Especially: is it actually a good thing that people can choose to do bad things? — Cuthbert
"I was devastated when my husband started beating me, but I thank God that he had the choice." — Cuthbert
1. Lucifer was also said to have been perfectly created. Why would a perfect being rebel? It's also stated that his motivation was pride. Why would a perfect being become proud? Imagine if you had a perfect will to live, and God put a cliff before you. Realizing that you had free will to jump off the cliff to your death, would you become suicidal, because free will? — Marchesk
If you aspire to be a believer then you have to accept that your finite intellect will never be able to understand the ways of an infinte intentionailty. — John
Suppose that G had no choice, he had to create evil to justify his creation, to create the best possible world, even though we may question how it can be the best. — Cavacava
Say you were granted the power to create your own world of your choosing (just another planet). Would you grant the creatures living there the ability to freely will all manner of evil? — Marchesk
What would that world look like, if it were up to you? Would you prevent "all manner of evil," or only certain kinds of evil? What abilities would you grant and deny the creatures living there in order to achieve that end? How do you define evil in the first place? — aletheist
It's not possible to make a world where only what is good can be chosen because in such a world there is no freedom. — Cavacava
And let's say one of the things I could do is change their genes so that sociopaths couldn't be born into that world. I would do so, and moreover, I would increase the genes responsible for feeling empathy and experiencing love. — Marchesk
In that sense, I would act in a way to constrain their free will from behaving in a manner that is without consideration for others. But that's only as a start. — Marchesk
What other abilities would you grant and deny the creatures living in your world? I am looking for a comprehensive response. If that seems unreasonable, maybe creating a better world than the one we have is harder than you think. — aletheist
My problem with the Genesis account is that the history of life on the planet as we now understand it rubbishes God's boast that it was created "very good" prior to the fall. — Thorongil
Faith is not so much intellectual assent to a set of propositions but a way of life. — Thorongil
You're being coy I see. — Thorongil
Of course it doesn't. It claims that the world, pre-fall, was "very good." — Thorongil
The history of life we now know about says otherwise. — Thorongil
For hundreds of millions of years, a timescale so vast it can't even be properly imagined, various living organisms preyed on each other, fought each other, starved, become sick, or suffocated to death in sink holes, bogs, and under volcanic ash, which preserved their skeletal remains we now gawk at in museums. These processes continue today as well. — Thorongil
I still do not see the problem. — aletheist
The Genesis account gives no indication of any suffering, evil, or death until the Fall, which it presents as happening fairly soon after the beginning, not hundreds of millions of years later. — aletheist
How could a world exist without predation, hazard, and death? — Wayfarer
Either address it or stop replying. — Thorongil
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