with its place and perception of itself as the One Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. — Ciceronianus the White
Which is it, God or belief in God? Or like me do you hold those to be exactly the same thing? — tim wood
I mean to call you out. Your snide little piece of rhetoric would shame a third-grader to use on a playground. It is disgusting here on this site. But apparently is the measure of the man you are, in sum a know-it-all who knows nothing and is proud of his ignorance.
But behind the infantile remark - for we know you are not an infant - is the lie. You are a liar and thus an enemy here, and having passed the bounds of civil discourse, are neither entitled to it, nor should receive it. — tim wood
God knows, (figure of speech) we are not all geniuses here, and almost all of us lack a basic grounding in knowledge. — god must be atheist
Depends on the hobbies music science poetry gardening philosophy. If they have a materialist content, which they tend to do, then yes. — Apollodorus
You mean a guitar to play, flower seeds and a garden, a book to read, ...? — jorndoe
Types of posters who are not welcome here:
Evangelists: Those who must convince everyone that their religion, ideology, political persuasion, or philosophical theory is the only one worth having.
If they have a materialist content, which they tend to do, then yes. — Apollodorus
Anything that distracts from God, religion or spiritual things.
If you use your guitar etc. for religious purposes, e.g., to play religious songs, then it would be a different story. — Apollodorus
Sorry, but if they're immaterial because they refer to immaterial things, I wonder then what immaterial things may be. Things which are not material? — Ciceronianus the White
If they have a materialist content, which they tend to do, then yes. — Apollodorus
Do interests in hobbies music science poetry gardening philosophy count as belief in material possessions? — jorndoe
You mean a guitar to play, flower seeds and a garden, a book to read, ...?
— jorndoe
Anything that distracts from God, religion or spiritual things. — Apollodorus
As if guitar playing and flowers were not spiritual. — Banno
He'd have everyone reading scripture and praying. The very obverse of spirituality. Monkish subservience, chaste obedience. — Banno
The "materialist content" of interests was what I was talking about. — Apollodorus
So, if I'm interested in the music of Brahms because I enjoy it, or in the poetry of Wallace Stevens because I enjoy it, does my interest in them have a materialist content? — Ciceronianus the White
My position is that it depends on the meaning you give to objects and the purpose for which you use them. You can use a knife to cut bread or kill someone. — Apollodorus
Huh. Plato's ethics? Virtue Ethics? Stoicism? Confucianism? Buddhism?
If you hold the "Big Daddy" view of God, your moral point of view is inherently childish, selfish and fearful--what won't you do to avoid a good spanking? What would you do if there was no spanker, or if spanking took a holiday, so to speak?
https://www.gocomics.com/tomthedancingbug/2003/10/04/ — Ciceronianus the White
Basically, atheistic moral theories are missing definitive answers to moral questions. An act is sometimes good and at other times bad which implies that all acts are neither obligatory (good) nor prohibited (bad). — TheMadFool
It is a privilege to live in a time when someone knows God's mind and can explain it to the rest of us. Or is this just a confused and confusing expression of the human limit of what can be known of or about God or His motives? That is, an obscure way of saying not only do we not know, but we cannot know? — tim wood
The same thing is true for religious morality which varies according to the denomination, church, preacher/Iman, and varies with the subjective preferences of individual believers. We have no way of knowing what a higher consciousness thinks our moral choices should be so why make the claim it provides a foundation? — Tom Storm
This is a common slip-up. How do you reconcile omnipotent with omnibenevolent?omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent person — Bartricks
How do you tell the difference?Morality requires God, not belief in God. — Bartricks
Indeed, as an idea, which I believe in. And it's very simple, but I doubt you're geared for it. That is, God is found and only to be found as an idea.And note as well that if belief in God and God are one and the same, then God exists even by your own lights, — Bartricks
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